At UFC on Fox 9, Demetrious Johnson will attempt to earn a third straight title defense on network television.
Having prevented John Dodson and John Moraga from stealing his strap, “Mighty Mouse” will now rematch Joseph Benavidez, who he defeated in th…
At UFC on Fox 9, Demetrious Johnson will attempt to earn a third straight title defense on network television.
Having prevented John Dodson and John Moraga from stealing his strap, “Mighty Mouse” will now rematch Joseph Benavidez, who he defeated in the inaugural flyweight championship matchup. Since losing to Johnson by split decision in their original meeting, Benavidez has picked up three straight victories.
In addition to the 125-pound main event, UFC on Fox 9 will feature a potential bantamweight title shot eliminator between Urijah Faber and Michael McDonald. Both men have had fairly recent shots at the 135-pound championship, but they have established themselves as the best in the division behind Dominick Cruz and interim champion Renan Barao.
On Thursday, several fighters will join UFC president Dana White or another UFC official for a UFC on Fox 9 pre-fight press conference. Once the media event starts at around 4 p.m. ET, it can be viewed live on the above video player.
Below is the entire UFC on Fox 9 fight card.
UFC on Fox 9 Main Card (8 p.m. ET on Fox)
Demetrious Johnson vs. Joseph Benavidez
Urijah Faber vs. Michael McDonald
Chad Mendes vs. Nik Lentz
Joe Lauzon vs. Mac Danzig
UFC on Fox 9 Prelims (5 p.m ET on Fox Sports 1)
Court McGee vs. Ryan LaFlare
Danny Castillo vs. Edson Barboza
Bobby Green vs. Pat Healy
Scott Jorgensen vs. Zach Makovsky
Sam Stout vs. Cody McKenzie
Abel Trujillo vs. Roger Bowling
UFC on Fox 9 Online Prelims (4:30 p.m ET on UFC.com)
It’s hard for UFC flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson to stand out in a crowd. Challenger Joseph Benavidez, who will look to take Johnson’s title belt Saturday on Fox, has the same problem. Standing just a shade over 5 feet tall and weighing a m…
It’s hard for UFC flyweight champion Demetrious Johnson to stand out in a crowd. Challenger Joseph Benavidez, who will look to take Johnson’s title belt Saturday on Fox, has the same problem. Standing just a shade over 5 feet tall and weighing a mere 125 pounds, both are smaller than not just the average American man but the average woman, too.
Getting lost in the shuffle isn’t just a possibility. It’s a fact. The box office tells us so, and money, some say, never lies.
But why? Benavidez took a shot at answering what, for a pro fighter, can literally be a million-dollar question. Why haven’t UFC fans embraced smaller fighters, rewarding technique and style over brawn and brawling?
“The only issue is the names, the recognition and the popularity,” Benavidez said. “Because the division’s so new. There’s no lack of skill in the division at all. Our guys are just as good as any other division, they just aren’t as known. They haven’t been on TV as much. But there’s amazing talent at flyweight. It’s just time with these things, man.”
But is it?
That’s the question that lingers. Putting a finger on why smaller fighters—not just flyweights but bantamweights and featherweights as well—have failed to thrive is hard, especially because custom and courtesy demand delicate words. It takes an amazingly dumb comment to get right to the heart of the matter, one conveniently provided courtesy of a friend’s friend.
“Forget it,” he said, making plans for Saturday night that didn’t include the UFC. “I’m not watching guys who weigh less than my 13-year-old sister.”
Disrespectful? Of course. Backwards? Maybe.
But like many questionable statements, there’s an essential element of truth too, a boiling down of flowery words and deeds to the essential elements. As anyone who has ever watched a UFC show at a sports bar can tell you, some MMA fans divide the world into two distinct categories—people they can beat up and people they can’t. And, believe it or not, they view professional fighters on the same spectrum.
When they judge Benavidez and Johnson, they find them wanting because of their size.
It’s a ridiculous conundrum for these professional athletes who have raised cage fighting to an art form. But it’s a real problem nonetheless, one I wanted to get their thoughts on. Were the two best flyweights in the world aware they had been dismissed by a collection of men with TapouT T-shirts barely covering their ample midsection? And, if so, did it bother them?
“If some guy on the couch who’s twice as big as me thinks he could beat my butt, it doesn’t bother me,” Johnson said, though his words and tone suggested otherwise. “That’s fine. We can sign a waiver and make it totally legit. We can make it no rules or rules and figure it out. But I’m not out there to walk into Buffalo Wild Wings and let everybody know that I’m here and can kick everybody’s ass just because I’m flyweight champion. I try not to think like that.”
