If you set a record during a UFC fight card, it’s a pretty safe bet your performance will be considered one of the most impressive of the event. That’s what UFC flyweight champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson did in the main event at UFC 186 in Mo…
If you set a record during a UFC fight card, it’s a pretty safe bet your performance will be considered one of the most impressive of the event. That’s what UFC flyweight champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson did in the main event at UFC 186 in Montreal on Saturday night.
After thoroughly dominating his bout against KyojiHoriguchi, Johnson could have simply settled for ending his bout in top control and walked away with the unanimous-decision win. Instead, the pound-for-pound great went for the finish in the final 10 seconds of the bout.
Like a machine, he transitioned from the mounted crucifix, to full mount, to an armbar in all of seven seconds to force Horiguchi to tap out with just one second left in the fifth and final round.
MMA fans who truly understand the nuances of the sport can appreciate just how brilliant of a performance that was by the champion. Per Fox Sports UFC, Johnson had a witty response to a question about his record-setting performance during the post-fight press conference:
Size bias, a non-stereotypical fighter persona and a lack of main-event level push from the promotion don’t allow Johnson to receive the attention he deserves. However, something tells me Mighty Mouse might be OK soaring, while still flying under the radar.
Here’s a look at the complete results table for the event.
Michael Bisping Keeps Alternating Wins and Losses
Michael “The Count” Bisping hasn’t won or lost consecutive fights in eight straight outings. On Saturday, he showed great resolve, excellent stamina and awesome takedown defense against C.B. Dollaway. Bisping took a hard left hook that dropped him in the first round. It looked for a moment like he might be stopped, but the 36-year-old veteran quickly regained his wherewithal and survived the round.
Dollaway is a former All-American wrestler from Arizona State University, but he couldn’t consistently take Bisping down. Dollaway seemed to tire himself out in the process.
Despite being five years older than his opponent, Bisping had the clear edge in cardio as he outworked Dollaway in the last two rounds to earn the victory.
It was an entertaining scrap, and one that Fox Sports’ Damon Martin believed deserved to be named Fight of the Night:
The prelim battle between Chad Laprise and Bryan Barberena was recognized, and it was a good fight, but Martin might be on to something with his assessment of the Bisping-Dollaway bout.
Thomas Almeida Is One to Watch
With a diverse striking attack and a nose to finish, the 23-year-old Thomas Almeida has the look of a future star. On Saturday, he ran his record to 19-0 with 18 wins by stoppage when he scored a first-round TKO win over veteran Yves Jabouin.
Almeida‘s ability to change levels with his strikes and do damage with his punches and kicks is noteworthy. If he can continue to develop his takedown defense and sharpen his above-average jiu-jitsu skills, he could be in position to challenge for a title in the next two to three years.
Quinton “Rampage” Jackson is back in the UFC…for now, at least. He’s also once again in the win column.
Facing Brazilian slugger Fabio Maldonado at UFC 186, Jackson pressed the action early, pushing his foe to the cage and slinging heavy hands with r…
Quinton “Rampage” Jackson is back in the UFC…for now, at least. He’s also once again in the win column.
Facing Brazilian slugger Fabio Maldonado at UFC 186, Jackson pressed the action early, pushing his foe to the cage and slinging heavy hands with reckless abandon. While Maldonado pulled together some offense as the fight wore on, he had little answer to Jackson’s pressure. The result was a clear-cut unanimous decision in favor of the former champ (to the tune of 29-28, 30-27, 30-27).
While a four-fight winning streak would usually prompt questions regarding his place in the rankings and whether or not he is angling for a run at the title, things are very different for Rampage. His ongoing legal dispute with Bellator makes it unclear where his fighting future will take place and whether the next cage he fights in will be octagonal or circular.
So why not look at a few different potential opponents for Rampage across both promotions?
Linton Vassell
Bellator‘s light heavyweight division is not particularly deep these days, but for what they lack in numbers, they make up in interesting European strikers. Any of them would be an interesting opponent for Jackson, but for where they are in the division and in their careers, the best option overall would likely be Linton Vassell.
