UFC 185: Results and Reactions from Saturday Night’s Card

New champions were crowned Saturday night in Dallas at UFC 185. Rafael dos Anjos took UFC lightweight champion Anthony “Showtime” Pettis’  to school. Dos Anjos used powerful takedowns and relentless pressure to batter Pettis for five rounds.

New champions were crowned Saturday night in Dallas at UFC 185. Rafael dos Anjos took UFC lightweight champion Anthony “Showtime” Pettis‘  to school. Dos Anjos used powerful takedowns and relentless pressure to batter Pettis for five rounds.

When it was over, all three judges saw it as a five-round sweep for dos AnjosThe new champion finished with nine takedowns in the fight and out-landed Pettis 90-54 in significant strikes. It doesn’t get more dominating than that.

If you could find someone who picked dos Anjos to win, I can almost bet they didn’t see the Brazilian dominating the way he did. Kevin Iole of Yahoo Sports marveled at dos Anjos‘ accomplishment:

In the co-feature, Joanna Jedrzejczyk‘s muay thai proved to be too much for UFC strawweight champion Carla “Cookie Monster” EsparzaJedrzejczyk scored a decisive second-round TKO to become the new women’s champion at 115 pounds. She displayed excellent takedown defense in the bout.

Esparza attempted 17 takedowns and only secured one. It seemed as if she had no Plan B once Jedrzejczyk was able to stuff the takedown attempts. Jedrzejczyk showed her striking prowess by out-landing Esparza 53-4 in significant strikes.

Light heavyweight contender Daniel Cormier was impressed with multiple facets of Jedrzejczyk‘s game.

Per UFC Canada, both new champions also earned Performance of the Night bonuses. 

Here’s a look at every result from Saturday night.

 

Other Dominant Performances

Alistair Overeem

He didn’t knock Roy Nelson out, but Alistair Overeem did display the most varied and technically sharp array of strikes we’ve ever seen from him.

Overeem out-landed Nelson 66-48 in significant strikes, and he stopped all four of Nelson’s attempts to take him down. Iole talked about all of the weapons Overeem showed off:

He came in ranked ninth, but Overeem looks capable of taking on a Top Five opponent. Then again, he’s duped us into believing he was elite before. We’ll need to see Overeem sustain this level of fighting for the next two or three bouts.

 

Johny Hendricks

Matt Brown wanted to make his fight with Johny Hendricks a brawl, but Hendricks’ takedown defense eliminated that strategy. With a nice mixture of striking, grappling and ground-and-pound, Hendricks proved he’s in shape physically and in the right mindset to take on UFC welterweight champion Robbie Lawler for a third time.

Hendricks would love to to regain the title he lost to Lawler. However, there’s a long line of 170-pounders with a solid claim to the next title shot. Since Hendricks is a former champion who has history with Lawler, it may not be difficult to land the third fight in their rivalry.

In any case, Hendricks is back on the right track, and his future is looking bright once again.

 

All stats per UFC.com.

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Rafael Dos Anjos Likely to Defend Title from Winner of Cerrone vs. Nurmagomedov

Rafael dos Anjos took the UFC lightweight title from Anthony Pettis with an eerie ease at UFC 185, relentlessly pressuring Showtime and taking a unanimous 50-45 decision win. While immediate rematches have been par for the lightweight championship cour…

Rafael dos Anjos took the UFC lightweight title from Anthony Pettis with an eerie ease at UFC 185, relentlessly pressuring Showtime and taking a unanimous 50-45 decision win. While immediate rematches have been par for the lightweight championship course, however, it seems like a new challenger will get a crack at the belt next.

Speaking at the UFC 185 post-fight press conference, UFC President Dana White speculated that the next challenge for the newly minted champion would be the winner of the UFC 187 bout between Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone and Khabib Nurmagomedov: 

Cerrone and Nurmagomedov already own resumes deserving of UFC lightweight title bouts. Cerrone is riding an impressive seven-fight winning streak dating back to 2013, with four of those victories coming via stoppage. Nurmagomedov, on the other hand, owns a career 22-0 record (with six wins in the UFC) and has been utterly dominant to this point in his career. 

