UFC Rankings Update: Miocic Breaks Into Top Five P4P

UFC 211 from Dallas, Texas last weekend (Sat. May 13, 2017) presented fight fans with quite the night of drama, knockouts, and perhaps the continuation of a record-breaking championship reign. Welterweight Demian Maia was able to solidify himself as the No. 1-contender for the 170-pound title, strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk put on a 25-minute clinic against

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UFC 211 from Dallas, Texas last weekend (Sat. May 13, 2017) presented fight fans with quite the night of drama, knockouts, and perhaps the continuation of a record-breaking championship reign.

Welterweight Demian Maia was able to solidify himself as the No. 1-contender for the 170-pound title, strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk put on a 25-minute clinic against challenger Jessica Andrade, and heavyweight champion Stipe Miocic made quick work of Junior dos Santos in a rematch of their epic initial encounter years ago.

The first updated rankings report since the Dallas event is now out, and you can check out the dramatic changes to the UFC’s ranking system here below:

POUND-FOR-POUND
1 Demetrious Johnson
2 Conor McGregor
3 Daniel Cormier
4 Jose Aldo
5 Stipe Miocic +1
6 Cody Garbrandt -1
7 Joanna Jedrzejczyk
8 Dominick Cruz
9 Tyron Woodley
10 Michael Bisping
11 Amanda Nunes
12 Max Holloway
13 TJ Dillashaw
14 Khabib Nurmagomedov
15 Frankie Edgar *NR

FLYWEIGHT
Champion: Demetrious Johnson
1 Joseph Benavidez
2 Henry Cejudo
3 Ray Borg
4 Wilson Reis
5 Jussier Formiga
6 Sergio Pettis
7 Brandon Moreno
8 Tim Elliott
9 Ian McCall
10 Dustin Ortiz
11 John Moraga
12 Ben Nguyen
13 Louis Smolka
14 Alexandre Pantoja
15 Ryan Benoit

BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Cody Garbrandt
1 Dominick Cruz
2 TJ Dillashaw
3 Raphael Assuncao
4 John Lineker
5 Jimmie Rivera
6 Bryan Caraway
7 John Dodson
8 Aljamain Sterling
9 Thomas Almeida
10 Johnny Eduardo
11 Eddie Wineland
12 Pedro Munhoz
13 Iuri Alcantara
14 Joe Soto
15 Rob Font

FEATHERWEIGHT
Champion: Jose Aldo
1 Max Holloway (Interim Champion)
2 Frankie Edgar
3 Ricardo Lamas
4 Cub Swanson
5 Chan Sung Jung
6 Anthony Pettis
7 Yair Rodriguez
8 Jeremy Stephens
9 Brian Ortega
10 Dennis Bermudez
11 Renato Moicano
12 Darren Elkins
13 Dooho Choi
14 Mirsad Bektic
15 Renan Barao

LIGHTWEIGHT
Champion: Conor McGregor
1 Khabib Nurmagomedov
2 Tony Ferguson
3 Eddie Alvarez
4 Edson Barboza +1
5 Rafael Dos Anjos -1
6 Michael Johnson
7 Michael Chiesa
8 Nate Diaz
9 Dustin Poirier
10 Beneil Dariush
11 Al Iaquinta
12 Kevin Lee
13 Evan Dunham
14 Gilbert Melendez
15 Francisco Trinaldo *NR

WELTERWEIGHT
Champion: Tyron Woodley
1 Demian Maia +2
2 Stephen Thompson -1
3 Robbie Lawler -1
4 Carlos Condit
5 Jorge Masvidal
6 Neil Magny
7 Dong Hyun Kim
8 Donald Cerrone
9 Gunnar Nelson
10 Kamaru Usman
11 Tarec Saffiedine
12 Ryan LaFlare
13 Santiago Ponzinibbio
14 Matt Brown
15 Leon Edwards

MIDDLEWEIGHT
Champion: Michael Bisping
1 Yoel Romero
2 Luke Rockhold
3 Robert Whittaker
4 Gegard Mousasi
5 Jacare Souza
6 Chris Weidman
7 Anderson Silva
8 Derek Brunson
9 Krzysztof Jotko
9 David Branch *NR
11 Vitor Belfort -1
12 Thales Leites -1
13 Uriah Hall -1
14 Sam Alvey -1
15 Daniel Kelly -1

LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Daniel Cormier
1 Alexander Gustafsson
2 Glover Teixeira
3 Jimi Manuwa
4 Mauricio Rua
5 Volkan Oezdemir
6 Corey Anderson
7 Misha Cirkunov
8 Ovince Saint Preux
9 Ilir Latifi
10 Rogerio Nogueira
11 Patrick Cummins
12 Tyson Pedro
13 Gian Villante +1
14 Jan Blachowicz -1
15 Gadzhimurad Antigulov *NR

