‘UFC on FUEL TV 10: Nogueira vs. Werdum’ Aftermath – A Long, Strange Trip


(Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)

If what we saw last night was truly the end of the UFC’s experiment with hosting events on FUEL TV (remember, FUEL becomes Fox Sports 2 this August, and no, preliminary cards don’t count), it ended in one of the strangest ways imaginable. A UFC record eight fights ended in submission; four of which ended in less than three minutes. None of the bouts on the main card went the distance, which helped contribute to what felt like an eternity of watching old footage and staring at Kenny Florian’s magnificent hair in between fights. And, of course, there was Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira surrendering to an armbar from Fabricio Werdum in the main event of the evening, marking the first time that Nogueira has opted to submit instead of letting something break.

It would be easy to write about how the once-invincible Nogueira looked like a fighter who should strongly consider retirement, but I can’t help but feel that doing so would be misleading. For starters, focusing on how beatable Big Nog looked would make it seem like the fight was a lopsided, painful to watch beatdown. Although Werdum was in clear control throughout the fight, it was still a pretty close and entertaining scrap between two of the UFC’s best heavyweights.

Perhaps more importantly, attributing Big Nog’s loss solely to Father Time would be an insult to the performance that Fabricio Werdum put forward last night. Right from the start of the fight, Werdum was able to mount Nogueira and began to work for submissions. When Nogueira made his way back to his feet, Werdum got the better of the stand-up exchanges. Rinse, wash, repeat, until Nogueira realized that he wasn’t going to escape the armbar that Werdum locked up in the second round and tapped out.


(Photo by Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images)

If what we saw last night was truly the end of the UFC’s experiment with hosting events on FUEL TV (remember, FUEL becomes Fox Sports 2 this August, and no, preliminary cards don’t count), it ended in one of the strangest ways imaginable. A UFC record eight fights ended in submission; four of which ended in less than three minutes. None of the bouts on the main card went the distance, which helped contribute to what felt like an eternity of watching old footage and staring at Kenny Florian’s magnificent hair in between fights. And, of course, there was Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira surrendering to an armbar from Fabricio Werdum in the main event of the evening, marking the first time that Nogueira has opted to submit instead of letting something break.

It would be easy to write about how the once-invincible Nogueira looked like a fighter who should strongly consider retirement, but I can’t help but feel that doing so would be misleading. For starters, focusing on how beatable Big Nog looked would make it seem like the fight was a lopsided, painful to watch beatdown. Although Werdum was in clear control throughout the fight, it was still a pretty close and entertaining scrap between two of the UFC’s best heavyweights.

Perhaps more importantly, attributing Big Nog’s loss solely to Father Time would be an insult to the performance that Fabricio Werdum put forward last night. Right from the start of the fight, Werdum was able to mount Nogueira and began to work for submissions. When Nogueira made his way back to his feet, Werdum got the better of the stand-up exchanges. Rinse, wash, repeat, until Nogueira realized that he wasn’t going to escape the armbar that Werdum locked up in the second round and tapped out.

For all intents and purposes, last night’s victory put Fabricio Werdum in line for a shot against the winner of the upcoming rubber match between UFC Heavyweight Champion Cain Velasquez and Junior Dos Santos. His 3-0 run in the UFC has been nothing less than spectacular to watch, and his grappling prowess poses a legitimate threat to anyone in the heavyweight division. He submitted Fedor back when that meant something. He submitted Big Nog last night, who has always been one of our sport’s premier grapplers. If he decides to sit out until Velasquez/Dos Santos III, like he plans on doing, it’ll be hard to argue against giving him the next shot.

For what it’s worth, Werdum mentioned that he wants to coach a season of The Ultimate Fighter alongside Velasquez when the UFC Network debuts in Latin America this fall. We’ll talk about the likelihood of that ever happening if Velasquez makes it past Dos Santos.

And as for Nogueira? There’s no point in writing that he’s in the twilight of his career or that he should hang up the gloves; fans have literally been writing that about him since 2008. He’s going to fight as long as he’s still competitive, and he still looked like a formidable opponent for most of the top-heavy heavyweight division last night. His arm isn’t broken, so he could take another fight by the end of the year if he wanted to. I say match him up against Mark Hunt. Because Pride, you guys.

