UFC 182: Jones vs. Cormier Fight Card, TV Info, Predictions and More

As main events in the UFC go, they don’t get much better than Jon “Bones” Jones vs. Daniel Cormier. UFC 182 is shaping up to be one of the most memorable events in the promotion’s history, and the featured bout is the main reason why.
These two guys ar…

As main events in the UFC go, they don’t get much better than Jon “Bones” Jones vs. Daniel Cormier. UFC 182 is shaping up to be one of the most memorable events in the promotion’s history, and the featured bout is the main reason why.

These two guys are both at the top of their game. They’re fighting Saturday for Jones’ UFC light heavyweight title, and they can’t stand each other.

We saw the latest proof of the bad blood between the two at the media staredown Thursday. UFC President Dana White had to step between the fighters on several occasions.

If the barbs traded between these two men are just hype, both of them should be joining the WWE after their MMA careers are done.

If you follow Bleacher Report and Jonathan Snowden and Jeremy Botter on Twitter, you know it takes a lot to impress these two gentleman. It seems safe to say that both are anxiously awaiting Jones-Cormier.

While the main event deserves a ton of attention, the rest of the card from the MGM Grand is nothing to sneeze at.

Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone will attempt to continue his march toward a shot at the lightweight title when he faces Myles Jury. Also on the card, Hector Lombard will take on Josh Burkman, and Brad Tavares battles Nate Marquardt.

Here’s how you can watch and my predictions for each fight. Just below the table is a closer look at the top three fights on the card.

 

Brad Tavares vs. Nate Marquardt

After snapping a three-fight losing streak with a submission win over James Te Huna in July, Marquardt is looking to send Tavares on his own three-bout skid. Tavares was stopped by Tim Boetsch via strikes in August, and he lost the bout prior to that to Yoel Romero by unanimous decision.

Needless to say, both fighters desperately need a victory in this one.

Marquardt has seemingly gone back to what he does best, which is grappling and submission. Before he beat Te Huna, he seemed to be showing a willingness to stand and strike, which isn’t his specialty. He lost two straight via strikes to Lombard and Jake Ellenberger.

While Tavares is a good wrestler in his own right, he doesn’t possess the submission skills that Marquardt does. If Tavares can keep the fight standing, he’s quicker and would have an advantage as a striker.

Marquardt is smart, though.  He’ll be looking for every opportunity to catch and counter Tavares with takedown attempts. I see him ultimately planting Tavares and securing a second straight submission victory in the second round.

 

Donald Cerrone vs. Myles Jury

The Cowboy simply wears opponents down. His advanced muay thai skills and submission game have proved to be a lethal combination. Cerrone has won five fights in a row, and he’s tasked with handing Jury the first defeat of his career.

Jury’s record is sparkling, but truth be told, he’s taking a major step up in competition against Cerrone. The best win on Jury’s record up to now came over Diego Sanchez. This fight will be different and more diffcult than any other he’s ever been in.

Cerrone doesn’t make many mistakes defensively, and when he does, he has shown the chin to absorb a shot and come back to finish his opponent. He did that against Edson Barboza, Melvin Guillard and Eddie Alvarez. Look for Cerrone to take Jury’s best shot early and to seize control in the second round.

This one will end via TKO and ground-and-pound. The win will move Cowboy one step closer to a title shot.

 

Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier

Throughout his amazing career, Jones has made a habit of beating his opponents at their own game. He wrestled Chael Sonnen. Jones submitted Vitor Belfort after nearly being made to tap out himself from a vicious armbar.

Against Cormier, Jones has hinted he will attempt to wrestle the former Olympian. If we were talking about any other fighter, I’d say he was out of his mind. However, I’ve learned not to doubt Bones.

When the light heavyweight champion finally gets his hands on Cormier, I predict he will make the fight look a lot easier than many predict. The biggest reason is his length. Jones will enjoy a 12-inch reach advantage over Cormier.