HEAVYWEIGHT
Champion: Stipe Miocic
1 Fabricio Werdum
2 Cain Velasquez
3 Alistair Overeem
4 Junior Dos Santos
5 Francis Ngannou
6 Derrick Lewis
7 Mark Hunt
8 Andrei Arlovski
9 Travis Browne
10 Alexander Volkov
11 Stefan Struve
12 Tim Johnson
13 Marcin Tybura
14 Aleksei Oleinik
15 Daniel Omielanczuk

WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT
Champion: Joanna Jedrzejczyk
1 Claudia Gadelha
2 Karolina Kowalkiewicz
3 Rose Namajunas +1
4 Jessica Andrade -1
5 Tecia Torres
6 Michelle Waterson
7 Joanne Calderwood
8 Carla Esparza +1
9 Randa Markos -1
10 Maryna Moroz
11 Cortney Casey *NR
12 Paige VanZant -1
13 Felice Herrig
14 Cynthia Calvillo +1
15 Jessica Aguilar -3

WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT
Champion: Amanda Nunes
1 Valentina Shevchenko
2 Julianna Pena
3 Ronda Rousey
4 Raquel Pennington
5 Holly Holm
6 Sara McMann
7 Cat Zingano
8 Liz Carmouche
9 Alexis Davis
10 Germaine de Randamie
11 Bethe Correia
12 Marion Reneau
13 Ketlen Vieira
14 Katlyn Chookagian
15 Ashlee Evans-Smith

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Five Most Controversial Herb Dean Errors

After a controversial ending to the exciting back-and-forth bout between Dustin Poirier and Eddie Alvarez at last weekend’s (Sat., May 13, 2017) UFC 211 from the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, longtime MMA referee Herb Dean has fallen under an intense shroud of criticism from some of his MMA peers and many fans. Overall,

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After a controversial ending to the exciting back-and-forth bout between Dustin Poirier and Eddie Alvarez at last weekend’s (Sat., May 13, 2017) UFC 211 from the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, longtime MMA referee Herb Dean has fallen under an intense shroud of criticism from some of his MMA peers and many fans.

Overall, Dean has been a consistent veteran referee of the sport, even once earning the high praise of Dana White as the ‘best in the sport.’ But even the best make mistakes from time to time, and his doubters would definitely have you believe that Dean is slowly losing his edge as the best due to a series of inconsistent decisions in recent years.

That may or may not be true, but there’s no doubt that Dean has made some head-scratching errors in the cage lately nonetheless. Let’s take a look at five of the worst.

Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Dustin Poirier vs. Eddie Alvarez – UFC 211

We’ll get the freshest example of a Dean screw-up out of the way first. After the early part of this anticipated prelim card headliner saw “The Diamond” rock Alvarez with a bevy of big shots, the former champion rallied back impressively to actually land some big strikes of his own when it looked like he was finished.

He got Poirier to the ground, and with the current state of knees to a grounded opponent one of the biggest messes in MMA, unleashed three knees that two of which may have been legal under one set of rules of another, while the third was most definitely illegal.

It also injured Poirier to the point of where he said he could not continue, making it seem as if he won by disqualification. But Dean declared it a no contest, deeming Alvarez unintentional in his strike and saying he was simply caught up in the moment. But that could be said about any illegal strike in any fight, and the rules are in place for a reason. Many have agreed Dean made a huge error in calling this a NC, and Poirier is already appealing the decision.

Renan Barao vs. Urijah Faber – UFC 169

This bantamweight title bout in February 2014 was a showcase fight for Barao, who at the time was considered one of the top pound-for-pound fighters in the world. In a bit of hyperbole, Joe Rogan even called him the best.

Anyway, the Nova Uniao champion was having his way with Faber, who filled in for an injured Dominick Cruz, in the early-going of the fight, landing big shots and dropping the tough “The California Kid.” Faber may have been absorbing a lot of damage, yet he gave a clear thumbs-up to Dean while Barao was unloading a barrage of pitter-patter strikes on the ground that were nowhere near as damaging as his previous ones standing.

Now a thumbs-up from a fighter certainly isn’t enough to warrant a bout being continued, but it does show that Faber was at least coherent. Barao was exactly landing knockout blows, either. He also pled with Dean to stop the bout, signaling he needed some assistance with the job rather than leaving no doubt. Dean did that for him, and has since taken a ton of flack for what’s perceived as an early stoppage.

Chas Skelly vs. Maximo Blanco – UFC Fight Night 94

This featherweight match-up saw an absolutely brutal submission finish, but it didn’t have tor be that way if Dean had been a bit more attentive at his job. Skilled wrestler Skelly had used an excellent transition on the mat to lock on a tight Anaconda choke that had Blanco in very bad shape in the bout. Skelly told Dean his opponent was out as he lay there with his arms splayed out on the canvas not moving, but Dean still had to make sure he was when there was no way Skelly was trying to pull a fast one on him.

