Matt Brown Reveals Details About Hotel Attack In Brazil

UFC welterweight Matt Brown faced a lot of adversity this past weekend in Brazil. First off he enraged the Brazilian crowds during the weigh-ins for his feature prelim bout with home favorite Demian Maia, flipping them off amid chants of ‘you’re going to die’ from the 15,000 strong crowd. Then came the night of the

The post Matt Brown Reveals Details About Hotel Attack In Brazil appeared first on LowKick MMA.

UFC welterweight Matt Brown faced a lot of adversity this past weekend in Brazil. First off he enraged the Brazilian crowds during the weigh-ins for his feature prelim bout with home favorite Demian Maia, flipping them off amid chants of ‘you’re going to die’ from the 15,000 strong crowd. Then came the night of the fight, and ‘The Immortal’ was mobbed by angry fans on the way to the octagon. He was struck a number of times, finally striking back with a right hand as one fan yanked the hood of his Reebok outfit.

Demian-Maia-vs.-Matt-Brown[1]

It’s never a good start whn you get hit before you’ve even got started fighting, whether it impacted on Brown’s performance is unknown, but he certainly got dominated by the far superior grappler. Maia controlled ‘The Immortal’ much to the delight of the 45,000 seater stadium which was packed to the gills. The partisan supporters raised the roof on the arena as Maia submitted Brown in the third round.

Here’s the video replay of the fight before the fight:
So after taking some strife before the fact, then getting burnt by Maia in rather convincing fashion, it looked as though Brown’s excursion to Brazil couldn’t get much worse. That statement couldn’t be any further from the truth, as ‘The Immortal’ was jumped by an old acquaintance in the UFC 198 host hotel the morning after the event…

continue…

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Is Stipe Miocic the Right Man to Lead Wild & Wacky UFC Heavyweight Division?

There’s no telling how long Stipe Miocic’s reign atop the topsy-turvy UFC heavyweight division might last.
This isn’t a weight class known for making long commitments, after all.
But Miocic seems like a good dude, and however long he …

There’s no telling how long Stipe Miocic’s reign atop the topsy-turvy UFC heavyweight division might last.

This isn’t a weight class known for making long commitments, after all.

But Miocic seems like a good dude, and however long he manages to stay atop the bucking bronco that is 265 pounds, it figures to be a fun time for all.

The Ohio native appeared eerily calm leading up to his surprise knockout of Fabricio Werdum at UFC 198. He casually champed his gum as he walked the aisle to the cage, apparently unperturbed by the 45,000 fans in Curitiba, Brazil, many of whom were literally shouting for his death.

Miocic was equally cool and composed during the two minutes, 47 seconds he spent in the cage with the reigning UFC heavyweight champion. He looked loose, slinging easy punches and gliding around the cage with that same expression on his face—like a man out for a Sunday stroll.

Perhaps Miocic’s Midwestern cool unnerved even Werdum. Maybe that’s what ultimately spurred the champ into a series of reckless, lunging attacks that ended when Miocic shut his lights out with a counter right hand just after the midway point of the opening stanza.

Werdum came in a slight favorite according to Odds Shark, but it was Miocic who emerged as the 19th man to hold the UFC heavyweight title.

When it was over, he sprinted across the mat and vaulted the cage into the throng of his coaches and cornermen.

“I’m a world champ!” Miocic shouted. “I’m a world champ!”

It was a moment immortalized on the UFC’s official Twitter timeline:

As MMA Junkie’s Ben Fowlkes wrote, it seemed in those early moments as if Miocic was trying to convince himself of it.

Something about the way he said it, you got the sense that he couldn’t quite believe it yet. It was as if he were trying, through sheer repetition, to get himself to accept this brand new fact about his life. Or maybe he feared it was all a beautiful dream, and he wanted to know what the words felt like on his lips before he woke up.

Is it a dubious honor, to be UFC heavyweight champ? To be sure.

Remember, this is a championship so mired in instability and inactivity that it sometimes seems cursed. No man has ever successfully defended it more than twice. Heavyweight title reigns typically end painfully, prematurely and with a strong undercurrent of embarrassment.

