The main card of UFC Fight Night 104 featured a pivotal strawweight match-up. The two 115-pounders in the event’s opener were No. 5 ranked Jessica Andrade (16-5) and Invicta FC champion Angela Hill (6-3). Hill immediately showcased her footwork. She went low with a leg kick then had a couple of high kicks blocked. Andrade
The main card of UFC Fight Night 104 featured a pivotal strawweight match-up. The two 115-pounders in the event’s opener were No. 5 ranked Jessica Andrade (16-5) and Invicta FC champion Angela Hill (6-3).
Hill immediately showcased her footwork. She went low with a leg kick then had a couple of high kicks blocked. Andrade moved forward and had “Overkill” backing up. Andrade nailed Hill with an uppercut after taking a knee to the body. Hill was very active with the kicks.
Andrade swung for the fences while in the clinch. Hill decides to ditch the hold after a knee to the body. The Brazilian landed a shot to fight off the clinch. Hill was eating a number of shots when her opponent exploded forward. A combination had Hill backing away. Andrade found the chin of Hill often as the round ended.
In the second round, Hill was on her toes and landed some leg kicks. Once again Andrade continued to move forward with bombs. Hill ate some big shots with her back near the fence. She brought the fight back to the center of the Octagon. “Overkill” threw a knee upstairs.
Andrade dropped down for a takedown and she got it. She moved towards the back of her opponent. Hill worked her way back up, but she was slammed down again. Before the round concluded, Hill looked to go for a submission.
The final round was underway. A counter right hand was there for Hill. The two slugged it out briefly to the delight of the Houston crowd. A hard left hook landed for Andrade flush. Andrade kept throwing shots, but Hill dropped her although it may have been a slip. Either way Andrade kept moving forward as if nothing happened.
Andrade pour it on with about 30 seconds left in the fight. He threw punches and landed knees, but Hill showed tremendous heart until the final horn sounded. That was a very good scrap.
All three judges saw the same the same and Andrade was awarded with the victory,
Final Result: Jessica Andrade def. Angela Hill via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
It’s once again fight day here at LowKickMMA, and the talent on display tonight (Saturday, February 4th, 2017) will come in the form of UFC Fight Night 104. Headlining the card are Chan Sung Jung and Dennis Bermudez, but there’s a whole bunch of great fights also taking place on the preliminary section of the
It’s once again fight day here at LowKickMMA, and the talent on display tonight (Saturday, February 4th, 2017) will come in the form of UFC Fight Night 104. Headlining the card are Chan Sung Jung and Dennis Bermudez, but there’s a whole bunch of great fights also taking place on the preliminary section of the card.
Adam Milstead vs. Curtis Blaydes in a heavyweight bout closes the preliminary card on FOX Sports 1.
Chas Skelly vs. Chris Gruetzemacher is next in a featherweight bout.
Ricardo Ramos vs. Michinori Tanaka is next in a bantamweight bout.
Tecia Torres vs. Bec Rawlings in a women’s strawweight bout opens the FOX Sports 1 preliminary bouts.
Alex Morono vs. Niko Price in a welterweight bout finished off the UFC Fight Pass preliminary card. Price pressed him up against the fence and landed two right hands to drop him in the second round to win the fight.
Opening the UFC Fight Pass prelims was Khalil Rountree vs. Daniel Jolly in a light heavyweight bout. Jolly going for his first takedown but it was stuffed. Rountree hit two knees to the face of Jolly and this one is over.
Here are the results:
PRELIMINARY CARD (FOX Sports 1/8 p.m. ET)
Heavyweight: Adam Milstead vs. Curtis Blaydes
Featherweight: Chas Skelly vs. Chris Gruetzemacher
Bantamweight: Ricardo Ramos vs. Michinori Tanaka
Strawweight: Tecia Torres vs. Bec Rawlings
PRELIMINARY CARD (UFC Fight Pass/7 p.m. ET)
Niko Price def. Alex Morono via KO (right hand) at 5:00 of R2
Khalil Rountree def. Daniel Jolly via knockout (knee) – Round 1, 0:52
Tomorrow night (Feb. 4) the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) will hold its third event of 2017. This time, it’s a Super Bowl weekend card in Houston, Texas. Twenty-four fighters will enter the Toyota Center in hopes of walking out victorious. Headlining the UFC Fight Night event will be a featherweight scrap. The “Korean Zombie” Chan […]
Tomorrow night (Feb. 4) the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) will hold its third event of 2017. This time, it’s a Super Bowl weekend card in Houston, Texas. Twenty-four fighters will enter the Toyota Center in hopes of walking out victorious. Headlining the UFC Fight Night event will be a featherweight scrap. The “Korean Zombie” Chan […]
Jessica Andrade is one step closer to realizing her dream. “Bate Estaca” will be go one-on-one with Invicta FC strawweight champion Angela Hill. It’ll be Andrade’s third bout in the 115-pound division. The two will share the Octagon tomorrow night (Feb. 4) at an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Fight Night event inside the Toyota Center […]
Jessica Andrade is one step closer to realizing her dream. “Bate Estaca” will be go one-on-one with Invicta FC strawweight champion Angela Hill. It’ll be Andrade’s third bout in the 115-pound division. The two will share the Octagon tomorrow night (Feb. 4) at an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Fight Night event inside the Toyota Center […]
After a long layoff due to injury and a mandatory two-year stint in the South Korean army, Chan Sung Jung, the Korean Zombie, finally makes his return to the UFC this Saturday for UFC Fight Night 104 on Fox Sports 1.