After he finally called it, Blanco was out for some time, and Dean drew a ton of heat for not calling the submission sooner.

Georgi Karakhanyan vs. Bubba Jenkins – Bellator 132

Like Skelly vs. Blanco, this bout is an example of Dean letting a fighter hold onto a choke for far too long. In this match, Karakhanyan locked up a tight standing guillotine choke on touted wrestler Jenkins that ended the bout rather quickly.

Like Skelly, Karakhanyan yelled at Dean that the fight was done, repeatedly yelling that he was out. But Dean didn’t believe him and let it continue on for some reason, letting Karakhanyan crank on the submission until Jenkins was out himself.

Not Dean’s finest moment, and another example of when he was unwilling to call a fight off by technical submission that resulted in a fighter’s health being put in jeopardy.

Photo Credit: Sean Porkorny for USA TODAY Sports

Uriah Hall vs. Derek Brunson – UFC Fight Night 94

This result, which also took place at UFC Fight Night 94, may be a bit more questionable, as Hall was clearly rocked by a big left hook from a charging Brunson.

However, he appeared to be intelligently defending himself by grabbing for a single leg, and immediately got back up to protest when the fight was called off.

Dean defended himself by saying Hall was wobbled and in trouble, but there’s certainly a case to be made for allowing the fight to continue for at least a few more seconds, something Dean obviously had no problem doing when the previous two mistakes on this list involved chokes being held onto far after a fighter had tapped.

It’s a fine line, true, but if Dean is going to allow fighters to be put in fight-ending submissions for a long while after they’ve tapped out, then you’d think he would want to give fighters who were rocked but still conscious a chance to fight back too. That’s what makes being a ref in MMA so tough, and while Dean has certainly proved his worth over many years, his calls have become inconsistent as of late.

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UFC 211 Preliminary Card Ratings the Best This Year

UFC 211 was arguably the best event put on by the UFC this year, and it seems viewer interest was at a high. That’s good news for the promotion, who have seen ratings slip so far in 2017. With the ratings out for the weekend, it appears the UFC have hit their highest rating for […]

UFC 211 was arguably the best event put on by the UFC this year, and it seems viewer interest was at a high. That’s good news for the promotion, who have seen ratings slip so far in 2017. With the ratings out for the weekend, it appears the UFC have hit their highest rating for […]

Dustin Poirier Promises He’ll Stop ‘Silly’ Eddie Alvarez In Rematch

Dustin Poirier and Eddie Alvarez were well on their way to a sharing “Fight of the Night” in the featured preliminary bout of UFC 211 last Saturday (May 13, 2017) from the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, but a controversial no contest after what clearly looked like an illegal knee from Alvarez put a

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Dustin Poirier and Eddie Alvarez were well on their way to a sharing “Fight of the Night” in the featured preliminary bout of UFC 211 last Saturday (May 13, 2017) from the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, but a controversial no contest after what clearly looked like an illegal knee from Alvarez put a stop to the action and left fans wanting a rematch.

After the fight Poirier was respectful to the former champion, demanding the crowd not boo him. Once he had a chance to settle down, however, Poirier was none too pleased with the result, which saw his win bonus taken away from him and left him with stitches on his face. He revealed that he planned to appeal the result, but there’s not telling what that will produce, especially in Texas – a state that does not yet utilize the new Unified Rules of MMA, making the call even cloudier.

The controversy can of course be cleared up if and when the two rivals have a rematch, something that’s beginning to look quite obvious. Poirier and Alvarez got the trash talk starting online today, with “The Diamond” first asking when Alvarez wanted to fight before telling him he owed him some stitches:

Alvarez replied back an hour later to say the fight was a go, but warned Poirier not to get too excited, as he ‘wanted out’ at UFC 211:

Finally Poirier called Alvarez silly and promised to finish him in the second bout:

With the fight a clear choice, expect it to go down sometime in the summer or fall, with the winner advancing a decent way way up the already crowded and backlogged lightweight pecking order.

Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Poirier will be looking for his sixth win in eight fights since going back to lightweight, and Alvarez is looking to get back on track after a one-sided loss to current champ Conor McGregor in the main event of last November’s UFC 205. Both fighters share the distinction of having been brutally finished by McGregor, and they will also need a win here to have even anything close to a shot at facing the seldom-seen Irishman again.

First things first, however, and both need to focus on the task at hand. Poirier obviously believes he deserves a win, but referee Herb Dean recently explained why he gave Alvarez a no contest in the heat of the moment:

“I would have disqualifed him if I believed they were intentional,” Dean said. “How I rule I knew that Eddie couldn’t see whether (Poirier’s) knee was down or not – that’s why I ruled it unintentional.