Both men have actually fought dos Anjos before. Cerrone was unable to overcome an early deficit in his 2013 bout with dos Anjos and lost via a unanimous 29-28 decision. Nurmagomedov, on the other hand, defeated dos Anjos in 2014 in dominant fashion, taking the Brazilian down repeatedly en route to a unanimous 30-27 decision win. Nurmagomedov likely would have been the one to face Pettis at UFC 185 had a knee injury not shelved him for nearly a year.

All that said, dos Anjos and his manager, Ali Abdel-Aziz, revealed that he had sustained a partial MCL tear just a few weeks ahead of the event. While dos Anjos speculated that he would not need surgery, all sports fans know how troublesome knee injuries can be. Fans (and fighters) will just need to keep their fingers crossed in regards to the champ’s health.

Keep an eye on Bleacher Report for more news as it breaks.

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UFC 185: Recapping the Fight Night Bonuses from Pettis vs. Dos Anjos Fight Card

What an event to remember.
With Rafael Dos Anjos bulling his way past Anthony Pettis for the lightweight championship, Joanna Jedrzejczyk punching her way to a women’s strawweight title and welterweight Johny Hendricks reestablishing himself as a top c…

What an event to remember.

With Rafael Dos Anjos bulling his way past Anthony Pettis for the lightweight championship, Joanna Jedrzejczyk punching her way to a women’s strawweight title and welterweight Johny Hendricks reestablishing himself as a top contender, UFC 185 was not short on memorable moments.

From the preliminary bouts all the way up to the two upsets in the title fights, Saturday will most likely stand as one of the best all-around pay-per-view cards of 2015.

Here is a recap of the Fight Night bonuses for UFC 185, per MMA Fighting’s Twitter account:

 

Performance of the Night: Rafael Dos Anjos

This was probably the closest bet to capturing Fight of the Night honors, but at the end of the day, Pettis didn’t do enough to warrant such a payday.

Instead, new light champion dos Anjos will take home some extra money on the heels of one of the more shocking championship upsets in recent memory.

He smashed the champion from bell to bell and deserves every bit of praise.

At the UFC 185 post-fight press conference, it was also revealed he fought with a bad knee.

 

Performance of the Night: Joanna Jedrzejczyk

Sometimes strikers come out on top.

That’s exactly what Polish sensation Jedrzejczyk did by bewildering women’s strawweight champion Carla Esparza with unfiltered kickboxing.

Her range and technique on the feet were absolutely flawless, but her takedown defense may have been even more impressive.

The new titleholder proved just how entertaining the little women can be and that the UFC may have themselves another female sensation.

 

Performance of the Night: Ross Pearson

Sam Stout didn’t stand a chance in a wild exchange with Pearson.

As one of the best power punchers on the lightweight roster, The Real Deal is a dangerous entity when his hands start to fly.

His second-round knockout of Stout is his second finish in three fights and a performance that will once again have him fighting the Top 15 by year’s end.

 

Performance of the Night: Beneil Dariush

Daron Cruickshank is no slouch.

He may not be the most well-rounded fighter in the UFC today, but his striking, timing and technique are worthy attributes for anyone.

But he was simply no match for a stronger and more equipped fighter like Dariush, losing to the Iranian via rear-naked choke in the second round.

It is Dariush‘s third UFC finish and an eye-popping performance as his 2015 stock skyrockets.

 

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Rafael Dos Anjos Tore MCL 4 Weeks Before UFC 185 Title Win over Anthony Pettis

Rafael dos Anjos shocked the MMA universe by dominating now-former lightweight champion Anthony Pettis at UFC 185. Not just beat, mind you. Dominated.
While winning a UFC title without breaking a sweat is impressive all on its own, dos Anjos’ victory t…

Rafael dos Anjos shocked the MMA universe by dominating now-former lightweight champion Anthony Pettis at UFC 185. Not just beat, mind you. Dominated.