Vassell, for those who missed him, earned a surprising shot at then-light heavyweight-champion Emanuel Newton in 2014 on the heels of a solid nine-fight winning streak. Vassell would prove himself to be a formidable fighter by repeatedly threatening Newton early in the fight, but he would be forced to tap to a fifth-round rear-naked choke. He has since bounced back with a knockout over Pride and UFC veteran Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou.
This would be the kind of fight Rampage has traditionally angled for, and it’s one that works out as a win-win for Bellator. A happy, winning Jackson is one that is more likely to stick around and, even if he loses and/or leaves, giving a bit of “the rub” to a long-term asset like Vassell is a wise move.
Ovince Saint Preux
Unlike Bellator, the UFC has a few different ways they can approach promoting a fight with Rampage. The UFC can either bend to his wishes and give him winnable fights against people that aren’t “cowards” (or, as everyone else calls them, wrestlers) or they can take the pro wrestling approach and try to build up a younger fighter at his expense.
Ovince Saint Preux is the kind of fighter who could use a fight against somebody like Jackson. Strikeforce’s pet project has been solid in the UFC thus far, amassing a 6-1 record with his most recent wins being emphatic knockouts of Mauricio “Shogun” Rua and Patrick Cummins. However, while OSP has been impressive in the cage thus far, fans have yet to catch on to him.
A fight with Jackson would be the biggest of Saint Preux‘s life and could build his brand in a huge way. It would also be fun to see how Jackson attempts to diminish OSP‘s skills after he loses a contest that mostly takes place standing.
Mark Hunt
This might sound a little bit crazy, or it might sound like a fan dream match…but hear me out! Ol‘ Rampage is still staring down dozens of Viacom-owned lawyers but, quite frankly, that isn’t the UFC’s problem. According to MMAFighting.com‘s Luke Thomas, the reversal of the preliminary injunction opens the door to a return if Rampage is willing to have a relatively quick turnaround:
Attorneys contacted by MMA Fighting were split on opinion about Rampage’s future. Some viewed judge Kennedy’s decision as proof that Bellator‘s case against Rampage just got significantly stronger in terms of damages. Others believe once Saturday passes, Bellator still has a larger case against Rampage, but nothing to stop him from competing again in the short run. Bellator will have to file another preliminary injunction to halt any subsequent UFC fight, but if one fight’s already been allowed, is there really any additional harm in two or three more?
The UFC, still searching for ways to get fans to tune in, would be wise to try to get as much out of Jackson as they can. The light heavyweight division is booked solid at this time, with few viable opponents outside Saint Preux. The heavyweight division, however, has more than a few interesting possibilities, in particular UFC Fight Night 65 main eventer Mark Hunt.
Hunt faces StipeMiocic in a couple weeks and, if Rampage gets a clean bill of health in his post-fight evaluation and Hunt can leave Adelaide, Australia unscathed, the timing would be pretty much perfect. The bout would be fun, easy for fans to get behind and would be a strong Fight Night main event or pay-per-view co-headline.
UFC flyweight champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson shined again on Saturday at UFC 186. He set a promotional record with the latest submission win in history when he forced Kyoji Horiguchi to tap out to an armbar with just one second remaining in…
UFC flyweight champion Demetrious “Mighty Mouse” Johnson shined again on Saturday at UFC 186. He set a promotional record with the latest submission win in history when he forced KyojiHoriguchi to tap out to an armbar with just one second remaining in the fight.
It was an example of what a supremely talented, skilled and superbly conditioned mixed martial artist can accomplish.
Fox Sports UFC confirmed the record-setting performance and Johnson’s well-deserved piece of the fight night bonuses:
Here’s a look at the other winners from the evening’s bouts:
Rampage Rules
In his return to the UFC, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson proved he could still stand and trade with the best of them. He won a unanimous decision over the rugged Fabio Maldonado.