Take Werdum, for example. Last week, we were wondering aloud if he would be the one to finally lead the heavyweight ranks out of the shadows. This week we’re left with the lasting image of him slumped against the cage, trying to figure out how all that promise could evaporate during the split second between when Miocic’s fist collided with his chin and his body landed on the canvas.

Before Werdum, we thought Cain Velasquez might be the guy.

Before Velasquez, it was Brock Lesnar.

And before Lesnar, well, you get the picture…

So you’ll forgive us this week if we don’t spend a lot of time scratching our heads over whether Miocic can finally reverse the curse and bring some stability to a division that has never really had any.

Let’s just say this: If you need someone to be the champion in the UFC’s wildest, wackiest division, Miocic seems like as good a choice as any.

For starters, there’s the obvious stuff: At 33 years old, he’s a veritable spring chicken in a weight class dominated by graybeards and the stars of bygone days. At 15-2, it feels like he’s still in the midst of his prime as a fighter—maybe just coming into it. Those two things alone set him apart from most of the competition.

Miocic lost a 2012 bout to Stefan Struve via TKO and then rattled off three straight wins before losing a questionable decision to Junior Dos Santos in December 2014. Aside from that, he’s come mostly as good as advertised.

At 6’4”, 240 pounds, he’s a midsized, athletic heavyweight who can out-slug most opponents his own stature, while out-maneuvering and out-quicking those who are bigger. To date, 12 of his career wins have ended in stoppages, and his striking-heavy style means he can make an exciting matchup with just about anybody.

Miocic seems like just as good a candidate to head up this crazy division outside the cage, too.

You get the impression this guy doesn’t take himself too seriously.

Miocic is that extreme rarity in combat sports—a fighter who is actually worth following on social media. Whether he’s retweeting the haters or live-tweeting the playoff games of his beloved Cleveland Cavaliers, it’s usually pretty entertaining.

But we’re not going to lie to you, he’ll have some tough fights coming up for as long as he remains champion. Nothing but tough fights, actually.

There have been immediate calls for a Werdum rematch, but in the interest of busting the title picture out of its seemingly endless cycle of do overs, Alistair Overeem may have the inside track for No. 1-contender status.

After a rocky start to his own UFC run, Overeem has righted the ship with four straight wins. He’s widely considered on the downside of a long career but will still make a compelling and difficult test if he does get the green light for a title fight.

Assuming Miocic retains his belt there, it seems logical that the winner of the scheduled bout between Velasquez and Travis Browne at UFC 200 would be up next. That would shape up as a doozy.

But all that’s getting ahead of ourselves. To try to predict even that modestly into the future assumes a level of continuity that the heavyweight division has never been able to muster.

It’s foolish to try to pretend we know how long Miocic can be champion, or even which tests will greet him. In truth, we should probably expect delays, misfires and a fair amount of chaos.

But with Miocic at the helm, perhaps for the first time in a long time there is some cause to feel optimistic about the UFC heavyweight division.

We will get some good fights out of it and maybe even some quality entertainment too.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 198 Results: Matches to Make for the Winners and Losers

And new.
That’s what UFC announcer Bruce Buffer had the privilege of saying at the end of UFC 198 in Curitiba, Brazil. Stipe Miocic caught an oncoming Fabricio Werdum with a clean shot that would have floored King Kong himself. And now there is a new k…

And new.

That’s what UFC announcer Bruce Buffer had the privilege of saying at the end of UFC 198 in Curitiba, Brazil. Stipe Miocic caught an oncoming Fabricio Werdum with a clean shot that would have floored King Kong himself. And now there is a new king on top of the heavyweight division’s Empire State Building.

While the heavyweights brought it in the main event, there were plenty of other significant results coming out of Brazil this weekend.

The question now turns to what is next for the winners and losers of UFC 198’s bouts. UFC matchmakers Joe Silva and Sean Shelby have plenty of options at their table. What will they choose? We attempt to help clear the waters and offer sound advice for what fights to make as 2016 rolls forward.

