UFC 185: Roy Nelson vs. Alistair Overeem Head-to-Toe Breakdown

Before the lights dim low and Anthony Pettis defends his lightweight title at UFC 185, two heavyweights will take to the Octagon in vicious manner.
As members of the division’s Top 10 club, No. 8 Roy Nelson and No. 9 Alistair Overeem are capable of kno…

Before the lights dim low and Anthony Pettis defends his lightweight title at UFC 185, two heavyweights will take to the Octagon in vicious manner.

As members of the division’s Top 10 club, No. 8 Roy Nelson and No. 9 Alistair Overeem are capable of knocking each other’s heads clean off.

With prolific striking from the muscle-framed Overeem and heavy-handed knockout power from Nelson’s big-bellied torso, the possibilities are endless.

Now while it would seem as if The Reem possesses a distinct advantage coming into Saturday’s tilt due in part to his exceedingly superior reach and range, Nelson’s steel chin and iron fists could get his hand raised when it all said and done.

Here is a full head-to-toe breakdown for what could shape up to be a barnburner.

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UFC 185 Weigh in Results: Pettis vs. dos Anjos Fight Card

UFC 185 hits Dallas this Saturday with two title fights leading the charge.
UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis defends his title for the second time when he squares off against No. 1-ranked contender Rafael dos Anjos in the main event.
In the co-m…

UFC 185 hits Dallas this Saturday with two title fights leading the charge.

UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis defends his title for the second time when he squares off against No. 1-ranked contender Rafael dos Anjos in the main event.

In the co-main event, UFC strawweight champion Carla Esparza makes the first defense of her title against top-ranked Joanna Jedrzejczyk.

Ten more fights round out the UFC 185 fight card. Prior to the action getting underway Saturday, the 22 athletes will step on the scale to make weight for their respective classifications. The weigh-ins begin at 5 p.m. ET on Friday, and Bleacher Report will bring you all of the news coming out of Dallas.

Come back for complete coverage.

 

UFC 185 Fight Card

  • Anthony Pettis vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Carla Esparza vs. Joanna Jedrzejczyk
  • Johny Hendricks vs. Matt Brown
  • Roy Nelson vs. Alistair Overeem
  • Chris Cariaso vs. Henry Cejudo
  • Ross Pearson vs. Sam Stout
  • Elias Theodorou vs. Roger Narvaez
  • Daron Cruickshank vs. Beneil Dariush
  • Jared Rosholt vs. Josh Copeland
  • Sergio Pettis vs. Ryan Benoit
  • Jake Lindsey vs. Joseph Duffy
  • Larissa Pacheco vs. Germaine de Randamie

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UFC 185 Weigh in Results: Pettis vs. dos Anjos Fight Card

UFC 185 hits Dallas this Saturday with two title fights leading the charge.
UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis defends his title for the second time when he squares off against No. 1-ranked contender Rafael dos Anjos in the main event.
In the co-m…

UFC 185 hits Dallas this Saturday with two title fights leading the charge.

UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis defends his title for the second time when he squares off against No. 1-ranked contender Rafael dos Anjos in the main event.

In the co-main event, UFC strawweight champion Carla Esparza makes the first defense of her title against top-ranked Joanna Jedrzejczyk.

Ten more fights round out the UFC 185 fight card. Prior to the action getting underway Saturday, the 22 athletes will step on the scale to make weight for their respective classifications. The weigh-ins begin at 5 p.m. ET on Friday, and Bleacher Report will bring you all of the news coming out of Dallas.

Come back for complete coverage.

 

UFC 185 Fight Card

  • Anthony Pettis vs. Rafael dos Anjos
  • Carla Esparza vs. Joanna Jedrzejczyk
  • Johny Hendricks vs. Matt Brown
  • Roy Nelson vs. Alistair Overeem
  • Chris Cariaso vs. Henry Cejudo
  • Ross Pearson vs. Sam Stout
  • Elias Theodorou vs. Roger Narvaez
  • Daron Cruickshank vs. Beneil Dariush
  • Jared Rosholt vs. Josh Copeland
  • Sergio Pettis vs. Ryan Benoit
  • Jake Lindsey vs. Joseph Duffy
  • Larissa Pacheco vs. Germaine de Randamie

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Johny Hendricks Explains Decision to Not Work with Mike Dolce for UFC 185

Johny Hendricks is changing up a few things in 2015.
After losing his welterweight title to rival Robbie Lawler in a hard-fought split decision at UFC 181 back in December, Bigg Rigg was forced to end his year on one of the roughest turns of his career…

Johny Hendricks is changing up a few things in 2015.