Jung’s last fight, a fourth-ro…
After a long layoff due to injury and a mandatory two-year stint in the South Korean army, Chan Sung Jung, the Korean Zombie, finally makes his return to the UFC this Saturday for UFC Fight Night 104 on Fox Sports 1.
Jung’s last fight, a fourth-round knockout loss to longtime featherweight champion Jose Aldo in August 2013, wasn’t his best. He struggled to find his range and rhythm against the Brazilian great and was repeatedly taken down before separating his shoulder and succumbing to punches.
Few thought that Jung would win that fight against Aldo; he closed as a more than 6-1 underdog, and that may still have been generous. It was still an anticipated fight, though, because of Jung’s brawling style.
Prior to his time away from the sport, Jung had made a name for himself as one of the most exciting young fighters. He was a talent who could finish the fight on the feet or on the ground while delivering a delectable buffet of wild violence.
Check out his five fights prior to that bout with Aldo: a fight of the year against Dustin Poirier; a seven-second knockout of Mark Hominick, who was just coming off a five-round war with Aldo for the title; a twister submission of Leonard Garcia in their rematch, the first in UFC history; a crazy head-kick knockout loss to George Roop; and one of the most epic brawls in MMA history against Garcia in their first meeting.
Jung had more than earned his reputation, and that’s why we should all be excited to have him back now.
While there are still some names that Jung will recognize, like Aldo, Frankie Edgar and Cub Swanson, the landscape of the featherweight division has changed drastically in the three years since Jung’s last fight.
Conor McGregor had just debuted in the UFC, and his whole rise to prominence was still in the future. Fighters like Clay Guida, Dennis Siver, Hatsu Hioki and Nik Lentz have since exited the elite, replaced by young guns like Brian Ortega, Yair Rodriguez and Jung’s opponent on Saturday, Dennis Bermudez.
How does Jung, who’s still only 29 years old, stack up in this new division? Does he even have the skills to be an elite fighter these days?
We haven’t seen Jung in the cage for 42 months, two years of which he spent in the military and much of the rest of the time out with injuries. It’s impossible to say whether or how his skills have developed in that time, and whether ring rust will affect him or not. Dominick Cruz returned from multiple long layoffs, one of nearly three years, and looked great; many other fighters haven’t been so lucky even with shorter periods away.
Still, before the layoff, Jung’s skills were evolving. He began his career in the WEC as a wild brawler in that first fight with Garcia, winging wild haymakers and flying knees like there was no tomorrow. He lost a split decision in that fight, but he gained a reputation as an action fighter on the rise.
Jung’s next fight, against Roop, showed the limitations of that brawling style: He ate a faceful of shin and went down by knockout, plodding ineffectively after the skilled striker and eating shot after shot before the finish.
After that devastating loss, Jung reevaluated his game and began to transform himself into something more measured. He exchanged a bit in the second fight with Garcia, but he mostly pressured and looked to grapple whenever possible. That led to his stunning twister finish in the second round, and it became clear to those who hadn’t been aware just how slick Jung was as a takedown artist and grappler.
It’s hard to take much from a seven-second knockout, but finishing the tough Hominick with a picture-perfect right-hand counter is a serious accomplishment.
The May 2012 fight of the year against Poirier showcased Jung’s full transformation. He hit takedown after takedown, a mixture of slick trips and throws, and he threatened constantly with submissions before finishing with a D’Arce choke in the fourth round. The counter he hit against Hominick was just the tip of the iceberg, and he countered Poirier effectively over and over. The flash and willingness to bang were still there, too.
While the fight with Aldo was disappointing, that too encapsulated how much Jung had changed from the chin-first brawler of his early career in the United States. He countered effectively and pressured as well as anyone against the ultra-technical Aldo, even finding moments of success before the unfortunate end.
If Jung’s development has continued along these lines, we can expect to see a few things from him in his matchup with Bermudez.
First, the counters will continue to develop. It’s not uncommon for fighters with a brawling nature to turn into excellent counterpunchers with a little refinement—Robbie Lawler and John Lineker come to mind—since focusing on counters takes advantage of the brawler’s chin, timing and willingness to hang in there and throw leather. Jung is a great example of this.
Second, Jung will probably be willing and able to grapple. He does his best work from the top position and in scrambles, and if he can force the transition, the opportunities will be there to finish with a submission.
Whatever he decides to do, no matter how his skills look, we know Jung will come to fight. We’re fortunate to have him back in the Octagon.
Dennis Bermudez has been in the spotlight of the UFC since making it to the finals of The Ultimate Fighter in 2011. Now, six years later, “The Menace” is enjoying his role as the co-headliner this week with Chan Sung Jung at UFC Fight Night 104. “I’m just trying to enjoy it (the experience) and […]
Dennis Bermudez has been in the spotlight of the UFC since making it to the finals of The Ultimate Fighter in 2011. Now, six years later, “The Menace” is enjoying his role as the co-headliner this week with Chan Sung Jung at UFC Fight Night 104. “I’m just trying to enjoy it (the experience) and […]