Let’s look at what comes next with the matches to make following UFC 198.

Begin Slideshow

UFC Rankings Update: Stipe Miocic Soars Following Title-Sealing KO

There was a huge amount of heavy-hitting action at last weekend’s (Sat., May 14, 2016) UFC 198 from the Arena da Baixada in Curitiba, Brazil, and not surpisingly, the official UFC rankings have echoed that. Obviously the biggest shift was made by newly-crowned heavyweight champion Stipe Miocic, who knocked out former champ Fabricio Werdum with a massive

The post UFC Rankings Update: Stipe Miocic Soars Following Title-Sealing KO appeared first on LowKick MMA.

There was a huge amount of heavy-hitting action at last weekend’s (Sat., May 14, 2016) UFC 198 from the Arena da Baixada in Curitiba, Brazil, and not surpisingly, the official UFC rankings have echoed that.

Obviously the biggest shift was made by newly-crowned heavyweight champion Stipe Miocic, who knocked out former champ Fabricio Werdum with a massive counter right hand that changed the UFC’s heaviest division in a big way by injecting some new (and perhaps unexpected) blood at the top. For the victory, Miocic debuted on the pound-for-pound rankings list, coming in at No. 11. Werdum dropped a lofty 11 spots as a result of the loss.

At heavyweight, Werdum dropped to the No. 1 spot, sending Cain Velasquez and Alistair Overeem down to No. 2 and No. 3, respectively.

Several other top-flight fighters also benefitted from “Vai Cavalo’s” drop, as the previous Nos. 5-12 fighters each rose up a spot, including Conor McGregor to No. 7, while previous No. 14-ranked pound-for-pound fighter Joanna Jedrzejczyk rose up two spots to No. 12.

In other movement, No. 3-ranked middleweight Vitor Belfort stayed put at that spot even though he was largely dominated by No. 2-ranked Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza in UFC 198’s co-main event. Also at 185, Thiago Santos made his debut at No. 14 after finishing longtime vet Nate Marquardt in Curitiba, pushing another longtime vet in Dan Henderson to the No. 15 spot.

At welterweight, Demian Maia continued his climb back up the rankings after his submission victory over Matt Brown, his fifth straight. The talented Brazilian rose two spots to No. 4, pushing Carlos Condit and Johny Hendricks each down a spot to Nos. 5 and 6, respectively. Gunnar Nelson also traded spots with Kelvin Gastelum, rising to No. 12 and forcing Gastelum down to No. 13.

Here are the fully updated rankings courtesy of UFC.com:

POUND-FOR-POUND
1 Jon Jones
2 Demetrious Johnson
3 Luke Rockhold
4 Dominick Cruz +1
5 Rafael Dos Anjos +1
6 Robbie Lawler +1
7 Conor McGregor +1
8 Daniel Cormier +1
9 Jose Aldo +1
10 Chris Weidman +1
11 Frankie Edgar +1
12 Joanna Jedrzejczyk +2
13 Stipe Miocic *NR
14 TJ Dillashaw -1
15 Fabricio Werdum -11

FLYWEIGHT
Champion: Demetrious Johnson
1 Joseph Benavidez
2 Henry Cejudo
3 Jussier Formiga
4 Kyoji Horiguchi
5 Ian McCall
6 John Moraga
7 Zach Makovsky
8 Wilson Reis
9 Dustin Ortiz
10 Ali Bagautinov
11 Justin Scoggins
12 Louis Smolka
13 Ray Borg
14 Sergio Pettis
15 Ben Nguyen

BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Dominick Cruz
1 TJ Dillashaw
2 Renan Barao
3 Urijah Faber
4 Aljamain Sterling
5 Raphael Assuncao
6 Michael McDonald
7 Thomas Almeida
8 Bryan Caraway
9 Takeya Mizugaki
10 John Dodson
11 John Lineker +1
12 Johnny Eduardo -1
13 Frankie Saenz
14 Jimmie Rivera
15 Eddie Wineland