As anybody who has had the chance to work out with high-level flyweights can tell you, looks can be deceiving. Up close, Benavidez has legs like tree trunks, and when he gets top position on the ground, his 125 pounds can seem like an awfully heavy burden.
For a person with his level of skill, size just doesn’t matter. It would take a forklift to get him off. But not every fan is going to have the chance to put a UFC star to the test physically. Fans have to believe, in their hearts, that the toughest 125-pound fighter in the world could whoop them.
“When they’re watching a heavyweight, they absolutely know that guy would kill them. You know a heavyweight can beat you up,” Benavidez said. “But I think people think when they’re bigger than you, ‘Oh, I would beat him up.’ In the back of their mind they, think maybe they could take us. They don’t realize we beat up bigger people all the time in practice. How do they think we become so technical and tough?”
Beyond the meathead demographic, flyweight fights impose a burden even on fans who want to give them a chance. Watching Benavidez and Johnson fight can be demanding. You’re forced to pay attention to carefully watch the subtleties that not every fan can appreciate.
Because the fights are more likely to go to a decision as fighters get smaller, a flyweight bout at a high level is often going to require 25 minutes of a fan’s undivided attention. In the age of iPhones, that’s a lot to ask. Things are moving quickly—often faster than the naked eye can follow.
“That’s how I’ve always trained. To always anticipate what an opponent’s going to be doing and to anticipate the body’s natural reaction. When people talk about me taking angles, changing elevation and doing all this other stuff? I don’t even realize I’m doing that. To me, it’s just my fighting style,” Johnson said, crediting coach Matt Hume. “When I spar him, something is always happening. Even when it seems like nothing is happening, he’s setting up his next move.”
Even the fighters can’t always keep up with the action, relying on instinct and rhythms carefully honed in training. Sometimes it’s action, sometimes reaction. For them, 25 minutes, when moving so quickly, can pass in the blink of an eye.
“When there’s a little bit of a lull in the action, you can analyze what’s going on,” Benavidez said. “You can think of a combo or a takedown you’re going to go for. When you get in an isolated position like a clinch, you can take a second to think.
“Other times? When they hit you or they shoot on you? After that, it’s pretty much instinct and everything you’ve trained. Sometimes things go so fast it’s just second nature. Especially in these fights. That was one fight where I looked back and think, ‘What the heck happened?'”
In their first fight, the two went back and forth at speeds impossible to follow with the human eye. Watching a fight like this closely, one with so much happening every few seconds, can be mentally exhausting for a fan unaccustomed to this style. The champion agrees that much of what happens in the cage may not come across to fan’s more comfortable with a Mark Hunt slobber-knocker.
“I think a lot of people can get discouraged watching us because they don’t understand. People get lost in what’s actually going on,” Johnson said. “A lot of the skill sets flyweights bring to the UFC can be lost in translation. Everyone is so evenly matched and we have a lot of skills that heavyweights or light heavyweights don’t get to use. There’s a lot more moving around, cardio and constant motion.”
The UFC doesn’t seem convinced fans are ready to support the little guy. In its ads for the show, the promotion never mentions the weight class at all, simply stating the two will fight for the “world championship.”
It’s as if the UFC is trying to keep the fact that these guys only weigh 125 pounds a secret. Like Dana White knows if he broadcasts it, people won’t watch.
Benavidez, for his part, doesn’t think much is likely to change. Either fans will get it, or they won’t. The sport, in the meantime, will continue to grow, with techniques and strategies implemented first by the little guys eventually finding their way to the big guys.
As fighters have gotten better and the sport has evolved, finishing rates have gone consistently down. You can’t be a fan of either technique or bludgeoning—increasingly, technique is winning that battle in the Octagon.
You’re on board, or you’re not.
“It’s always going to be the most technical division because everyone’s smaller,” Benavidez said. “If you don’t understand the sport, what can we do? You don’t understand the sport. Everyone can understand two guys standing there and throwing one punch at each other. But not every fan is going to understand the footwork and the movement and the combos and the scrambles. Even the takedowns and the ground work aren’t understood by most fans, in any division.
“They can’t necessarily see and appreciate everything that’s going on. But as the UFC becomes more popular, people are starting to understand more. And as that happens, they’re also going to appreciate the division more.”