After losing his welterweight title to rival Robbie Lawler in a hard-fought split decision at UFC 181 back in December, Bigg Rigg was forced to end his year on one of the roughest turns of his career. While the rematch between Hendricks and Ruthless picked up where their first meeting left off and delivered another 25-minute war between the two top welterweights, the former two-time NCAA D-I national champion wrestler ultimately exited the Octagon as the former 170-pound UFC champion.

Considering how much adversity the former Oklahoma State University wrestling standout had to overcome just to claim the divisional throne, coming up short in his first official title defense undoubtedly left a sting. With that in mind, Hendricks is determined to turn things around in the new year, and he’s changed up several aspects of his approach coming into his first bout of 2015 against Matt Brown.

Where the former champion had used nutrition guru Mike Dolce to coach him through the weight-cutting process over the past few years, the Team TakeDown fighter opted to go a different route for his fight at UFC 185. In the lead-up to his fight with The Immortal on Saturday in Dallas, Hendricks decided to keep his nutritional efforts in house and personally took control of his own nutritional preparation.

On Thursday, the Texas transplant spoke to Ariel Helwani of MMA Fighting about his new approach to making weight and the current status of his relationship with Dolce:

We are not with [Mike] Dolce on this one. I wanted to do it on my own. I’ve learned a lot of stuff from Dolce and I’m using a lot of it. The way I prep my food and all that stuff I learned from him. But me and my wife—and with everybody talking about my weight—it’s time for me to man up and do it on my own. See what I can do.

Behind the scenes my wife does everything. Every Sunday we did meal prepping. What I’ve done is learn to make chicken, salmon and deer meat. You don’t have to do anything to deer meat to make it taste good, but on the chicken and salmon I’ve added low sodium things that make it taste good. I’ve added 30 calories or so to each meal, but for as hard as we work out, that’s taken care of in one workout. That’s what I’ve done. Some days when I’m hungry, I’m driving faster to get home and not looking at fast food because I’m really excited to get home and eat my chicken, salmon or deer meat.

As Hendricks has made some major changes to his approach heading into UFC 185, he’s hoping those efforts—alongside what he plans to do inside the Octagon—will put him back into a championship opportunity.

He was originally in talks with the UFC to get an immediate rematch with Lawler later this year, but the promotion opted to give Rory MacDonald the next title shot and slotted Hendricks to face Brown when the organization returned to Dallas on March 14. And while Hendricks realizes certain opportunities are within striking distance, he also appears to be getting hip to a few outside perspectives as well.

The heavy-handed country boy is notorious for his love of a good burger and cold beer and has spoken out publicly in the past about how difficult and grueling it’s been for him to make the 170-pound limit. Those elements have faded away in his lead-up to UFC 185, as the welterweight knockout artist arrived at fight week looking lean and mean and well under the weight he typically starts his cut at.

And while Hendricks’ new nutritional groove may be directly linked to the goals he hopes to accomplish, the fighter also suggested there is a particular look that warrants opportunity in the fight game:

I know if I go out there and do a good job against Matt Brown it’s mine to win or lose. I’m not looking at it any other way. I have to go out there and perform to my best ability and that’s why I did the weight cut and I’m going everything right. I’m getting that fighter look that everybody wants and making it easier on me to get to that belt.

 

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

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Question: Does Anthony Pettis Belong on Top of UFC’s Pound-for-Pound List?

If you ask the casual UFC fan about the sport’s top fighters, you’ll typically get a pretty standard list in return. Jon Jones will be somewhere near the top. So will middleweight kingpin Chris Weidman, featherweight standout Jose Aldo and even women’s…

If you ask the casual UFC fan about the sport’s top fighters, you’ll typically get a pretty standard list in return. Jon Jones will be somewhere near the top. So will middleweight kingpin Chris Weidman, featherweight standout Jose Aldo and even women’s bantamweight Ronda Rousey.