FEATHERWEIGHT
Champion: Conor McGregor
1 Jose Aldo
2 Frankie Edgar
3 Chad Mendes
4 Max Holloway
5 Ricardo Lamas
6 Cub Swanson
7 Charles Oliveira
8 Dennis Bermudez
9 Jeremy Stephens
10 Hacran Dias
11 Darren Elkins
12 Brian Ortega
13 Tatsuya Kawajiri
14 Yair Rodriguez
15 Mirsad Bektic

LIGHTWEIGHT
Champion: Rafael Dos Anjos
1 Khabib Nurmagomedov
2 Eddie Alvarez
3 Tony Ferguson
4 Donald Cerrone
5 Nate Diaz
6 Edson Barboza
7 Anthony Pettis
8 Michael Johnson
9 Michael Chiesa
10 Beneil Dariush
11 Dustin Poirier
12 Al Iaquinta +1
13 Bobby Green -1
14 Rashid Magomedov +1
15 Evan Dunham -1

WELTERWEIGHT
Champion: Robbie Lawler
1 Rory MacDonald
2 Stephen Thompson
3 Tyron Woodley
4 Demian Maia +2
5 Carlos Condit -1
6 Johny Hendricks -1
7 Neil Magny
8 Matt Brown
9 Dong Hyun Kim
10 Tarec Saffiedine
11 Rick Story
12 Gunnar Nelson +1
13 Kelvin Gastelum -1
14 Hector Lombard
15 Thiago Alves

MIDDLEWEIGHT
Champion: Luke Rockhold
1 Chris Weidman
2 Jacare Souza
3 Vitor Belfort
4 Michael Bisping
5 Anderson Silva
6 Robert Whittaker
7 Lyoto Machida
8 Gegard Mousasi
9 Tim Kennedy
10 Uriah Hall
11 Derek Brunson
12 Thales Leites
13 Rafael Natal
14 Thiago Santos *NR
15 Dan Henderson -1

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Daniel Cormier
1 Jon Jones (Interim Champion)
2 Anthony Johnson
3 Glover Teixeira
4 Alexander Gustafsson
5 Ryan Bader
6 Ovince Saint Preux
7 Mauricio Rua +1
8 Rashad Evans -1
9 Jimi Manuwa
10 Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
11 Nikita Krylov +2
12 Corey Anderson
13 Ilir Latifi +1
14 Patrick Cummins -3
15 Gian Villante

HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Stipe Miocic
1 Fabricio Werdum -1
2 Cain Velasquez -1
3 Alistair Overeem -1
4 Junior Dos Santos
5 Ben Rothwell
6 Andrei Arlovski
7 Travis Browne
8 Mark Hunt
9 Josh Barnett
10 Roy Nelson
11 Derrick Lewis +1
12 Frank Mir -1
13 Stefan Struve
14 Ruslan Magomedov
15 Alexey Oliynyk

WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT
Champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk
1 Claudia Gadelha
2 Carla Esparza
3 Rose Namajunas
4 Tecia Torres
5 Valerie Letourneau
6 Jessica Penne
7 Karolina Kowalkiewicz
8 Paige VanZant
9 Maryna Moroz
10 Michelle Waterson
11 Joanne Calderwood
12 Randa Markos
13 Jessica Aguilar
14 Juliana Lima
15 Justine Kish

WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Miesha Tate
1 Holly Holm
2 Ronda Rousey
3 Cat Zingano
4 Amanda Nunes
5 Julianna Pena
6 Sara McMann
7 Jessica Eye
8 Liz Carmouche
9 Valentina Shevchenko
10 Raquel Pennington
11 Bethe Correia
12 Germaine de Randamie
13 Lauren Murphy
14 Ashlee Evans-Smith +1
15 Marion Reneau -1

 

 

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UFC 198 Medical Suspensions: Fabricio Werdum Out For 45 Days

With every decision comes a consequence and for those fighters who took part in battle this past at UFC 198, it’s their time to faces those consequences in the form of medical suspensions. Some of the more notable suspensions include Fabricio Werdum, Leslie Smith, Nate Marquardt and Patrick Cummins being out of action for 45

The post UFC 198 Medical Suspensions: Fabricio Werdum Out For 45 Days appeared first on LowKick MMA.