The rest of the card was a who’s-who of “who’s that?” winning (mostly) by submissions. Notable highlights…

– Your TUF Brazil 2 champion is Leonardo Santos, who tapped out William Patolino in the second round last night. If you follow submission grappling, you’ve probably known about Santos since the late 90s, and were thrilled to watch him pick up a victory in the Octagon last night. At thirty-three years old, I don’t exactly see him having a spectacular run in the UFC, unlike recent TUF champions…um…hmm…

– Oh wait, I thought of one! The first champion of TUF Brazil, Rony Jason, who needed just eighty-four seconds to choke out the previously undefeated Mike Wilkinson last night. He improved to 3-0 in his UFC career, and with that impressive submission on his resume he’s earned a step up in competition for his next bout.

– Last time Thiago Silva fought, I somewhat-jokingly wrote that the result was drug test pending. This time, I’m not joking when I write it. Drug test pending, Silva picked up his first victory since 2009 in a very convincing manner over Raphael “Feijao” Cavalcante. When Thiago Silva is on top of his game, he’s a threat to anyone in the LHW division. Himself included.

– Silva took home $100,000 for both Fight of the Night and Knockout of the Night honors. I personally thought it was far more satisfying to watch Felipe Arantes punch the purple hair dye out of Godofredo Pepey, but you never know, Arantes may end up getting that money after all.

– For whatever reason, Bigfoot Silva took to Twitter to call out Thiago Silva after the fight. You can insert your own rebound fight and/or Thiago ate Bigfoot’s Doritos/Taco Bell/Chips Ahoy jokes in the comments section.

– $50K Submission of the Night honors went to Erick Silva, who reminded everyone why he was riding so much hype before his fight against Jon Fitch with a quick submission over Jason High. He may not be ready for the deep end of the division just yet (ROFL at the idea of having him fight GSP) but he’s an incredibly interesting prospect.

Full Results

Main Card:
Fabricio Werdum def. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira via Submission (armbar), 2:41 of Round Two
Leonardo Santos def. William Macario via Submission (arm triangle choke), 4:43 of Round Two
Thiago Silva def. Rafael Cavalcante via KO (punches), 4:29 of Round One
Erick Silva def. Jason High via Submission (triangle armbar), 1:11 of Round One
Daniel Sarafian def. Eddie Mendez via Submission (arm triangle choke), 2:20 of Round One
Rony Jason def. Mike Wilkinson via Technical Submission (triangle choke), 1:24 of Round One

Preliminary card:
Raphael Assunçao def. Vaughan Lee via Submission (armbar), 1:51 of Round Two
Felipe Arantes def. Godofredo Pepey via TKO (elbows and punches), 3:32 of Round One
Ildemar Alcantara def. Leandro Silva via Unanimous Decision
Rodrigo Damm def. Mizuto Hirota via Split Decision
Caio Magalhaes def. Karlos Vemola via Submission (rear-naked choke), 2:49 of Round Two
Antonio Braga Neto def. Anthony Smith via Submission (kneebar), 1:52 of Round One

@SethFalvo

Antonio Silva Challenges Thiago Silva to Heavyweight Bout, Thiago Responds

Following an impressive knockout victory over ex-Strikeforce champ Rafael Cavalcante at UFC on FUEL 10 Saturday night, it was inevitable Thiago Silva was going to get called out sooner than later. However, he probably wasn’t expecting a challenge …

Following an impressive knockout victory over ex-Strikeforce champ Rafael Cavalcante at UFC on FUEL 10 Saturday night, it was inevitable Thiago Silva was going to get called out sooner than later. 

However, he probably wasn’t expecting a challenge from his former teammate/recent heavyweight title challenger Antonio Silva. 

Shortly after Thiago finished “Feijao,” here’s what “Bigfoot” tweeted in Portuguese: 

The Strikeforce import says he has a “debt to settle” with Thiago, arguing that a heavyweight fight is fair since the fellow Brazilian cuts down from 230 pounds to make the light heavyweight limit of 205 pounds. 

Speaking through an interpreter at the UFC on FUEL 10 post-fight press conference (via MMA Fighting), Thiago Silva offered an explanation for the bad blood and welcomed the Bigfoot match up…as long as it takes place at light heavyweight. 