It’s only after rattling off a string of other names that Anthony Pettis (18-2) tends to enter the mix.

Is that fair? Should the UFC’s lightweight champion, a man who won the title from the king of close decisions, Benson Henderson, in a runaway romp, be considered among the elite? Should his every fight, not just Saturday’s tilt against Rafael dos Anjos at UFC 185, be greeted with more fanfare than this?

Bleacher Report’s lead combat sports writer Jonathan Snowden and Kenny Florian, former UFC lightweight contender and current Fox Sports 1 broadcaster extraordinaire, tackle the issue—but carefully. Kenny didn’t want to muss his hair.

 

Kenny Florian: He definitely is on my list of elite fighters, and I do think he is undervalued tremendously. However, consistency is key in this sport. And we just haven’t seen him enough.

The hardcores know how good he is. But he’s not sticking in the memory of the general MMA fans. That’s an issue for Pettis, but he’s not alone. I think that’s an issue with Cain Velasquez right now, too. Fortunately, Cain has built much more of a history with UFC fans, so it’s easier to return after time off.

It’s tougher for Pettis. These guys need to be performing on a pretty consistent basis—and Anthony has really struggled with injuries. That’s why we haven’t seen the same praise and attention thrown his way. It’s unfortunate.

 

Jonathan Snowden: Since splitting his first two fights in the Octagon way back in 2011, Pettis has really come into his own. He’s finished four of the best fighters in the division, winning a Performance of the Night bonus each time out.

But I think you’re right. There’s a more telling statistic hidden in there. In three years, Pettis has only fought four times. Combined, he has less than five total rounds under his belt during that period. That’s just not enough to make the impact you need.

No one would encourage a fighter to come to the cage hurt—but there’s a fine line between injuries everyone accumulates and works through and something that should keep you out of action for months. That’s a tricky balancing act, isn’t it?

 

Florian: There does need to be a balance. Every three-to-four months, guys should be looking to compete. I do know he wants to get at least three fights in this year. He’s in the prime of his career right now. He wants to fight.

I think Pettis realizes the importance of being out there again and again. Whether it’s sponsors, other opportunities outside of the cage or building that fanbase so people want to see you fight, being active is only going to help you.

Fighters need to compete to make people want to see them compete again. It equals dollars for him if he can attract pay-per-view buys. Not to mention, you want to say sharp. It’s not just economic.

 

Snowden: What frustrates me the most is that Pettis has shown transcendent ability when he has had the chance to go out and perform. My friend Patrick Wyman from Sherdog calls him a “generational” fighter.

That’s bold praise.

I’m often accused of hyperbole—and that’s fair. I tend to get carried away when a fighter does something worth getting carried away about. But I think we are on to something here. Pettis is a gifted fighter on the mat and one of the smartest we’ve ever seen from range with both kicks and punches.

You’ve been in the cage with one of the consensus greats in the division in B.J Penn. So you have some expertise here. Is it unthinkable that Pettis has the potential to be the best?

 

Florian: I don’t think that’s out of the realm of possibility. The skills he’s shown are very impressive. He’s not just beating top guys—he’s making it look easy. He’s finishing them.

The most impressive thing about Pettis is that he carries with him an intuition. When he fights you can see he has this confidence and belief in himself. He has the fearlessness to let his skills truly shine. He can go out there, let go of all the pressure and just compete—and do it with flash and pizzazz.

I think that’s a hard thing for a lot of guys. Jon Jones has it. Conor McGregor looks like he does too. But even Jose Aldo, for as great as he is, feels like he’s holding something back. Like he’s maybe not letting it all go, that he’s not showing all of his skills in the Octagon. With Pettis, I get the sense he feels like he’s in a training session.

His ability to find your smallest mistake and expose you is unlike most fighters out there. He has a killer instinct a lot like Anderson Silva’s. It reminds me of when Silva was on his run.