For fans already drinking the flyweight Kool-Aid, the rematch between Benavidez and Johnson has long been circled on calendars. Much has changed in the two years since the first fight, Benavidez believes in his favor.
“It’s a different fight. Watch my last two fights. I’m a different fighter,” Benavidez said. “It’s easy to say ‘I’ve been working hard.’ But what are you doing differently? We actually flipped our system upside down. It’s not every day that somebody gets a whole new coach and 180-degree flip and revamp of their system like we have at Team Alpha Male. And I think you can tell and you’ve seen the improvements in the fights. It’s been an amazing year for the team. The fact that it’s all coming to a head, a culmination, here in Sacramento, it’s just the way it’s supposed to be, man.”
Johnson, of course, doesn’t intend to give Benavidez his storybook ending. All he’ll say is that the first fight, a split decision in his favor, makes it easier to step into the cage with Benavidezagain.
Benavidezwelcomes the challenge.
“The great thing about this sport is that you have to prove it,” he said. “There’s no lying out there. You can’t hide from anything. It’s all truth in there. I don’t just get to say I’ve gotten better. You get to prove you’ve gotten better and test yourself. He’s the best guy in the world. I think I’m better. It’s awesome because I get to prove it.”
Joseph Benavidez challenges Demetrious Johnson for the UFC’s flyweight title Saturday on Fox in his adopted hometown of Sacramento. Jonathan Snowden is Bleacher Report’s lead combat sports writer. Unless otherwise noted, all quotes were acquired firsthand.
The UFC will not rest. The company will put on another show this upcoming weekend. UFC on Fox 9 will come live from Sacramento, CA and is headlined by flyweight champ Demetrious Johnson and challenger Joseph Benavidez.
The card is stacked from top to b…
The UFC will not rest. The company will put on another show this upcoming weekend. UFC on Fox 9 will come live from Sacramento, CA and is headlined by flyweight champ Demetrious Johnson and challenger Joseph Benavidez.
The card is stacked from top to bottom, despite the fact it has been hampered by injury. In fact, a welterweight bout between Carlos Condit and Matt Brown was scrapped late last week due to an injury to Brown.
With that, the UFC limps forward into the finish line for this card. Here are the predictions for the bonuses.
Submission of the Night: Pat Healy
Pat Healy was originally supposed to square off with Jamie Varner, but an injury has brought in hot lightweight Bobby Green on short notice.
Green is running into a hot commodity that has a similar, but more refined skill set in Healy. Healy‘s wrestling is better and he has a suffocating top game that can stifle Green’s jiu-jitsu.
Don’t be surprised if Healy pulls off a solid submission win. He did it to Jim Miller and he can definitely do it to Green.
Also in the running: Scott Jorgensen, Joe Lauzon
Knockout of the Night: Chad Mendes
Chad Mendes is arguably the second best featherweight in the world. He has shown that in his dominating performances over everybody minus Jose Aldo.
Mendes faces a tough test in NikLentz, but in looking at the matchup, both men have similar skill sets.
With that being said, Mendes is a better wrestler than Lentz, and wrestling is Lentz‘s biggest strength.
Mendes will use his wrestling to stay upright and tag Lentz. That may earn him a nice little bonus check in time for Christmas.
Also in the running: Sam Stout, EdsonBarboza
Fight of the Night: Demetrious Johnson-Joseph Benavidez
The first time Demetrious Johnson and Joseph Benavidez fought, it was a fun, competitive fight. The second time should be just as good.
Both men are incredibly fast and skilled, which is why they are ranked as the top fighters in the world. They are going to log one of the best fights in the second half of the year and get paid handsomely for it.
Also in the running: Michael McDonald-Urijah Faber, Joe Lauzon-Mac Danzig, Sam Stout-Cody McKenzie, Abel Trujillo-Roger Bowling
As fighters continue to find success under the bright lights of the UFC and their profiles rise in the realm of public perception, it’s easy to lose things in the shuffle. For recently turned, yet ever-scrappy, welterweight Court McGee, the potent…
As fighters continue to find success under the bright lights of the UFC and their profiles rise in the realm of public perception, it’s easy to lose things in the shuffle. For recently turned, yet ever-scrappy, welterweight Court McGee, the potential to be led astray by the chaos is tempered by his ability take things one step at a time.
If that sounds simplistic, that’s because it is. And that is the only way it can be for McGee as he moves forward through his career in mixed martial arts.
