Donald Cerrone vs. Myles Jury: Keys to Victory for Each Fighter

Donald Cerrone and Myles Jury have an important bout coming up at UFC 182. While they are at different points in their respective careers, both Cerrone and Jury can find themselves on the short list for a title shot if they can get their hands raised. …

Donald Cerrone and Myles Jury have an important bout coming up at UFC 182. While they are at different points in their respective careers, both Cerrone and Jury can find themselves on the short list for a title shot if they can get their hands raised. With that in mind, here are some specific keys for both men for winning this lightweight affair.

At 15-0 Myles Jury is an interesting prospect who tends to fly under the radar in the world of mixed martial arts. He’s put together a 6-0 record within the Octagon that has him currently ranked No. 8 by the UFC—but this can be considered a “quiet” top-ten ranking.

Perhaps it is the idea that the only ranked opponent Jury has defeated at this point is Michael Johnson, or the fact that he’s not truly outspoken about his talents that keeps him away from the hype that surrounds some of his peers. Still, a victory in this fight would catapult him to an important position in the quest to receive a title shot in the next 12 months.

Jury believes that a victory will be enough to demand a fight with current lightweight champion Anthony Pettis. Jeremy Botter of Bleacher Report recently spoke with Jury, who made his point very clear:

A win over Cerrone puts me next in line for that title shot. And that’s what I want. Anthony Pettis beat Cerrone and got a title shot. A lot of people that beat Cerrone, back in WEC and in the UFC, get title shots. … When I beat Cerrone, you better bet I’m going to be asking for a title shot.

But how is he going to defeat “Cowboy?”

Jury’s base is a mix of wrestling and grappling that he began to develop at a young age. That early training has allowed Jury to become very effective when applying wrestling within the cage. According to Fight Metric, he currently averages 3.18 takedowns per 15 minutes, to go along with landing 2.67 strikes a minute.

He’s stayed active in a way that can wear down many opponents. In doing so, he does not allow himself to be hit very often as he defends 76 percent of significant strikes thrown his way. This is very important, because Cerrone is a very active striker. In fact, that activity may turn out to be a real problem for Jury.

Donald Cerrone rarely slows down within the cage. His ability to exchange strikes with anyone is always apparent, but it is his grappling abilities that are usually a “forgotten surprise.” While he is known for his exciting striking style, 14 of his 25 wins have come by submission.

This means that Jury is not safe in any sense of the word if—and when—this fight hits the floor. Cerrone has scored multiple victories from his back and would not hesitate to do so in UFC 182’s co-main event.

That activity will be a key aspect to Cerrone’s opportunity to defeat Jury. To this point, Myles has not faced an opponent who is as aggressive as Cerrone. His Fight Metric report shows that he lands 3.96 strikes per minute, and while he may not be very accurate (landing 47 percent of those strikes), that volume alone is enough to overwhelm many.

Cerrone also has the edge of being the veteran who has experienced many big fights like this one. He expects to test the young Jury’s metal within the Octagon.

“I wouldn’t say I’m gunning for the kid,” Cerrone said, per Mike Bohn of MMA Junkie. “His win over Diego [Sanchez], him saying, ‘Oh, I can’t believe I beat him that easy,’ that he’s ‘taking out veterans’ and that’s what he does—I didn’t like it. I don’t dislike him more than anybody else I would say, but now it’s time to prove it.”

Donald Cerrone closed out 2014 going 4-0. Three of those were stoppages that were vastly different from one another. That type of diversity will make him a very tough opponent for Jury at this point in his career. As usual, expect Cerrone to be very aggressive from the onset and in every position of this fight. It will be interesting to see how Jury will respond when faced with an opponent who continues to come forward.  

Myles Jury vs. Donald Cerrone has the potential to be the “Fight of the Night” from UFC 182. Cerrone has pulled many other opponents into violent exchanges that end with him as the victor more often than not. The question is whether or not Jury is ready to handle such a fighter at this point in his career. No matter which individual wins, this fight will go a long way in determining a top contender at 155 pounds.

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Dana White Predicts UFC 182 to Generate 750,000 Pay-Per-View Buys

The MMA universe is in a tizzy over Saturday night’s UFC 182 light heavyweight title fight between champion Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier, and UFC President Dana White is expecting that to translate into some huge numbers. Speaking at the UFC 182 media …

The MMA universe is in a tizzy over Saturday night’s UFC 182 light heavyweight title fight between champion Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier, and UFC President Dana White is expecting that to translate into some huge numbers. Speaking at the UFC 182 media day, White estimated that the card would garner around around 750,000 buys.

“I think this fight will do 750[,000 buys], that’s where I place the line,” White said to the assembled media. “Everyone thinks the pay-per-view thing is dead. Pay-per-view isn’t dead. We just had a bad year.”

White is referencing the UFC’s brutally tough 2014. According to MMAPayout.com and Wrestling Observer Newsletter (via CagePotato.com), the promotion averaged under 250,000 buys per event, with only one event (UFC 175) climbing over the 500,000-buy mark and five (UFC 174, 177, 178, 179, 180) scattered between 115,000 and 205,000.