“He must be sad because I left American Top Team, but if he wants to fight me he has to come down to 205. That’s it,” he said. 

Thiago Silva stands 6’1″ with a 75-inch reach, while Antonio Silva is 6’4″ tall and boasts an 82-inch reach. 

Bigfoot is also known to shed some weight in order to make the 265-pound heavyweight limit, so a light heavyweight bout with anyone seems flat out impossible. 

Thiago Silva’s main card victory over Cavalcante earned him both “Knockout of the Night” and “Fight of the Night” honors, good for a cool $100,000 in bonus money. 

Due to failing post-fight drug tests, Thiago is just 1-1(2) in his past four bouts, though he decisively beat both Brandon Vera and Stanislav Nedkov prior to the wins being overturned. 

While the matchup would be pointless from a ranking standpoint, does anyone think Thiago Silva vs. Antonio Silva would be a fun fight to watch?

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA Editor for eDraft.com and contributes MMA videos to The Young Turks Sports Show. 

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UFC on Fuel 10 Results: Top 10 Heavyweights in the UFC

UFC on Fuel TV 10 was headlined by a battle of Top 10 heavyweights.No. 3-ranked Fabricio Werdum defeated No. 8-ranked Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira via second-round submission. The victory moved him closer to a potential title shot against the winner of Cai…

UFC on Fuel TV 10 was headlined by a battle of Top 10 heavyweights.

No. 3-ranked Fabricio Werdum defeated No. 8-ranked Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira via second-round submission. The victory moved him closer to a potential title shot against the winner of Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos.

The heavyweight division continues to get better and better with each passing month. We are beginning to see more development in the division, and the UFC is reaping the benefits.

These are the UFC’s top 10 heavyweights.

Begin Slideshow

UFC on Fuel 10 Results: 5 Fights for Fabricio Werdum to Take Next

Fabricio Werdum has officially tossed his name into contention for the UFC heavyweight title with his performance at UFC on Fuel 10. “Vai Cavalo” submitted the legendary Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira via armbar, effectively pushing himself to the front of t…

Fabricio Werdum has officially tossed his name into contention for the UFC heavyweight title with his performance at UFC on Fuel 10. “Vai Cavalo” submitted the legendary Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira via armbar, effectively pushing himself to the front of the line of top heavyweights.

Cain Velasquez and Junior dos Santos are scheduled to settle their rivalry with a rubber match next with the belt on the line. In the meantime, Werdum lies in wait ready for a shot at gold.

Here are five fights for Werdum to take next.

Begin Slideshow

UFC on Fuel 10 Results: Musings on the Nogueira vs. Werdum Fight Card

UFC on Fuel 10 sure tested the patience of the fans viewing the card on television on Saturday night. That’s no reflection on the fighters, who did a fine job of not letting the fights go to the judges. However, those early stoppages had their drawback…

UFC on Fuel 10 sure tested the patience of the fans viewing the card on television on Saturday night. That’s no reflection on the fighters, who did a fine job of not letting the fights go to the judges. However, those early stoppages had their drawbacks, the main one being that the UFC and Fuel TV had a lot of time to fill. To fill that time, we were treated to an endless loop of the same commercials.

Let’s try to put that behind us and just focus on what happened inside the Octagon on Saturday night in Brazil.

 

There is Crying in MMA

The tears that flowed down the face of Antonio Braga Neto as he walked to the Octagon for his UFC debut on Saturday barely had time to dry before he was getting his hand raised in victory.

Once Neto’s fight against Anthony Smith went to the ground, we learned that his jiu-jitsu bona fides, two gold medals at the World Jiu-Jitsu Championships and four gold medals at the Pan Jiu-Jitsu Championships are no joke.

Neto was a dervish on the ground, attacking the leg of Smith and cranking on a brutal kneebar that had Smith screaming in pain and wondering what was taking referee Marc Goddard so damn long to get Neto to release the hold.

 

Did Karlos Vemola Go Out on His Shield?

In the pre-fight buildup, it was said that Karlos Vemola, even with a loss, could possibly remain employed with the UFC if he “went out on his shield.”  We’ll get a ruling from the UFC on that soon after Vemola tasted defeat via submission on Saturday.