Jackson added in some much-needed diversity to his striking game and more active ground defense. He employed kicks and head movement and showed off more fluidity than we’re used to seeing from him.
Maldonado did shoot for the uncharacteristic takedown—which he landed—but he ate some surprising elbows from Rampage once the legend’s back hit the canvas. In previous bouts, Rampage would be very inactive off his back and unable to improve his position.
Maldonado isn’t exactly the most skilled fighter from top control, but Rampage has still shown some willingness to expand his game. At 36 years old, he might be too old for it to have a significant impact on his career, but it’s still something.
At the post-fight press conference, Jackson gave respect to Maldonado for his toughness:
Jackson did land some shots that would have normally hurt previous opponents, but the Brazilian took them all without much issue.
Bisping Outlasts Dollaway
Cardio was king in the Michael Bisping vs. C.B. Dollaway match. After nearly knocking Bisping out in the first round with a left hand, Dollaway couldn’t keep up the pace against the Englishman in the second and third rounds.
Bisping showed a return to his stellar takedown defense and forced Dollaway to lumber around on his feet for most of the fight. Bisping exposed Dollaway‘s less-than-smooth striking and simply outworked his opponent to earn the victory.
Despite alternating wins and losses over his last eight fights, Bisping remained confident in his place among the top fighters in the world in the post-fight press conference:
Almeida Is a Future Star
At just 23 years old, the best is yet to come for Thomas Almeida. If you’re a bantamweight in the UFC, that’s got to be a scary concept. The Brazilian vanquished veteran Yves Jabouin in the first round via TKO to earn the other POTN bonus.
The win moved him to 19-0 overall in his career with 18 of the wins coming by stoppage.
The way Almeida changes levels on his strikes and gets power behind most of the attacks is impressive. UFC fans haven’t gotten an opportunity to see his grappling skills, but he’s got the basis for a solid jiu-jitsu game as well.
Jabouin did take him down impressively at one point, but Almeida was able to work his way back to his feet. If he continues to work on his jiu-jitsu and takedown defense, he’ll be a title contender in the next two to three years.
Saturday night, the UFC made its return to Montreal with a card that ended up being one of the most exciting in recent memory. UFC 186 marked the return to pay-per-view and was put on the back of UFC Flyweight Champion Demetrious Johnson, as he defende…
Saturday night, the UFC made its return to Montreal with a card that ended up being one of the most exciting in recent memory. UFC 186 marked the return to pay-per-view and was put on the back of UFC Flyweight Champion Demetrious Johnson, as he defended his belt against top Japanese star KyojiHoriguchi.
Also on that card was a middleweight scrap, which saw long-time UFC vets Michael Bisping and CB Dollaway meet up in a Fight of the Night performance. It was a back-and-forth fight in which both men saw their moments, but Bisping ended up taking a unanimous decision after a couple sticky situations.
It was a big fight for both men, as both needed to get back into the win column. For Bisping, he got that win, while Dollaway now has to go back to the drawing board and search again for a victory in his next affair.
So where does Dollaway go from this loss? Let’s take a look at three matchups he could see in the near future.
GegardMousasi-Costa Philippou loser
The Philippines is set to have its first-ever UFC show in the month of May. On that stacked main card is an intriguing middleweight bout, as power boxer Costa Philippou looks to thwart the rapid assent of former Strikeforce champion GegardMousasi.
The matchup between the two promises to be fireworks, as both are proficient on the feet. A win for either man pushes them into title talks, while the loser finds himself on the outside looking in, in need of a dance partner to get them back on track.
That’s where Dollaway comes in. Seeing as Mousasi, Philippou and Dollaway are all top-20, if not top-15, middleweights in the UFC, the losers could find value in fighting one another.
My preference is Dollaway vs. Philippou, though if Mousasi were to lose his bout in the Philippines, he would certainly be a fun matchup for “The Doberman” as well.