For the sake of comparison, pay-per-view events in 2013 averaged over 400,000 buys. That is a particularly sharp drop, even considering the company’s established downward trend.

Some speculated that this was a sign that the pay-per-view model for combat sports is no longer sustainable for the UFC.

Regardless of White’s dismissal, there is some logic and precedent in that belief, as World Wrestling Entertainment—the foremost professional wrestling organization—has been attempting to leave conventional pay-per-views behind in favor of its own media platform, the WWE Network. The UFC, around the same time, rolled out its own digital streaming service, UFC Fight Pass.

That said, it is hard to deny that the slide was not, at the very least, exaggerated by the collapse of numerous blue-chip fights. Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort was booked, cancelled, re-booked and then delayed to UFC 184. Cain Velasquez vs. Fabricio Werdum was scrapped after Velasquez suffered an injury. Even UFC 182’s main event was initially planned to go down at UFC 178.

Either way, UFC 182’s buyrates will come out in the weeks following the event. Stick with Bleacher Report for coverage of both the event itself and its aftermath.

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UFC 182 Fight Card: Predictions You Can Take to the Bank

A little more than three months after their originally scheduled bout fell through, a main-event title fight between the light heavyweight champ and the undefeated challenger Daniel Cormier will finally come to fruition at UFC 182 on Saturday.
Arguably…

A little more than three months after their originally scheduled bout fell through, a main-event title fight between the light heavyweight champ and the undefeated challenger Daniel Cormier will finally come to fruition at UFC 182 on Saturday.

Arguably the most anticipated match in the division’s history, the duo have captivated MMA fans with their heated feud that spawned from what Cormier called an insult from Jon Jones during their first encounter at UFC 121 in 2010.

With Jones, Cormier and the remainder of the fighters on the UFC 182 lineup set to hit the scales at the event’s weigh-in in mere hours, the time to make last-second predictions is slipping away.

Here are five UFC 182 predictions you can take to the bank.

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Video: Watch the UFC 182 Weigh-Ins Live Featuring Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier

Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier will collide this Saturday night at UFC 182 in Las Vegas for UFC’s light heavyweight title.
Before the fight can be made official, both fighters have to make weight. There will be 22 fighters in total weighing in …

Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier will collide this Saturday night at UFC 182 in Las Vegas for UFC’s light heavyweight title.

Before the fight can be made official, both fighters have to make weight. There will be 22 fighters in total weighing in Friday at 7 p.m. ET. 

Thursday, the two faced off during the UFC 182 media dayand things got heated. Thankfully, things did not get physical and lead to a brawl—like what happened a few months ago during a different media day at the MGM Grand. 

Jones and Cormier have been jawing at each other for years.

It all started when the two ran into each other backstage at UFC 121. Jones introduced himself to Cormier and made a comment about how he bet he could take down the two-time Olympian. Jones says he meant it as an icebreaker, but Cormier took it as a slight.

The tension between the two has only escalated since then, and the two will finally get a chance to settle the score at UFC 182. 

The full fight card lineup is below. Check back for official results. For a more detailed accounting of the weigh-ins, follow along with our live blog

 

UFC 182 Fight Card

  • Jon Jones (   ) vs. Daniel Cormier (   )
  • Donald Cerrone (   ) vs. Myles Jury (   )
  • Brad Tavares (   ) vs. Nate Marquardt (   )
  • Kyoji Horiguchi (   ) vs. Louis Gaudinot (   )
  • Hector Lombard (   ) vs. Josh Burkman (   )
  • Danny Castillo (   ) vs. Paul Felder (   )
  • Marcus Brimage (   ) vs. Cody Garbrandt (   )
  • Shawn Jordan (   ) vs. Jared Cannonier (   )
  • Evan Dunham (   ) vs. Rodrigo Damm (   )
  • Omari Akhmedov (   ) vs. Mats Nilsson (   )
  • Alexis Dufresne (   ) vs. Marion Reneau (   )

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UFC 182: 5 Quick Facts for Each Main Card Fighter

UFC 182 kicks off a brand new year of events for the largest mixed martial arts promotion in the world, and fans get to witness two of the baddest heavyweights on the planet go to battle on Saturday.
Former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Daniel Cormi…

UFC 182 kicks off a brand new year of events for the largest mixed martial arts promotion in the world, and fans get to witness two of the baddest heavyweights on the planet go to battle on Saturday.

Former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Daniel Cormier will attempt to wrestle away UFC gold from the pound-for-pound best Jon Jones. The two eerily similar fighters have been engaged in a bitter feud that stems from a meeting between them that took place prior to Jones’ title win.

This card has a little bit for everyone, as lightweights Donald Cerrone and Myles Jury take the Octagon to find out who might be next in line for a title shot behind Rafael dos Anjos. Meanwhile, heavy hitters Nate Marquardt and Hector Lombard are also fighting.