In the first round of their preliminary card bout, Vemola escaped a handful of guillotine choke attempts from Caio Magalhaes and rained down a significant number of strikes. However, Vemola was unable to finish Magalhaes in the first round, and Vemola’s expenditure of energy may have led to his downfall in the second stanza.

Vemola is now 2-4 in the UFC, losing fights at heavyweight, light heavyweight and middleweight. It’s hard to see him staying in the UFC, but stranger things have happened.

 

Watch Your Positioning

Godofredo Castro learned an important lesson during his fight with Felipe Arantes, and that lesson was a fighter should always be aware of his positioning. Castro was in full mount on Arantes when he postured up. Arantes, feeling an opening, was able to quickly reverse. The next thing that Castro probably remembers was referee Dan Miragliotta pulling Arantes off him. 

When Castro catches the replay, he’ll see that between the time he was in full mount and when the fight ended, he absorbed a number of heavy elbows to the head.

It was a nice victory for Arantes and a valuable lesson for Castro.

 

What is Going on in the Bantamweight Division?

The division has a champion in Dominick Cruz who has not defended his title since October 1, 2011, as he rehabs from surgery (or surgeries) and an interim champion who was pulled from his last scheduled bout due to injury. 

The top-ranked fighter outside those two is Urijah Faber, a fighter who has recent losses to both Cruz and interim champion Renan Barao. The next highest-ranked fighter, Michael McDonald, is coming off a loss to Barao, while the No. 4-ranked bantamweight, Eddie Wineland is in limbo after seeing his UFC 161 matchup with Barao scrapped. 

On Saturday, things got even murkier when Raphael Assuncao put those ranked above him on notice with his fourth straight win in the UFC’s bantamweight division.

The UFC matchmaking team has some work to do trying to sort through what the hell is going on at 135 pounds.

 

Karma

Rony Jason wanted to do the glove-touch thing to start his fight against Mike Wilkinson, but Wilkinson wanted no part of that show of respect. One minute and 24 seconds later, Wilkinson was asleep and Jason was running around the Octagon with his finger to his lips and pantomiming sleep. Yeah, karma—it’ll bite you in the ass. 

 

The Jury Should Still Be Out on Erick Silva

Erick Silva looked good at UFC on Fuel 10, adding another first-round submission win to his collection. However, let’s slow things down before putting him in the top 10 of the UFC’s welterweight division.

Prior to his victory over Jason High on Saturday, his UFC victories came against Luis Ramos and Charlie Brenneman, and, if you feel like throwing in the disqualification loss, Carlo Prater. All of those fights ended in the first round. All of those fighters, with the exception of High, are no longer on the UFC roster.

Silva’s single loss was a three-round decision defeat at the hands of Jon Fitch, who, at the time of the fight, was a top-10 fighter.

Silva may very well grow into a contender, but he’s not one yet. He needs to show he can go the distance and can defeat someone who is going to have more than a cup of coffee in the UFC. Silva’s next fight will be his big test.

 

Let’s Take a Break on the Submissions for One Fight

Thiago Silva and Rafael Cavalcante didn’t get the memo about UFC on Fuel 10 being a fight card full of submissions. Nope, these two light heavyweights, who both have BJJ black belts, wanted to do some striking.

Both fighters were aggressive early, but as they went deeper into the first round, Cavalcante’s hands got lower and lower and lower. That fact was not lost on Silva, who walked Cavalcante down, put Cavalcante’s back to the cage and blasted him with a huge uppercut that crumpled him to the mat and ended the fight.

Cavalcante’s conditioning seemed to have failed him, something noted by another fighter who defeated him, Dan Henderson:

The knockout earned Silva $100,000 in bonus cash, something he won’t be able to collect until the post-fight drug tests come back, and if you know anything about Silva’s history over the last few years, that clean test is not a slam dunk. For that matter, the $50,000 Cavalcante got for Fight of the Night is not a sure thing either. 

 

More Crying in MMA

One of the most emotional moments of the night came when Leonardo Santos jumped from the cage and embraced a tearful UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo after Santos had submitted William Macario and claimed the title of winner of the second season of The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil. 

 

Did Werdum Do Enough to Make Us Believe?


Fabricio Werdum entered the Octagon on Saturday night as the third-ranked fighter in the heavyweight division and despite claiming a submission victory over Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, I don’t know if he boosted his standing in the division.