While winning a UFC title without breaking a sweat is impressive all on its own, dos Anjos‘ victory turned out to be even more impressive than it initially seemed, as multiple reports surfaced that the Brazilian had suffered an MCL tear just a few weeks prior to Fight Night. From Twitter:

MCL tears are no joke. While not as debilitating or time-consuming as the dreaded ACL tear, more than a few bouts have been called off due to partial or complete tears of the ligament. A recent example would be Cain Velasquez’s withdrawal from UFC 180, where he was slated to defend his heavyweight strap from Fabricio Werdum.

At this point, it is unclear how serious the injury was. While dos Anjos was clearly able to fight at a high level in spite of the MCL tear, recovery can take months. That could spell trouble for a division that struggled with Pettis as champion due to chronic injuries that resulted in him fighting just six times in a four-year span and saw the belt go undefended from August 2013 until December 2014 (approximately 16 months).

That said, MCL troubles do not necessarily require invasive treatments. As Jonathan Gelber detailed for BloodyElbow.com when Dan Henderson pulled out of UFC 151 with an MCL injury, hematomas can form around the ligament, which allows it to heal in a way other parts of the knee cannot. Dos Anjos, during the post-fight press conference, speculated that he will not need surgery for the injury.

Here is hoping dos Anjos can get back into the cage to defend his belt in short order.

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Anthony Pettis vs. Rafael Dos Anjos: What We Learned from UFC 185 Title Fight

A new champ has been crowned.
After putting forth one of the more impressive performances in recent Octagon history, Rafael dos Anjos outclassed and outshined Anthony Pettis at UFC 185.
His dominant efforts on the feet, in the clinch and on the ground …

A new champ has been crowned.

After putting forth one of the more impressive performances in recent Octagon history, Rafael dos Anjos outclassed and outshined Anthony Pettis at UFC 185.

His dominant efforts on the feet, in the clinch and on the ground resulted in one of the more shocking title upsets in the history of the UFC.

He simply proved too much for a champion renowned as one of the best pound-for-pound fighters on the planet.

Here is what we learned from Saturday’s memorable title scrap and dos Anjos capturing the UFC lightweight title via unanimous decision.

 

What We’ll Remember About This Fight

Dos Anjos did what he needed to do in order to take Pettis out of his game and force him to fight dirty.

By sticking to the champ like glue through the fight’s entirety, RDA’s relentless pressure created a whirlwind of trouble for Showtime.

He connected close, attacked from distance, shot for takedowns with high success and powered through anything the champ had to offer

This is a fight that we’ll remember for a long time and one that could possibly tarnish the legacy of Pettis and his once-untouchable aura.

 

What We Learned About Pettis

Whether Pettis took this fight lightly or not, we’ll never know.

As a true champion and a guy who always finishes on top, it would seem as if Pettis didn’t expect a few things that dos Anjos threw his way.

It did look like RDA damaged Pettis‘ eye early in the first round, but that’s no excuse to get taken down nine times and fall behind on strikes 90-54.

Saturday night was proof that nobody is perfect, and Pettis has a long way to go to becoming the best fighter in the world, especially when it comes to finding an early groove.

 

What We Learned About Dos Anjos

Spectacular. Punishing. Captivating.

These are just a few words that come to mind when thinking about the beating that Dos Anjos put on Pettis at UFC 185.

He took one of the best strikers in the world to the woodchipper and left nothing on the bone.

From perfectly timed takedowns to scintillating combinations in close quarters, the new lightweight kingpin made all the right moves.

We need to take notice of this performance and understand even further that the 155-pound division is full of dangerous, battle-tested warriors.

 

What’s Next for Pettis

At 28 years of age, Pettis may not even be in his prime.

This obviously is not the type of performance you want to build a legacy off of, but Showtime remains one of the most skilled competitors in the sport today.

When healthy, he’s capable of beating any opponent the lightweight division has to offer, including new titleholder dos Anjos.