Reach can be an overrated stat in MMA, but in this case, it’s relevant. Jones understands how to fight tall, and he’ll be able to pepper Cormier with shots early. Once he’s broken his will a bit, Jones will then look to drive his point home by beating him at his own game.

The end will come with Jones mounting a dazed Cormier and pounding him into submission to retain his title.

 

Follow Brian Mazique on Twitter. I dig boxing and MMA.

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UFC 182 Weigh-Ins: Live Results for Jones vs. Cormier Fight Card

UFC 182 is Saturday, but we are not quite there yet. First, all 22 athletes hit the scale on Friday to make weight for the event.
The Las Vegas fight card is headlined by one of the most heated grudge matches in UFC history. UFC light heavyweight champ…

UFC 182 is Saturday, but we are not quite there yet. First, all 22 athletes hit the scale on Friday to make weight for the event.

The Las Vegas fight card is headlined by one of the most heated grudge matches in UFC history. UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones puts his belt on the line against No. 2-ranked contender Daniel Cormier. It is easily one of the most compelling fights in recent memory under the UFC banner.

Lightweights Donald Cerrone and Myles Jury will meet in the co-main event as they try to state their case for a lightweight title shot.

Fox Sports 1 will host the weigh-ins at 7 p.m. ET on Friday evening. Check back here for all of your UFC 182 weigh-in coverage.

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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Dana White Separates Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier at UFC 182 Media Day

Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier will square off for UFC’s light heavyweight title Saturday night in Las Vegas.
Before the actual fight are the media day faceoffs and the weigh-ins. With the melee that took place at the MGM Grand a few months ago as a back…

Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier will square off for UFC’s light heavyweight title Saturday night in Las Vegas.

Before the actual fight are the media day faceoffs and the weigh-ins. With the melee that took place at the MGM Grand a few months ago as a backdrop, both events offered an opportunity to see how Jones and Cormier might posture up. The psychological battle between fighters is an important one in combat sports, and neither man wants to give up any territory in that regard. 

During Thursday’s media day faceoff, UFC President Dana White stepped in to make sure the tense moment between champion and challenger did not escalate into an episode which could potentially nix the title fight. With Jones and Cormier having already been fined for their parts in August’s brawl, a repeat incident could have been disastrous. 

Both fighters ultimately behaved themselves while still giving those in attendance enough jawing and scraping to give everyone a morsel of spectacle. It bears watching how the two men, who have no love lost for one another, behave during the weigh-ins on Friday, which will make their title fight official.

While the long reigning champion Jones is favored, per OddsShark, the two-time Olympic challenger Cormier is considered Jones’ toughest challenger to date. The pair have a combined record of 35-1 in professional mixed martial arts competition, with that lone loss being Jones’ disqualification against Matt Hamill due to illegal elbows.

If the fight goes down how many are expecting, it could be one of the most exciting fights in MMA history. 

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UFC 182: B/R Staff Main Card Predictions

A new year, the same crew. Bleacher Report is back in 2015 to guide you through the main card of UFC events throughout the year.
We kick things off with Saturday’s UFC 182, which is likely the most anticipated main event since Anderson Silva vs. C…

A new year, the same crew. Bleacher Report is back in 2015 to guide you through the main card of UFC events throughout the year.

We kick things off with Saturday’s UFC 182, which is likely the most anticipated main event since Anderson Silva vs. Chael Sonnen II. We have UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones defending his title against Daniel Cormier, the biggest threat to his crown ever.

There are a number of great fights on this card, but we will stick with the main card as always. Without further ado, Scott Harris, Sean Smith, James MacDonald, Craig Amos and I, Riley Kontek, will guide you through UFC 182.

Begin Slideshow

Why Does Jon Jones Have So Many Haters?

For Jon Jones, being the most polarizing figure in MMA also comes with the hefty price tag of dealing with endless haters.
The reigning UFC light heavyweight champ can’t even sneeze without being condemned for some blasphemous act of injustice. C…

For Jon Jones, being the most polarizing figure in MMA also comes with the hefty price tag of dealing with endless haters.