Werdum looked like he was running out of gas as the first round came to a close. He was clearly doing some clock watching, and that’s not something that screams “future UFC champion.”

Werdum may have won on Saturday night, but it’s doubtful that Joe Silva penciled him in for a future title shot after that performance.

 

Not a Great Call?

I understand the desire to applaud a referee when they do something correct, but when a referee does something only half right, let’s not call that a great move.

William Macario grabbed the fence during a takedown attempt from Leonardo Santos during The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil finale bout. That fence grab allowed Macario to land in top position when the fight hit the ground.

Referee Marc Goddard correctly stopped the fight at that point, but when he only warned Macario about the fence grab and reset the fighters in the standing position, he dropped the ball. 

It was a missed opportunity. It was not, as UFC president Dana White tweeted, a great call. 

It was a half-great call.

The rule is no fence grabbing. Macario broke the rule; he should have had a point deducted, and the fight reset standing.

Let’s not be satisfied when a referee gets something half correct.

 

Think Before Taking the Call

A quick note to UFC fighters: If you are not from Brazil and you get a call to fight in Brazil, you may want to ask for some type of hazard pay, because the odds are good that you are not going to leave the country with a win on your record. 

On Saturday, not one non-Brazilian fighter won a fight.

 

So, So, So Long

As Mike Bohn was so kind to point out on Twitter, the total fight time for UFC on Fuel 10 was 76 minutes and 52 seconds.

Got that? One hour, 16 minutes and 52 seconds. Yet those of us who watched the entire broadcast sat through, what, six hours of commercials and replays.

I understand that broadcast television makes its money from commercials, but c’mon. This card could have been over much sooner. There was no need to stretch it out. Fuel TV could have and should have taken the hit and wrapped the event up by 10 p.m. ET.

Something has to be done about this in the future. I’m sure many fans tuned out before the main event took place.

 

North America is an Afterthought

One thing fans in North America need to take away from these Brazil cards: You are an afterthought.  These events are not being assembled with you in mind; they are being put together to grow the sport in Brazil. 

With a population of 196.7 million, Brazil is going to be a huge market for the UFC. As we have witnessed, a large amount of Brazil’s population loves MMA. I mean, really, really loves MMA.

The UFC is doing the right thing by putting on multiple events in multiple venues across Brazil. Don’t expect that to change any time soon.

Now, about the choice of venues, let’s make sure air conditioning is something they come equipped with.

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UFC on Fuel 10 Video Highlights from Nogueira vs Werdum, Silva vs Cavalcante

If you tuned into UFC on Fuel 10 on Saturday night, you got to hear Bruce Buffer call out “and the winner by submission” multiple times over the course of the event. In fact, all but four fights on the card ended via some form of submission. …

If you tuned into UFC on Fuel 10 on Saturday night, you got to hear Bruce Buffer call out “and the winner by submission” multiple times over the course of the event. 

In fact, all but four fights on the card ended via some form of submission.  The two bouts headlining the Brazil fight card did not deviate from that pattern, but the light heavyweight scrap that preceded the co-main event sure did.

Thiago Silva and Rafael Cavalcante both possess black belts in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, but neither fighter showed any interest in showcasing their ground skills on Saturday night. Instead, it looked like their only focus was ending the fight with one punch—something that Silva accomplished when he blasted Cavalcante with an uppercut, putting the seemingly gassed former Strikeforce champion down and out in the first round.

Leonardo Santos took home The Ultimate Fighter Brazil: 2 title when he earned a second-round tapout victory over William Macario.  Santos, fighting out of Nova Uniao, then leapt from the Octagon in search of teammate, UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo.  When Santos found Aldo in the crowd, the two embraced in celebration before Santos returned to the Octagon to have his hand raised in victory.

The main event, somewhat surprisingly, did end in submission.  The thinking heading into this fight was that Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belts Fabricio Werdum and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira would be reluctant to take the fight to the ground. Each man knew what the other could accomplish on the mat. 

When the fight began, Nogueira wanted to keep the fight standing, but Werdum, the world jiu-jitsu champion, did not.  Werdum’s takedowns decided that the fight was going to the mat, where he was able to verbally submit Nogueira.

Check out the video highlights for the three fights that headlined UFC on Fuel 10.

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