Holly Holm isn’t one to think too far ahead before focusing on the present. Last night (June 9), Holm took on Megan Anderson inside the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. This was Anderson’s Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) debut. Holm…
Holly Holm isn’t one to think too far ahead before focusing on the present. Last night (June 9), Holm took on Megan Anderson inside the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. This was Anderson’s Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) debut. Holm earned a dominant unanimous decision win. “The Preacher’s Daughter” is the number one ranked UFC bantamweight, […]
Charles Oliveira isn’t letting go of his desire to return to featherweight Oliveira took on Clay Guida on the preliminary portion of UFC 225 last night (June 9). In the first round, “do Bronx” latched onto a guillotine choke for the s…
Charles Oliveira isn’t letting go of his desire to return to featherweight Oliveira took on Clay Guida on the preliminary portion of UFC 225 last night (June 9). In the first round, “do Bronx” latched onto a guillotine choke for the submission victory. He has now gone 2-1 since his return to lightweight. During his […]
Last night (Sat., June 9, 2018), MMA fans were treated to one of the best middleweight title fights in the history of the sport in the main event of UFC 225 from the United Center in Chicago, Illinois.
That’s not just hyperbole, either.
The insane, all-out war between champion Robert Whittaker and Yoel Romero (watch full highlights here) was genuinely unlike any other 185-pound fight we’ve ever seen, a brutalizing battle that tested the fortitude and wills of both top-ranked competitors to the fullest extent of human athleticism.
“The Reaper” controlled the early going of the fight, using his crisp, accurate striking volume to batter a more plodding Romero with a torrent of side and push kicks to his lead knee that appeared both painful and stifling to the already-drained challenger. His left jab was nearly flawless as well, at one point swelling the right eye of Romero shut as it found its mark over and over again. Finally, you couldn’t discount Whittaker’s trademark left high kick, several of which he landed to sounds similar to a wooden baseball bat hitting a home run.
Not to be outdone, Romero surged back with his all-too-common power shots in the fourth and fifth rounds, blasting Whittaker with strikes so impactful they had the champion implementing dance moves akin to a New Zealander trying his first line dance at a country western bar in Cheyenne, Wyoming. The Cuban ‘Soldier of God’ had Whittaker nearly finished on multiple occasions, especially in a one-sided fifth round, but somehow the champ weathered the storm no matter how hurt he truly was.
And then, as it always seems to do when Romero is involved, controversy reared its ugly head. Whittaker was declared the winner by split decision, a fine enough result but also a somewhat questionable one considering that he certainly could have been handed a 10-8 (or worse) score in that fateful fifth round. A draw could definitely have been an acceptable outcome, it would have been hard to argue Romero had clearly won three rounds outright.
Many chalked it up to the Romero controversy of the previous day when he missed weight by 0.2 pounds, his second straight UFC title fight where he missed the mark. The conspiracy theorists said the judges punished Romero for missing weight and gave the decision to “The Reaper.” The Cuban and his team seem to agree, with Romero posting a video claiming he was the champ from a hospital bed earlier today.
In the video, Romero’s manager Abraham Kawa said that Romero was robbed twice, first by the commission who gave him two hours to cut the pound he was over on his first attempt before forcing him to stop cutting weight only one hour into the allotted time, and a second time by the judges after the fight.
In reality, Romero and his team may be feeling a bit sorry for themselves, because if he had made weight on his first attempt, they never would have been in this position in the first place. As for the judges, again, Romero definitely may have deserved a 10-8 score in the fifth and final frame, but that would have just given him a draw in a fight he couldn’t win the title in the first place.
Yet there’s a more sinister dynamic in play here, and that’s the fact that some kind of controversy – whatever it may be – always seems to follow any fight involving Romero. The examples are many, as there was his infamous ‘Stoolgate’ incident versus Tim Kennedy at UFC 178, his lovely ‘No For Gay Jesus’ moment after he stopped Lyoto Machida, his failed USADA drug test prior to his close decision win over ‘Jacare’ Souza that was eventually overturned, and his first weight miss before his scheduled interim title fight with Luke Rockhold at UFC 221 this March, a fight after which he kissed Rockhold to the point of almost molesting him after he had brutally knocked him out.