With every decision comes a consequence and for those fighters who took part in battle this past at UFC 198, it’s their time to faces those consequences in the form of medical suspensions.

Some of the more notable suspensions include Fabricio Werdum, Leslie Smith, Nate Marquardt and Patrick Cummins being out of action for 45 days.

UFC 198 took place on May 14th at the 40,000-seat Arena da Baixada in Curitiba, Parana, Brazil. The prelims aired on UFC Fight Pass and FOX Sports 1. The main card aired on PPV.

The event was headlined by a heavyweight title clash between Werdum and Stipe Miocic. The co-main event featured a middleweight bout between Belfort and Ronaldo Souza. 

Here are the entire medical suspensions:

Fabricio Werdum: suspended 45 days with no contact during training for 30 days

Vitor Belfort: suspended 60 days with no contact during training for 45 days

Leslie Smith: suspended 45 days with no contact during training for 30 days

Warlley Alves: suspended 180 days due to a facial injury, though a physician can clear him early

Nate Marquardt: suspended 45 days with no contact during training for 30 days

Yancy Medeiros: suspended 180 days due to a facial injury, though a physician can clear him early

Patrick Cummins: suspended 45 days with no contact during training for 30 days

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UFC 198 Results/Highlights: Miocic Shocks the World, Souza Breezes Past Belfort, Cyborg Savages Smith + More


(“Hey Fabricio, it’s me Dan. I know this probably isn’t the time to tell you this, but you really dun f*cked up, kid.”via Getty)

Fabricio Werdum may have only been a -185 favorite heading into his UFC 198 title tilt with Stipe Miocic on Saturday, but the consensus across the board seemed to be that he would either utilize his vastly-improved striking skills to put away his Cleveland-born opponent on the feet or take him to the mat and submit him using his world-renowned Jiu Jitsu. This was the man who defeated Cain Velasquez, after all, and was hoping to kickstart his legacy as “the greatest heavyweight of all time” with a big win in front of 45,000 Brazilian fans.

The Fabricio Werdum that actually showed up at UFC 198, however, could not have looked further from the greatness he so desired. Chalk it up to blind confidence or whatever you will, but “Vai Cavalo” — a man who has not only submitted 3 of the greatest heavyweights of all time, but dominated the likes of Mark Hunt and Travis Browne in recent appearances — appeared to temporarily lose complete control of both his body and mind on Saturday night. It was quite possibly the most mind-blowingly stupid performance since Koji Oishi tried to block Nick Diaz’s punches with punches, and the result was a new champion who was all but handed the belt on a silver platter.

The post UFC 198 Results/Highlights: Miocic Shocks the World, Souza Breezes Past Belfort, Cyborg Savages Smith + More appeared first on Cagepotato.


(“Hey Fabricio, it’s me Dan. I know this probably isn’t the time to tell you this, but you really dun f*cked up, kid.”via Getty)

Fabricio Werdum may have only been a -185 favorite heading into his UFC 198 title tilt with Stipe Miocic on Saturday, but the consensus across the board seemed to be that he would either utilize his vastly-improved striking skills to put away his Cleveland-born opponent on the feet or take him to the mat and submit him using his world-renowned Jiu Jitsu. This was the man who defeated Cain Velasquez, after all, and was hoping to kickstart his legacy as “the greatest heavyweight of all time” with a big win in front of 45,000 Brazilian fans.

The Fabricio Werdum that actually showed up at UFC 198, however, could not have looked further from the greatness he so desired. Chalk it up to blind confidence or whatever you will, but “Vai Cavalo” — a man who has not only submitted 3 of the greatest heavyweights of all time, but dominated the likes of Mark Hunt and Travis Browne in recent appearances — appeared to temporarily lose complete control of both his body and mind on Saturday night. It was quite possibly the most mind-blowingly stupid performance since Koji Oishi tried to block Nick Diaz’s punches with punches, and the result was a new champion who was all but handed the belt on a silver platter.