The reigning UFC light heavyweight champ can’t even sneeze without being condemned for some blasphemous act of injustice. Complete strangers have resorted to calling him fake, classless and arrogant. What is it about Jon Jones that gets under people’s skin? Why does he have so many haters?

History has taught us that winning is a surefire way to draw the ire of fans.

The mere entertainment value of a sport can become compromised when the same person wins over and over again. It is common for fans of certain athletes to jump off the bandwagon as that athlete reaches the top and sustains greatness.

The New England Patriots and quarterback Tom Brady were treated like royalty by NFL fans during their first Super Bowl run over a decade ago. Three championships later, they are arguably the most hated team in professional football. The Chicago Bulls and Michael Jordan had the entire nation backing their NBA franchise in the nineties, but multiple championship victories and Jordan’s unparalleled greatness eventually turned the masses against them.

The same could be said for all-time great professional boxers Muhammad Ali and Floyd Mayweather Jr. Both of these men were cheered and praised all the way to the top, but once the mountaintop was cleared, public opinion began to rapidly change.

Jones was praised early in his career for his confidence and creativity inside the Octagon. Now he is being judged and criticized for those exact same things.

Pre-fight talk that was once looked at as confidence being shown by a young fighter is now being perceived as arrogance and cockiness. A technique such as the oblique kick that was initially admired by the masses is now looked at as dirty and cheap.

Jones touched on this topic during an interview with MMAjunkie.com earlier this year:

I’ve gotten to the point now where I realize I’m not going to be a fan-favorite, and being loved isn’t necessarily – it doesn’t have to be. Muhammad Ali was hated, and then he was loved at the very end. Floyd Mayweather was hated, and a lot of people are really coming around on him. So I’m just remaining positive and trying not to offend too many people along this way.

Perhaps the hate for Jones stems from his youth.

Fighters like Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, Lyoto Machida and Vitor Belfort are legends who basically helped build MMA. These men were considered immovable objects and the cornerstones of the light heavyweight division. Yet Jones, who was basically a kid at the time, swooped in with all of his physical gifts and otherworldly talents and trumped these beloved legends with ease.

The term “hater” is justly used in this piece because those judging Jones have no viable insight into the type of person he truly is. People simply cling to whatever petty angle they can find as a reason to root against him.

Anderson Silva, an all-time great in MMA, wasn’t without his haters during his record-long run as UFC middleweight champ. Even Georges St-Pierre, one of the sport’s friendliest personalities, had his share of haters towards the end of his welterweight run.

The difference with Silva and St-Pierre is that they embraced their personalities from the very beginning. Neither went out of their way to change their own public perception. Jones, on the other hand, has been striving for years to get people to like him.

He has often gone out of his way to try to say all the right things and maintain a perfect image. Unfortunately, it’s virtually impossible to meet these standards in a world where a camera is right around every corner, and people are judging everything you do. Jones’ overzealousness in being the good guy played a hand in making him the bad guy.

It isn’t hard for cracks to show when the spotlight is constantly on a subject. Anything fans see as superfluous typically gets labeled as fake and disingenuous. Years of playing nice has finally helped Jones understand you can’t please everybody.

“When I read my comments on Twitter and Instagram, I realize that I really do inspire people and touch people and people really do appreciate who I am as a martial artist,” Jones said during the UFC 182 media phone conference on Monday.

“Then when I look at some of the people who write me negative messages, it’s always so dumb,” he said. “It’s like, ‘Dude you’re fake.’ I’ve been hearing that I’m fake for so many years it’s like, ‘OK.’ Who cares if I’m fake? I win fights and that’s what I’m here to do. I’m not here to win you over in my personality. I’m here to fight, that’s ultimately my job. I look at the people who hate on me, and it’s never anything solid. It’s like, ‘Dude you poke people in the eyes in your fights.’”