An immediate rematch is unlikely to take place considering Donald Cerrone and Khabib Nurmagomedov will fight for No. 1 contention at UFC 187 in May, leaving Pettis to drop back down the ladder and look for a win elsewhere.

The most sensible choice for the former champ would have to be Michael “The Menace” Johnson.

 

What’s Next for Dos Anjos

Hopefully, Dos Anjos is able to remain healthy in order to showcase the near-perfect skill set that he did at UFC 185.

As the new face of the division, the 30-year-old Brazilian should be willing to fight any challenger brave enough to reach into his cage.

But considering Nurmagomedov defeated RDA early last year, you’d have to believe Dos Anjos has some unsettled business with the undefeated Russian.

The deepest and most intriguing division in all of MMA just got a little crazier.

 

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The Good, Bad and Strange from UFC 185

As the saying goes, “Everything is bigger in Texas.” And that certainly was the case for UFC 185.
With the promotion’s 2015 campaign getting off to a memorable yet rocky start in the new year, the biggest stage in MMA put a major focus on its return to…

As the saying goes, “Everything is bigger in Texas.” And that certainly was the case for UFC 185.

With the promotion’s 2015 campaign getting off to a memorable yet rocky start in the new year, the biggest stage in MMA put a major focus on its return to Dallas on Saturday night. Rather than the normal pay-per-view format of surrounding a pair of high-profile fights with a mixture of recognizable names and ones fans are likely to have never heard of, the Las Vegas-based operation used the guns-blazing approach for UFC 185.

The card’s lineup was stacked from top to bottom with interesting matchups, with the top of the bill anchored by highly anticipated title fights in the women’s strawweight and men’s lightweight divisions. Carla Esparza, The Ultimate Fighter 20 winner and inaugural women’s 115-pound champion, put her title on the line for the first time against Polish upstart Joanna Jedrzejczyk. Meanwhile, pound-for-pound phenom Anthony Pettis returned to action to square off with seasoned veteran Rafael dos Anjos with the 155-pound title up for grabs.

While other bouts on the card fueled fight fans’ excitement in the lead-up to UFC 185, the title tilt between Showtime and the Kings MMA representative definitely held the most electricity. Pettis has been a wrecking machine since joining the UFC fold back in 2011, but where the Duke Roufus protege built his name on defeating a collection of former champions and contenders during his time atop the 155-pound fold, Dos Anjos accomplished many of the same tasks to earn his shot at championship gold.

The Brazilian’s title shot at UFC 185 was as hard-earned as any in recent memory, and it set the stage for a crucial showdown for the top spot in what is arguably the most talent-stacked division in the UFC. The main event on Saturday night was figured to be a barnburner, but once the action began, it was all Dos Anjos.

The Rafael Cordeiro-trained fighter dominated Pettis from start to finish to earn a lopsided unanimous decision and become the new champion of the lightweight division. Not only did he pull off the most impressive performance of his career, but his victory capped off one of the best redemption stories in the history of mixed martial arts.

Let’s take a look at the good, bad and strange from UFC 185.

 

The Good

On November 15, 2008, Rafael dos Anjos made his UFC debut.

On that night in Las Vegas, the young Brazilian became highlight-reel fodder courtesy of an uppercut from Jeremy Stephens in the third round at UFC 91. At the time, RDA wasn’t much more than a jiu-jitsu practitioner who was looking to make good in mixed martial arts, and if the way things went down against Lil Heathen and Tyson Griffin in his next bout were any indication, his time under the UFC banner was going to be short-lived. 

Fast forward six years and the Kings MMA representative is the new lightweight champion thanks to his five-round thrashing of Anthony Pettis at UFC 185. Like most of his bouts at the elite level of the 155-pound fold, Dos Anjos came into his bout with Showtime as a heavy underdog, and once again the Brazilian veteran rose to the occasion. He dominated the Duke Roufus-trained fighter throughout the 25-minute affair, battering Pettis in a fashion no other man before him had done.