In many of these bouts, picking the winner may seem easy, but there’s no disproving the facts. Here are the five key details one needs to know heading into Saturday night’s main card matchups

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UFC 182 Start Time: Full Card, TV Info, Live Stream and Predictions

UFC 182 is almost guaranteed to start the new year off with a bang. In addition to a long-awaited main event featuring reigning light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and rival Daniel Cormier, the Las Vegas card is littered with matchups that have barn-b…

UFC 182 is almost guaranteed to start the new year off with a bang. In addition to a long-awaited main event featuring reigning light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and rival Daniel Cormier, the Las Vegas card is littered with matchups that have barn-burning potential. 

For all the hype surrounding the main event, both Myles Jury and Donald Cerrone have done enough inside the Octagon to warrant serious attention. The two lightweight contenders are among the hottest commodities in the division thanks to Jury’s undefeated record and Cowboy’s five-fight win streak. 

Add in a few intriguing fights to watch on the undercard, and it’s clear that this isn’t a card fight fans will want to miss.

Here’s a look at all the information you need to catch the action from Vegas. 

When: Saturday, Jan. 3

Start Time: Fight Pass Prelims at 7 p.m. ET (subscription required); Fox Sports 1 Prelims at 8 p.m. ET; Main Card pay-per-view at 10 p.m. ET

Where: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas

Live Stream: UFC.tv

Odds via Odds Shark.

 

Storylines to Watch

Will Hector Lombard Finally Put Together a Winning Streak?

When Hector Lombard officially made the move to the UFC in July of 2012, it appeared he was destined for stardom. The Cuban-Australian fighter entered the promotion with a long reign as Bellator champion and a winning streak that went back to 2006.

Then a split-decision loss to Tim Boetsch happened. 

“Lightning” came back strong with a knockout win over Rousimar Palhares but disappointed once again with a split-decision loss to Yushin Okami. As it turns out, it might just be that he needed a move to welterweight to be relevant in the UFC. 

Lombard made the move to the lighter weight division after that loss and has since knocked out Nate Marquardt and earned a decision win over Jake Shields. That’s back-to-back wins, but two wins does not a real winning streak make. 

Josh Burkman isn’t the toughest challenge of Lombard’s career. The 34-year-old is returning to the Octagon after journeying through World Series of Fighting and other promotions since being released from the UFC in 2008. 

However, he will provide Lombard an opportunity to showcase the skills that made him such an exciting addition to the UFC roster. An impressive win here should set up a high-profile win against a top-five welterweight. 

 

Is Myles Jury a Legitimate Lightweight Contender?

All Myles Jury has done since his professional debut is win. The 25-year-old has a perfect 15-0 record. Yes, he lost to Al Iaquinta in The Ultimate Fighter, but he’s done more than enough to show that the loss was more of an aberration than an indication of his actual talent. 

What’s still in doubt is how he will react to the spotlight that comes with a co-main event slot on a pay-per-view. Given the magnitude of this card and the quality of his opponent, a fight this big is uncharted territory for Jury. 

Yet the rising star has his sights set even higher, per Jeremy Botter of Bleacher Report:

A win over Cerrone puts me next in line for that title shot. And that’s what I want. Anthony Pettis beat Cerrone and got a title shot. A lot of people that beat Cerrone, back in WEC and in the UFC, get title shots. … When I beat Cerrone, you better bet I’m going to be asking for that title shot.

A win over Cerrone would certainly prove he belongs in the discussion as a title contender. Cowboy’s recent five-fight win streak includes victories over Jim Miller, Edson Barboza and Eddie Alvarez. That’s much more established talent than the level of competition Jury has defeated. 

Cowboy should be able to test Jury in ways that other opponents have not been able to. 

 

Can Jones vs. Cormier Live Up to the Hype?

There are few fights for Jon Jones that are truly compelling. Because he is the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, there are not many opponents whom the UFC can truly sell as legitimate threats to the champion. 

One of the few happens to be Daniel Cormier. As Jonathan Snowden of Bleacher Report noted on Twitter, the matchup has some saying this will be an all-timer and others saying this will be a one-sided beatdown:

DC is unlike any challenger that Jones has faced in his career.

Yes, comparisons could be made to Rashad Evans. Both are excellent athletes whose main challenge against someone like Jones is closing the distance, but that’s where the comparisons end.

Evans doesn’t have nearly the wrestling credentials of Cormier, nor does he have the track record of defeating men much larger than himself in the heavyweight division. 

On the other hand, Jones-Evans was a marketable matchup thanks to some familiar bad blood between the two. The personal feud and hype machine did a great job of bamboozling fans into thinking they were watching an intriguing matchup between former champions. Instead, they witnessed another emphatic chapter of Bones’ legacy. 

Have fans done it again? Or is Cormier‘s rare blend of strength and athleticism truly enough to get the champion in trouble?

That remains to be seen, but those questions will certainly make fans tune in come Saturday night.

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