“OK, that’s an accident, or it’s, ‘Hey you’re fake, you’re bigger than the other light heavyweights.’ It’s always real stupid stuff. So I’ve learned to kind of laugh at it. I’m just waiting for the person who really hates me and gives me a legit answer or reason. No one has ever really given me anything solid, outside of calling me fake. I mean what are we in high school? I’m a grown man. I’m like, ‘OK, you’re calling me fake? You can’t call my work ethic fake and the things I’ve achieved fake.’”

True greatness is hardly ever appreciated until it’s gone. Public opinion will often vary on Jones, but no one can ever question his accomplishments in MMA. Being the villain is a hard job, but somebody has to do it.

On Saturday night, Daniel Cormier enters one of the biggest grudge matches in UFC history against Jones as a fan favorite. If he’s fortunate, his good guy role won’t last long.

Perhaps one day Cormier will be champion long enough to give birth to his own section of haters.

 

All quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted. Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon

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Jones vs. Cormier: Analyzing Physical Traits of Bones and DC

Jon “Bones” Jones and Daniel “DC” Cormier couldn’t be much more different. That’s part of what makes their bout on Saturday night at UFC 182 so compelling. Their personalities clash—which explains why they hate each other. Also, their fighting st…

Jon “Bones” Jones and Daniel “DC” Cormier couldn’t be much more different. That’s part of what makes their bout on Saturday night at UFC 182 so compelling. Their personalities clash—which explains why they hate each other. Also, their fighting styles are different as well.

Jones is an unorthodox, gifted striker with excellent takedown defense. Cormier is a world-class wrestler with quick hands and good boxing. This explains why, even aside from the mutual malice, the fight is so intriguing.

Last but not least, this fight is for the UFC undisputed light heavyweight championship of the world. Jones is already an all-time great, and Cormier might be his most significant test.

Put it all together and you have the most highly anticipated fight perhaps in UFC history. Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter agrees with me.

You can watch any number of the hype videos to see the storyline for this feud, but let’s take a closer look at how these two men match up physically. Here’s a Tale of the Tape with information per Fight Metric.

 

Each Fighter’s Best Physical Attribute

Jones’ Length

Not only is Bones 6’4″, but he also has an 84″ reach. That just measures his length from armpit to knuckle. His legs are also very long. 

What makes all of these length numbers all the more relevant is the fact that Jones is the rare tall pugilist who knows how to use his height. He’s a master at using his limbs as a first line of defense and using spatial awareness to know when he’s out of range.

Opponents must wade through his arms and knees before getting in striking distance. All the while, they must remain on the lookout for spinning elbows, fists, knees and educated feet.

 

Cormier‘s Strength

DC obviously has great technique. You don’t make it to the Olympics as a wrestler without excellent technique. Beyond that, he is strong as an ox. 

Once he locks on, his opponents usually have little choice but to go where he throws them. Throughout Jones’ career, he’s thwarted 97 percent of the takedowns attempted against him. 

But he’s never fought a wrestler like Cormier before.

 

Most Lethal Weapon

Jones’ Elbows

Bones has a plethora of weapons at his disposal, but the most deadly are his sharp and accurate elbows. He has finished Brandon Vera, Vladimir Matyushenko and Chael Sonnen with these strikes.

He’s also punished others such as Rashad Evans with them. Against Cormier, the elbow could be a big key again. Just like Evans, Cormier is a much shorter wrestler who will look to close distance and grapple.

Routinely, Jones bashed Evans’ face with his elbows just as Suga tried to get into range. Without question, Cormier has seen this fight. Will he be able to avoid a similar fate?

 

Cormier‘s Takedowns

We mentioned Cormier‘s strength earlier, but that’s just part of what makes him so good at securing takedowns. He’s nailed 49 percent of his attempts in his career, mostly because he’s relentless and skilled.

Case in point, against Dan Henderson, the long-time veteran appeared to escape Cormier‘s grasp only to be tripped and dropped as he tried to retreat.

Cormier will use every part of his body to get his opponent to the mat, but that will be easier said than done against Jones.

Boy, this is going to be one heck of a fight.

 

Follow Brian Mazique on Twitter. I dig boxing and MMA.

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