It was a spectacular performance from start to finish and one that will put the definitive stamp on Dos Anjos‘ climb to prominence. With the 155-pound division hosting a collection of hungry contenders in waiting, it won’t be long before he’ll have to defend his title. That said, March 14, 2015, in Dallas is a night that belonged entirely to him.

*** There were a lot of jokes made about Joanna Jedrzejczyk‘s name coming into UFC 185, but in the aftermath of her trouncing of Carla Esparza in Dallas, “champion” is the only label that matters. The Polish striker punished The Ultimate Fighter Season 20 winner, putting on an absolute clinic in the co-main event. After Jedrzejczyk stuffed several of Esparza‘s takedowns, the champion had nothing to offer as the challenger smashed her with one heavy shot after the next.

With Esparza barely surviving the opening round, Jedrzejczyk picked up where she left off in the second and finished The Cookie Monster with a flurry of shots to become the new champion of the women’s strawweight division. 

*** The story going into his bout with Matt Brown at UFC 185 was how in shape Johny Hendricks appeared to be. Bigg Rigg may have had a new look going into Saturday night, but it was old-school Hendricks that defeated The Immortal in Dallas. The two-time NCAA D-I national champion went to his wrestling early and often as he put Brown on the canvas continuously throughout the fight. The end result was Hendricks’ earning the lopsided unanimous-decision victory and positioning himself to face the winner of Robbie Lawler vs. Rory MacDonald at the end of 2015.

*** Championship belts are to be collected in the eyes of Alistair Overeem, and The Demolition Man took another step toward a shot at the UFC heavyweight crown by defeating Roy Nelson Saturday night. While his performance was a curious mix of efficiency and evasion, Overeem controlled the action at range, where he tagged Big Country with body kicks.

Nelson dropped him with a big left hand late in the fight, but it wasn’t enough to turn the tide of the fight. Overeem took the unanimous decision on the judges’ scorecards and picked up his third victory in his last four outings inside the Octagon.

*** Elias Theodorou came to UFC 185 determined to keep his unblemished record intact and take another step up the middleweight ladder at the expense of Rogar Narvaez. The Ultimate Fighter: Nations winner wasted zero time getting to work as he set a hard-charging pace from the opening bell that kept the Corpus Christi native on his heels in defense mode.

While the opening round was close, The Spartan poured it on in the second frame and pounded out Narvaez to earn the TKO stoppage. With the win, Theodorou has now won three bouts inside the Octagon and will draw a bigger name in the 185-pound fold for his next outing. 

*** While Sergio Pettis doesn’t carry the accomplished resume his brother had built, the amount of hype surrounding him often casts the opponents he faces in the long-shot role. That was certainly the case Saturday night with Ryan Benoit, as many assumed the hometown fighter would serve his purpose as a steppingstone for the younger Pettis‘ entry into the flyweight fold.

The opening round of the fight supported this notion as Pettis battered Benoit at every turn throughout the first five minutes. Victory seemed like a foregone conclusion, until a perfectly timed left hook from Benoit leveled the Duke Roufus-trained prospect.

Benoit’s shot crumpled Pettis to the canvas, and the young Texan immediately pounced on his wounded opponent. He unloaded a flurry of shots as Pettis attempted to recover, but Benoit’s flurry was simply too much, and the bout was stopped early in the second round. While the victory over Pettis is the biggest of his career, Benoit will lose a few sportsmanship points for throwing a kick at the Milwaukee native shortly after the referee stepped in. Nevertheless, it was a phenomenal comeback for Benoit, who has plenty of reasons to celebrate after his victory at UFC 185.

*** As the last man to defeat Irish sensation Conor McGregor inside the cage, there was a lot of buzz surrounding Joseph Duffy’s official Octagon debut at UFC 185. The scrappy Irish lightweight lived up to expectations as he made quick work of Jake Lindsey, finishing The Librarian with a vicious flurry midway through the opening round. Duffy planted a left head kick on Lindsey up against the cage followed by a brutal body shot that put the Kansas native on the canvas and forced the referee to stop the fight.