Kelvin Gastelum-Nate Marquardt loser
Speaking of international UFC fights on the horizon, UFC 188 in Mexico City plays host to a pivotal middleweight bout of its own. Star of the future Kelvin Gastelum makes his return to 185 pounds after weight troubles at 170 to take on long-time vet Nate Marquardt on the main card.
Marquardt, a former King of Pancrase and Strikeforce champ, has had his ups and downs since returning to the UFC but has seemingly righted the ship since moving back to 185. Gastelum, at just 23 years old, has already become a contender, despite his young age and seeming inexperience.
The winner moves closer to the title picture. The other could possibly be booked with fellow top middleweight Dollaway, whose style coincides perfectly with either man.
It’s an intriguing option, to say the least.
Ed Herman
Ed Herman is coming off a loss to Derek Brunson. Dollaway is coming off a loss to the aforementioned Bisping.
Might these two men find common ground that could lead to a pivotal bout at 185?
Both men are TUFrunner-ups who have had long careers in the UFC thus far. They have similar credentials, though one could argue that Dollaway has been more of a success to this point.
Dollaway is a boxing wrestler. Herman is a boxing jiu-jitsu artist.
Styles make fights, and these two have the type of styles that could lead to a fun, strategic chess match.
How odd it must feel for Demetrious Johnson to be a master of something so many people actively want to ignore.
Johnson presented a clinic on the art of being Demetrious Johnson on Saturday at UFC 186. He efficiently sucked the life out of game challen…
How odd it must feel for Demetrious Johnson to be a master of something so many people actively want to ignore.
Johnson presented a clinic on the art of being Demetrious Johnson on Saturday at UFC 186. He efficiently sucked the life out of game challenger KyojiHoriguchi during five grueling rounds before retaining his flyweight title via armbar with one second left on the clock.
It was another signature performance from the best 125-pound fighter on the planet. Great, because once again, Johnson looked a generation ahead of his next-best competition, winning just about every exchange, every moment of another high-profile bout.
Forgettable, because it felt like a tedious rerun of something we’d all seen before, and fans inside Montreal’s Bell Center reportedly began heading for the exits long before the end:
“I didn’t notice,” UFC President Dana White said at the post-fight press conference when asked about the walkouts by MMAjunkie’s Brent Brookhouse and Matt Erickson. “I don’t give a s–t what people are doing. I’m watching the fight.”
Johnson’s victory set a record for the latest stoppage in UFC history, and the fight company’s commentary team tried to make a big deal out of that fact as the pay-per-view broadcast ended.
In all ways, it was a fitting accolade for the flyweight champion.
The record will effectively be unbreakable—unless somebody can finish his or her opponent with less than one second remaining—but as a landmark achievement it felt unconvincing, with any fanfare over it invented as a way to try to celebrate Johnson’s underappreciated style.
He may well be the best overall fighter on the UFC roster. Watching him systematically torture the 125-pound class one doomed No. 1 contender at a time is as impressive as anything you can see inside the Octagon. He’s probably the organization’s most athletic champion and its most complete technician.
Unfortunately, a lot of MMA fans quite literally aren’t buying-in.
It’ll be a while before specific estimates are available, but the UFC 186 PPV is not expected to have sold well. An intended main event—a bantamweight title rematch between T.J. Dillashaw and Renan Barao—had to be postponed after an injury to Dillashaw. Quinton “Rampage” Jackson’s co-main event bout against Fabio Maldonado was on, off and then on again due the machinations of ongoing legal action against Jackson.
Previous PPVs headlined by Johnson have posted tepid box office results. Last June’s UFC 174 featured his bout against Ali Bagautinov and was thought to have garnered just 115,000 buys. Four months later, a UFC 178 scrap with Chris Cariaso may have amassed 205,000.
As an opponent, Horiguchi was arguably more dangerous than either Bagautinov or Cariaso. As a drawing card, he was likely even lesser known. That does not bode well for UFC 186’s final sales numbers.