Phew. It’s exhausting to keep track of, and his latest weight miss coupled with the close nature of his decision and the conspiracy theories of just why he lost obviously do nothing to derail the notion of Romero and his never-ending stream of controversy. He’s no doubt one of the sport’s most exciting fighters, a rare genetic monster who blends true Olympic-level wrestling with some of the most genuinely frightening knockout power MMA has ever seen rolled up into the physique of a Greek God. There’s also nothing even close to a real reason to say he deserved to lose because he missed weight, just like there’s no proof that was the reason why he did in a close, back-and-forth slugfest.
It just is what it is, and there can’t be a Romero fight without some sort of controversy brewing. Perhaps it’s what makes his bouts so intriguing. They’re certainly must-watch television for anyone resembling a true MMA fan. So even if it’s a chore to get to the main event when he’s involved, fights like the classic he delivered in Chicago last night make it all worth it.
Romero will most likely be headed up to 205 pounds for his next fight, and the entire MMA world will be waiting to see what happens when he arrives.
Robert Whittaker battled frightening challenger Yoel Romero in a classic slugfest (full highlights here) in the main event of last night’s (Sat., June 9, 2018) UFC 225 from the United Center in Chicago, Illinois.
And he did so with essentially one hand.
Beating “Soldier of God” by close split decision in a hard-fought, controversial war, Whittaker’s camp revealed he broke his right thumb early in the first round of the historic fight with photos of his x-rays on social media:
A post shared by Gracie Grange (@graciejiujitsusmeatongrange) on
The injury means it was the second fight Whittaker beat Romero with a serious injury suffered in the first round, as the 27-year-old champion seriously hurt his knee from a push kick in the first round of their initial UFC 213 match-up last July.
As the fight wore on into the later frames, you could tell Whittaker had indeed hurt his right hand because he refused to throw it. And while the champ was dropped by some hellacious shots from “The Soldier of God” in both the fourth and fifth rounds in addition to breaking his thumb, he legitimately showed some of the most iron-willed toughness we’ve ever seen from a UFC competitor by somehow staying conscious enough to edge out a win thanks to his high-volume striking attack.
True, Romero believes he’s actually the champion – he said as much in a video from a hospital bed, but after the Cuban slugger missed weight and then lost the fight, Whittaker emerged with the belt and the right to call himself champ following one of the most unbelievable displays of toughness the octagon has ever seen.
The fact that he did it with another serious injury is icing on the cake for a man quickly becoming one of the UFC’s most skilled titleholders.
Yoel Romero might have lost last night (June 9), but he still views himself as the champion. Romero took on Robert Whittaker in the main event of UFC 225. This was a non-title bout as “The Soldier of God” missed weight. The bout still serve…
Yoel Romero might have lost last night (June 9), but he still views himself as the champion. Romero took on Robert Whittaker in the main event of UFC 225. This was a non-title bout as “The Soldier of God” missed weight. The bout still served as the main event and took place inside the United […]
MMA photographer and journalist Mike Jackson picked up a lopsided win over CM Punk (highlights here) on the main card of last night’s (Sat., June 9, 2018) UFC 225 from the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, but it may have done him more harm than good.
After the victory, Jackson was effectively raked over the coals by UFC President Dana White for his supposedly lackadaisical, taunting performance in a fight he could have finished if he had tried. It was so bad in the exec’s eyes that White confirmed Jackson was done in the UFC.
But Jackson, not surprisingly, has a different account of the events and offered his story on social media as the criticism rolled in. When a ‘fan’ online suggested he could have finished the fight at multiple junctures, ‘The Truth’ replied that while he was hitting Punk with repeated blows, he didn’t want to rush it and risk being the man who was finished by the inexperienced former WWE wrestler:
I hit him with punches and elbows and he stayed standing. I didn’t want to run in and get caught with dumb shit. Imagine being the guy who loses to CM Punk! https://t.co/DNgztswpzH
— Mike Jackson, Esq. (@TheTruthJackson) June 10, 2018
It’s a moot point to a certain degree, however, as many – possibly including White – felt the disrespect came when Jackson had Punk on the ground and was raining down lazy, almost joking ground blows. It was something another Twitter user pointed out to him and Jackson replied that he was simply looking at his corner rather than taunting Punk:
— Mike Jackson, Esq. (@TheTruthJackson) June 10, 2018
Justification aside, it seemed like Jackson indeed had the chance to finish Punk on at least one if not multiple occasions after being able to land varied strikes seemingly at will.
He chose to stay in Punk’s guard throwing lazy, spinning punches while staring off into space – he claims it was his corner for ‘instruction’ in a fight he was dominating – and he lost his UFC job for it.
Are you buying what he’s selling, or should have made a statement and ended the fight?