“The most important thing for me is to not look too far ahead,” McGee told Bleacher Report. “Sometimes you get caught up in what could happen or what may happen. But if it hasn’t happened yet, then I’m wasting energy just thinking about it. What I can do is show every day and do my best and that ensures the next day I’ll be ready to go. People ask me all the time what I want to do next or who I want to fight, but the most important thing for me is right now. I keep things simple and look at it one day at a time because you never know what is going to happen.
“I was cornering somebody on a card once and during the weight cut, a guy slipped and hit his head while cutting weight in the sauna. You never know, man. If I’m sitting here thinking about fighting a top-10 guy then I’m not focused on what I have directly in front of me. I can’t be thinking about what is potentially down the road when I haven’t even fought this fight yet. I haven’t even made weight yet and I have so much on my plate that needs my attention that I can’t waste energy on thinking about what could happen down the line.”
“I have a lot to focus on right now and I have a lot of great things in my life,” he added. “I have a beautiful wife and I have two great boys. I have a career in the UFC and the most important thing for me is to stay focused on today because that gives me the ability to show up when it’s time to show up.”
The Utah native and Pit-elevated fighter jumped out to a solid start after winning the 11th season of The Ultimate Fighter. After defeating Kris McCray to earn the six-figure contract, the 28-year-old picked up two more wins and began to establish himself in the middleweight division in the process. But setbacks in his next two outings would force McGee to take a look at how he was approaching things. It would lead him to pull the trigger on making a move he had been thinking about since early 2012—making way for the welterweight division.
The decision proved to be a wise one as McGee picked up victories in his first two outings at 170 pounds. He defeated veteran Josh Neer in his divisional debut at UFC 157 back in February, then followed up that performance by edging out fellow TUFalum Robert Whitaker at Fight Night 27 in Indianapolis. While earning those victories proved McGee could be successful in his new weight class, the intensity of his performances also served to show his gritty, grinding style could be just as effective in a new division.
“Every fight is a learning experience whether you win or lose,” McGee said. “I had thought about dropping to 170 back before I fought in Australia in March of last year. I had been thinking about it before but some things do cross your mind because you’re carrying a little bit of extra weight, are going to have a little bit harder of a weight cut and you wonder how that is going to affect your gas tank. I just had to make sure I stayed really focused throughout my camps and in-between training on my diet.
“I’m getting more used to it but it’s definitely difficult. The portion sizes are a lot smaller but I have a good variety of food to choose from. I also have some great help from Perfecting Athletes. They’ve helped me out quite a bit and given me tips and hints on how to eat. It’s really made a huge difference and has made a difficult process a lot easier.”
With back-to-back victories under his belt, his focus now turns to his upcoming bout against Ryan LaFlare this weekend at UFC on Fox 9 in Sacramento. Where he was originally slated to face Kelvin Gastelum on Saturday night, theTUF17 winner suffered an injury and was forced out of the fight. Recent promotional newcomer Laflare stepped up to take the bout on short notice, and McGee had a new fight on his hands.
While the last-minute change of opponent could have been a hectic situation, McGee’s outlook and perspective are custom-made for the unpredictable nature of MMA.
“I don’t know, man. I don’t watch a lot of video and I don’t research the guy I’m fighting because I never train for one specific guy. And it’s partly for the purpose we are talking about. You never know what is going to happen. That’s why I look at things the way I do. If I train for one specific guy and style, then I go out there and lose because I was only focusing on one thing; how is that going to make me a better mixed martial artist?
“I gear my training so that I get better at every aspect of the game. I try to constantly improve all the time so if there is a wrench thrown in, it doesn’t screw up my entire game. I try to keep it as simple as possible where I try to constantly improve and always be learning. It’s worked out pretty good for me so far. Then when these things do happen, and this guy is a little taller or he’s better than the other guy at this or that, I don’t have these big huge changes to make. When you prepare for anybody and everybody, things of this nature aren’t a huge shocker other than being unfortunate for the person that got injured.”
If McGee can continue his streak of success and defeat LaFlare on Saturday night, he will take a definitive step towards establishing his footing in the welterweight division. A win at UFC on Fox 9 won’t catapult him into the top 10 of the weight class, but it will certainly provide the type of momentum he will need to travel further into what is arguably the UFC’s most stacked division.
While there are certainly other talented collectives under the UFC banner, no weight class boasts the amount of potential title contenders that the welterweight division currently enjoys. McGee knows he’s a few steps away from getting to the deep end of the pool, but he’s willing to run through whoever the promotions put in front of him to get there.