Anthony Pettis is a special athlete and a superstar in the making. The only things slowing him down are injuries. It’s hard to build a legend when you can’t fight on a consistent basis. But I think he’s a special fighter, and he certainly could go down as the best lightweight of all time.

 

Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.

Kenny Florian fought for the UFC title on two occasions and is currently a color commentator and studio analyst for Fox Sports 1.

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Get to Know UFC Strawweight Contender Joanna Jedrzejczyk

Joanna Jedrzejczyk will attempt to take the women’s strawweight belt away from Carla Esparza this Saturday in Dallas at UFC 185. But how many out there truly know who Jedrzejczyk is?
Jedrzejczyk made her UFC debut on a lower-level fight card as the ope…

Joanna Jedrzejczyk will attempt to take the women’s strawweight belt away from Carla Esparza this Saturday in Dallas at UFC 185. But how many out there truly know who Jedrzejczyk is?

Jedrzejczyk made her UFC debut on a lower-level fight card as the opening bout on UFC Fight Pass. The next time she fought, she saw a slightly bigger audience on FOX Sports 1 opposite Claudia Gadelha, but the title eliminator was not placed on big FOX.

Now she is in the co-main event, and the mass audience does not really know who she is or how qualified of a contender has become. Well, let’s take a quick look at Jedrzejczyk‘s past and how she became the No. 1-ranked contender at 115 pounds.

 

Muay Thai

Jedrzejczyk is known for her wicked striking inside the MMA cage, so it should come as no surprise that she began her fighting career as a muay thai specialist.

She turned pro in 2007, five years prior to making the transition to being a pro mixed martial artist.

The Polish striker is credited with five different professional muay thai championships in her UFC bio: WKN World Champion, J Girls Champion, WBKF Champion, WKF European Champion and WMC Champion.

She has some of the fastest hands in the division and possibly the best technical striking at 115 pounds. She is an exceptional talent standing with good power, which comes from a combination of speed and technique, not from having natural, god-given freakish power such as John Lineker and other fighters who are revered for such gifts.

Her striking background made her an instant prospect and threat when she moved over to MMA.

 

Pre-UFC MMA

Jedrzejczyk made her MMA debut in May 2012 in Poland. It was a decision victory over Sylwia Juskiewicz. She reeled off four more victories before advancing to her first big test against veteran Rosi Sexton.

The bout took place in Cage Warriors and came after Sexton was released from the UFC’s 135-pound division.

Jedrzejczyk dominated Sexton with her accuracy.

She kept pelting Sexton with the right hand, and she dropped her twice in the opening round. Just after the halfway point in the second frame, Jedrzejczyk dropped Sexton for the final time to earn the KO victory. It was the win that got her the call to the UFC with a perfect 6-0 record.

 

UFC Strawweight Contender

Jedrzejczyk was in the second official strawweight contest in UFC history. She drew Juliana Lima for her UFC and strawweight debut.

Her entire MMA career had taken place at 125 pounds prior to coming to the UFC. There were questions as to how the weight cut would effect her.

It didn’t. She tore through Lima with spectacular boxing.

As The Ultimate Fighter season 20 drew on, the UFC needed a title contender waiting for the winner. After Gadelha and Jedrzejczyk won their respective bouts, it only made sense to pit them against one another in a title eliminator.

Gadelha was the No. 1-ranked contender entering the fight, and it was almost a foregone conclusion that we would see Gadelha vs. Esparza at some point. Jedrzejczyk changed that perception by upending Gadelha in a fun, competitive bout.

Most impressively, Jedrzejczyk was able to drop Gadelha with an uppercut to once again showcase her superior striking. The decision came in and was split, but the fans were firmly behind Jedrzejczyk as the winner of that fight.

While she only has two wins at 115 pounds, the manner in which she has won should prove to everyone that she is the No. 1 contender for the belt.

Knocking off Gadelha was a statement. The weight cuts have never been an issue. Jedrzejczyk is a true strawweight and a true threat to dethrone Esparza at UFC 185.

Saturday’s co-main event may be the Fight of the Night. It may even be the dawning of a new era for the strawweight division. Time will tell, but we will see a lot of Jedrzejczyk moving forward as one of the top stars in this division.

Remember her name, even if you can’t pronounce it.

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