“There’s a lot going on in there, and that’s why (referees) give people a little bit of leeway with some of those rules. I reserve ‘intentional’ for someone acting out of the rules and being a bad guy, and they need to be disqualified. I don’t think (Alvarez) was trying to be a bad person. I think he was trying to fight within the rules – it’s just that it’s difficult.”

It is difficult to be sure, yet fighters’ health and safety are on the line in close calls like that, and few are surprised Poirier is appealing.

Will he get the win he believes he earned, or will he only be able to prove that in the rematch?

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Herb Dean Reacts To Dustin Poirier vs. Eddie Alvarez Controversy

Herb Dean seems to be finding himself in a hotbed of UFC controversy quite often these days. The longtime MMA official, who has refereed some of the more high-profile bouts in the octagon, recently drew heat when he deemed the Dustin Poirier vs. Eddie Alvarez scrap at last Saturday’s (Sat., May 13, 2017) UFC 211 from

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Herb Dean seems to be finding himself in a hotbed of UFC controversy quite often these days.

The longtime MMA official, who has refereed some of the more high-profile bouts in the octagon, recently drew heat when he deemed the Dustin Poirier vs. Eddie Alvarez scrap at last Saturday’s (Sat., May 13, 2017) UFC 211 from the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas a no contest following what looked like some incredibly illegal knees from Alvarez.

The former champion had been in bad shape when “The Diamond” rocked him with some big shots, but somehow persevered to mount an unlikely flurry of his own, a true testament to his heart and determination. He ground Poirier and hit him with three knees along the fence, but with the State of Texas not yet utilizing the new Unified Rules of MMA, at just what threshold Alvarez’ strikes would be called illegal was unclear.

However, it was plain to see that Alvarez’ third knee was illegal by either set of rules as Poirier was clearly ground by both definitions, yet Dean still decided to call the bout a no contest when Poirier said he could not continue because he felt ‘something pushing on his eyeball’. Poirier has since declared his intentions to appeal the decision, but Dean recently defended the call when speaking to MMA Junkie:

“I would have disqualifed him if I believed they were intentional,” Dean said. “How I rule I knew that Eddie couldn’t see whether (Poirier’s) knee was down or not – that’s why I ruled it unintentional.

“There’s a lot going on in there, and that’s why (referees) give people a little bit of leeway with some of those rules. I reserve ‘intentional’ for someone acting out of the rules and being a bad guy, and they need to be disqualified. I don’t think (Alvarez) was trying to be a bad person. I think he was trying to fight within the rules – it’s just that it’s difficult.”

Photo Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Fair enough, but the rules are still the rules, and many, including octagon announcer Brian Stann, feel the knees were illegal and Poirier should have won by disqualification. For his part, “The Diamond” didn’t agree with Dean’s decision that Alvarez did it unintentionally, because in his mind, the act of hitting someone in a fight is always intentional:

“I’m protected by these rules. I think he’s trying to cover his own ass. Any time somebody strikes somebody with a blow, it’s intentional. I don’t understand. He didn’t trip me and kick me on the ground – he intentionally kneed me on the ground.”

As for Dean’s reaction, the official said he understood why Poirier would want to appeal and wouldn’t make this a personal issue of him vs. Poirier:

“I’m not personalizing this,” Dean said. “It’s not about me – it’s about him. He’s a fighter. I’m here just trying to do a good job and serve him and the other fighters. This is about him. I don’t take that personally. He should do everything he can. If he feels he needs to appeal, I think he should do that. I don’t take it personal on me. The fight is the most important fight of their career.”

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Jorge Masvidal Wants ‘Easy Money’ Fight With ‘Wonderboy’ Thompson

No. 5-ranked UFC welterweight contender Jorge “Gamebred” Masvidal came up short in a title eliminator bout with Demian Maia this past weekend (May 13, 2017) at UFC 211, suffering a split-decision loss to the Brazilian grappling guru. Masvidal, however, appears to be eager to jump right back into competition, as he recently expressed interest in

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No. 5-ranked UFC welterweight contender Jorge “Gamebred” Masvidal came up short in a title eliminator bout with Demian Maia this past weekend (May 13, 2017) at UFC 211, suffering a split-decision loss to the Brazilian grappling guru.

Masvidal, however, appears to be eager to jump right back into competition, as he recently expressed interest in a bout with Neil Magny, although Magny is injured at this time. Instead, “Gamebred” took to his official Twitter account to call out No. 1-ranked two-time title challenger Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson:

Thompson replied, saying that he’d ‘love’ to fight Masvidal after he completely heals from a recent knee surgery:

“Wonderboy” is coming off of back-to-back five round fights with champion Tyron Woodley, battling “The Chosen One” to a majority draw last November at UFC 205 in New York city before losing a lackluster decision in the rematch this past March at UFC 209.

Is this a bout you’d like to see?

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