Many of the reasons why Johnson hasn’t made an impression on consumers are not his fault. He simply possesses a superfecta of factors that make it hard for UFC fans to invest in him. He’s small. He’s relatively soft-spoken. He has had no iconic challengers. He is technically superior but not particularly fearsome.
Put all those things together and you get one of the UFC’s best pound-for-pound fighters and one of its worst draws. At this point, it’s unclear what, if anything, can be done about it.
“It’s kind of sad that Demetrious Johnson has this thing hanging over his head that he’s not this, he’s not that,” White said, per Brookhouse and Erickson. “… He comes in with a game plan and he follows it to the letter. He’s just one of these guys who’s got to put his head down, keep doing his thing and you just have to respect him. Anderson Silva wasn’t the biggest star while he was champion. Chuck Liddell wasn’t a big star for a while. His day will come.”
Will it?
In order for that to happen, it seems as though Johnson will need a new and fiery 125-pound contender to emerge. He’ll need someone else to stoke the interest of the PPV-buying fight community, someone who is willing to play the ConorMcGregor to Johnson’s Jose Aldo. To date, there isn’t really anyone like that on the horizon, though, admittedly, these things can happen quickly.
Personality-wise, the closest thing the flyweight class has to a superstar might be John Dodson. Dodson has already lost once to Johnson in January 2013, but the two are slated for a rematch when Dodson can return from a knee injury.
Competition-wise, the biggest threat in the weight class might eventually come from Olympic gold medal wrestler Henry Cejudo. But Cejudo is just two fights into his UFC career and has had trouble consistently making the 125-pound limit. A fight between the two of them would be stylistically fascinating but could be another PPV dud.
If Johnson’s career-making feud never comes, then fans will have to foster a grudging respect for him through the sheer repetitiveness of his dominance. Saturday night marked his eighth straight win and the sixth successful defense of the flyweight crown. He hasn’t lost since 2011, when Dominick Cruz bested him in a bout for the UFC bantamweight title.
Early on, it appeared Horiguchi might present an interesting riddle for Johnson to try to unravel. The 24-year-old native of Gunma, Japan, packed power in his strikes and possessed an awkward and elusive style.
Soon enough, though, Johnson began forcing Horiguchi to the mat with a relentless string of takedowns. He also outhustled the challenger on his feet, and his transitions between striking exchanges and takedown attempts were moments of great beauty.
As Horiguchi grew exhausted by the pace, the danger he presented leeched away, and eventually it became clear we were dealing with another patented Mighty Mouse shutout. He probably would’ve scored a clean sweep on the judges’ scorecards had the fight made it that far.
The arm bar he locked on Horiguchi just before the final horn was also breathtaking in its speed and almost mechanical perfection. To see him win via stoppage with just one second left, however, only seemed to make the performance more frustrating.
Somewhere before it happened, we’d reached a tipping point. Right now, it feels as though if you’ve seen one of Johnson’s fights (and he’s had an even dozen of them in the UFC), you’ve seen them all. As the seconds ticked away against Horiguchi, even Johnson’s staunchest supporters—like this writer, for example—had to admit things were getting monotonous.
Nobody can keep up with him. Nobody can compete with his comprehensive arsenal of MMA skills. In recent days, UFC matchmakers have been unable to find a flyweight opponent who could even make a fight of it.
Until they do, Johnson will go on being one of our sport’s least prized attractions. He’ll just keep piling up largely unwatched victories, beating opponents and breaking records that both feel dubious at best.
Alexis Davis was finally able to get a win over Sarah Kaufman at UFC 186. This was their third time facing off against each other, and Davis pulled off a great armbar submission for the win.
Kaufman and Davis are two highly ranked women who have both r…
Alexis Davis was finally able to get a win over Sarah Kaufman at UFC 186. This was their third time facing off against each other, and Davis pulled off a great armbar submission for the win.
Kaufman and Davis are two highly ranked women who have both recently suffered defeats at the hands of current bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey. With that in mind, these individuals should be considered for Ally-Gator’s next opponent.