While Duffy was impressive in his debut, his trainer Firas Zahabi told Joe Rogan post-fight that he was going to drop down to featherweight for his next bout in his pursuit of McGregor. Starching your opponent and then putting a target on the hottest commodity under the UFC banner made Duffy’s showing at UFC 185 a great example of how to make a memorable first impression.

 

The Bad

Few fighters have competed in the UFC’s lightweight division longer than Sam Stout has.

Hands of Stone made his promotional debut back in 2006 and has been mixing it up inside the Octagon for the better part of the past decade. Yet, consistency has always been an issue for the Ontario native, and those woes continued Saturday night against Ross Pearson. Despite a gritty effort to get the job done, the seasoned veteran ate a blistering left hook from The Real Deal that sealed the deal for Pearson. With the loss, Stout has now suffered back-to-back setbacks and has been defeated in three of his last four showings.

Where Stout was once considered one of the gamest fighters in the 155-pound ranks, that status has come into question over recent years. His tendency to “give one, take one” where wins and losses are concerned kept him relevant while the lightweight division was developing, but the current shark-tank status at 155 moves is no place for inconsistency. At 30 years old, Stout should just be coming into his fighting prime, but 19 UFC appearances—and losses in 10 of those bouts—could have well taken their toll.

 

The Strange

Living up to the hype is a difficult task to accomplish, and Sergio Pettis is currently in the process of figuring this out.

While The Phenom had won three of his four showings inside the Octagon coming into his bout with Ryan Benoit at UFC 185, the Duke Roufus-trained fighter had yet to put on the caliber of performance to match the level of expectations attached to his name. When the bout against Baby Face began, it appeared the 21-year-old striker was well on his way to getting that done. He was battering Benoit at range and controlling and punishing his opponent when the action went to the canvas.

Everything seemed to be going to plan for Pettis until he drifted in on an exchange in the second round and was floored by a left hook from Benoit. Dazed and hurt on the mat, Pettis attempted to scramble and recover, but Benoit poured it on, and the referee stepped in to stop the fight. With his second loss in four showings, Pettis will lose a bit of luster on his highly touted status. That said, the skills he possesses are obvious, and both of his losses have come abruptly in fights where he had been dominating the action. 

There will be plenty of time for Pettis to come into his own inside the Octagon, but there is a limited amount of time and errors allowed where hype and expectation are concerned. This especially rings true when his older brother is one of the most accomplished and exciting fighters in the sport, which undoubtedly creates an even loftier pedestal to reach.

While there was a minimal amount of strange inside the Octagon on Saturday night, a poor choice from the UFC’s production team brought the noise in the awkward department. With the Dallas crowd worked up from a good night of fights, the UFC decided to do a close up of former Cowboy-turned-Philadelphia Eagle DeMarco Murray on the pay-per-view portion of the card.

Dallas fans are passionate about their football and equally driven in their hatred for their rivals in Philadelphia. The departure of the Pro Bowl running back from “The Big D” was big news earlier in the week, and when Murray’s face hit the screen on Saturday night, a strong chorus of boos immediately followed.

From the look on Murray’s face, it was clear he not only wanted to get out of the American Airlines Center but the city of Dallas in quick fashion. 

In closing, the durability of Roy Nelson has become the stuff of legend. The former IFL heavyweight champion has put on some of the grittiest performances in the current era of the sport, and the heart he displayed in bouts against Junior dos Santos and Fabricio Werdum are memorable examples of how difficult the Las Vegas native is to finish.

On Saturday night at UFC 185, The Ultimate Fighter Season 10 winner added another battle to his resume as he and Alistair Overeem mixed it up for 15 minutes of heavyweight violence. And although Nelson ate one big body kick after the next, he was still throwing heat until the final bell. He even dropped Overeem with a powerful left hook late in the final round but was unable to finish and lost the bout on the scorecards. 

It was an unfortunate turn for Nelson, who has now lost four of his last five fights, but he’ll be damned if he’s not one of the toughest outs to ever step into the Octagon on fight night.

 

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

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