It cannot be understated how surreal it was to see a fighter with Werdum’s technical prowess literally charge face first into the fists of his opponent while throwing the kind of telegraphed 1-2 punches usually found on an episode of Cops. He didn’t even cut off the cage, for Christ’s sake! THIS IS DAY ONE STUFF, FABRICIO.

In the end, it’s hard not to see Werdum’s performance at UFC 198 as anything but reckless. He’s asking for a quick rematch at UFC 200, because of course he is, and given the way in which the UFC operates these days, it’s very likely that he’ll receive it. Until that day comes, however, there won’t be enough “happy face” masks in the world to suppress his sadness.

Rather than focus on Vitor Belfort‘s nearly-as-stupid decision to pull guard against Ronaldo Souza and get immediately TKO’d in last weekend’s co-main event, we figured it would be nice to highlight some of the positive takeaways from UFC 198. First up on that list, obviously, would have to be Cris Cyborg‘s long-awaited UFC debut. Paired up against self-admitted journeyman Leslie Smith, the current Invicta featherweight champion looked faster, more dynamic, and more technical with her strikes than ever before… a scary notion if you’re, say, the one woman who has been needling her for what feels like a decade now. The end result of Cyborg’s time away from the octagon, in any case, was an absolutely savage ass-kicking.

Smith may be protesting the stoppage to anyone who will listen, but really, referee Eduardo Herdy was only putting a stop to the inevitable before it got out of hand. The fact is that Smith landed maybe 2 punches in 80 seconds and was caught between a rock and a hard place (which, conveniently, are the names Cyborg has bestowed upon her fists) before the fight was stopped, so let’s just credit her for having the guts to take the fight in the first place and move on to figuring out how Cyborg can make the cut to 135, because that shit needs to happen.

Can we talk about Matt Brown for a second? What a week it has been for this poor guy. Paired up against Demian Maia in the featured prelim of the evening, “The Immortal” knew he would be entering hostile territory, but decided that the best course of action to combat this would be to flip off the Curitiba crowd during Friday’s weigh-ins. This…..did not seem like a strong move, in retrospect.

You can check out the highlights from Brown’s third round submission loss to Maia here, but basically, it looked like every performance that we’ve come to expect from Maia 2.0. More interesting, however, were the assaults Brown was forced to deal with both before and after the fight. The first you can check out above, wherein Brown is hit no less than three times on the way to the ring before giving the final assailant a once-in-a-lifetime souvenir.

Crazy, right? Well that doesn’t hold a candle to what happened in the hotel lobby after the fight. According to MiddleEasy, Brown was then sucker-punched by his former coach, Rodrigo Botti, in the hotel that he was staying in. The video above captures Brown’s friend, Vinicius “Pequeno” Lemos, laying some good old fashioned street justice on Botti while waiting for the police to arrive. Brazilians, man, they’re f*cking crazy.

The full results for UFC 198 are below.

Main card
Stipe Miocic def. Fabricio Werdum via first-round KO (2:47)
Jacare Souza def. Vitor Belfort via first-round TKO (4:38)
Cris Cyborg def. Leslie Smith via first-round TKO (1:21)
Mauricio Rua def. Corey Anderson via split decision
Bryan Barberena def. Warlley Alves via unanimous decision

Undercard
Demian Maia def. Matt Brown via submission (rear-naked choke) (R3, 4:31)
Thiago Santos def. Nate Marquardt via first-round KO (3:39)
Francisco Trinaldo def. Yancy Medeiros via unanimous decision
John Lineker def. Rob Font via unanimous decision
Antonio Rogerio Nogueira def. Patrick Cummins via first-round TKO (4:52)
Sergio Moraes vs. Luan Chagas ruled a draw
Renato Moicano def. Zubaira Tukhugov via split decision

The post UFC 198 Results/Highlights: Miocic Shocks the World, Souza Breezes Past Belfort, Cyborg Savages Smith + More appeared first on Cagepotato.