“Here I come,” McGee said in regard to the talent-stacked welterweight division. “If you are going to be fighting in this sport you have to be ready to do whatever it takes. You only get one shot at this thing, and whether it is in this weight division or another, it doesn’t matter. They might as well line up the tough ones for me.
“There are no slouches or easy fights in the UFC. You always have to be on top of your game and be improving just to compete. But I didn’t come here just to compete; I came here to fight and win. I came here to do the best that I can and I’m grateful to have the opportunity.”
Duane Finley is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.
Perhaps, the most telling statement that Urijah Faber ever made about his own position in life came at WEC 26, as he prepared to fight a little known 21-year-old named Dominick Cruz.
“I’m not the type of person who’s ever been be…
Perhaps, the most telling statement that Urijah Faber ever made about his own position in life came at WEC 26, as he prepared to fight a little known 21-year-old named Dominick Cruz.
“I’m not the type of person who’s ever been beat up or picked on or—you know—the underdog,” Faber said during pre-fight interviews. “I’ve been the man since I was a little kid, and I’m still going to be the man.”
That confidence was well-earned. At the time, Faber was the undisputed king of MMA‘s lightest weight classes. He was the WEC’s featherweight champion who was undefeated for more than two years and was consistently capable of making the rest of the best fighters in his division appear decidedly less than.
For lack of better terminology, he was indeed the man.
Fast-forward six-and-a-half rocky years, and Faber can still lay claim to being among the best and most popular fighters under 155 pounds. That said, if he’s going to carry on being the man at 34 years old, this Saturday’s fight against Michael McDonald shapes up as an absolute must-win.
Since Nov. 2008, Faber has posted a middling 8-5 overall record in the WEC and UFC. The astounding fact that all five of those losses came in title fights stands as kind of a backhanded compliment to his own diminishing status.
If not for all those years spent being the man, Faber never would’ve been granted so many championship opportunities. Still, after losses to Mike Brown, Jose Aldo, RenanBarao and (most bitterly of all) Cruz, it’s getting tougher and tougher to tell where he stands among the little guy elite.
After each one of those defeats, he’s had to do some backtracking. He’s put together character-rehabilitating wins against a host of also-rans (Jens Pulver, TakeyaMizugaki, IuriAlcantara) and a couple of top contenders (Eddie Wineland, Scott Jorgensen).
Right now, he’s riding a three-fight win streak, but “The California Kid” obviously isn’t a kid anymore. It’s unclear how many more times he can hike back up the same mountain before his perennial No. 1 contender status eludes him for good.
That’s why this weekend’s fight is so important.
At 22 years old and 16-2 overall, McDonald is more than an upstart. He’s already fought for the interim bantamweight title, losing to Barao via fourth-round submission 10 months ago.
He’s young and insanely talented, but he still doesn’t have much of a profile among UFC fans. In short, he’s exactly the kind of guy whom Faber used to slay on the regular, back when the business of being the man was still being good to him.
If he’s able to do what he’s always done and top McDonald, then he stands a very good chance of meeting the winner of February’s scheduled bantamweight title unification bout between Barao and Cruz.
If not—if McDonald becomes the first non-champion ever to defeat Faber—then it could amount to Faber’s most significant and unfortunate loss since Brown knocked him into his current flat spin five years ago.
Faber, after all, has nowhere to go now. He’s already been run out of the featherweight division and has already lost once to both Barao and Cruz. The idea of him trying to make flyweight seems ridiculous, and a guy can only get so many shots at the featherweight and bantamweight belts before he gets permanently crossed off the list, no matter who he was in the past.
In large part, Faber’s legacy is already secure. If his career ended today, he’d already be a Hall of Famer.
The thing at stake for him in this bout may well be the difference between being a contender and being a pioneer.
The former means he can still be the man.
The latter means he merely once was, until the new men got here.
The UFC returns to the Fox airwaves Saturday night, offering its ninth show on the big network. The flyweight title will be on the line as Demetrious Johnson defends against Joseph Benavidez for the second time in a little over a year, and Urijah Faber…
The UFC returns to the Fox airwaves Saturday night, offering its ninth show on the big network. The flyweight title will be on the line as Demetrious Johnson defends against Joseph Benavidez for the second time in a little over a year, and Urijah Faber will slug it out with Michael McDonald in the co-main event.
With that in mind, here are five reasons to tune in for a little pre-holiday mayhem this weekend.