Do Dana White’s Antics Help or Hurt the Growth of MMA and the UFC?

Dana White’s increasingly inflammatory and pernicious antics are making the UFC look bush league—unworthy of a deal with a major network such as Fox. This isn’t about White’s frequent swearing. This isn’t about his choice of attire&mdas…

Dana White‘s increasingly inflammatory and pernicious antics are making the UFC look bush league—unworthy of a deal with a major network such as Fox. 

This isn’t about White’s frequent swearing. 

This isn’t about his choice of attire—trendy T-shirts—that some might say is unbefitting an executive. 

This isn’t even about his notorious disdain for certain media members

This is about White’s attitude toward the fans and toward criticism of the UFC’s product. 

Recently, the main event of UFC on Fuel TV 9 fell apart. Rising Swedish star Alexander Gustafsson was supposed to face Gegard Mousasi in the latter’s long-awaited UFC debut, but the fight never came to pass. 

A cut above Gustafsson’s eye kept the Swede from being cleared to fight by the Swedish MMA Federation. 

An intriguing main event with established fighters disappeared in the stroke of a pen on a medical form. 

The UFC lost a main event, and fans lost the only meaningful fight on the card.

UFC brass scrambled to find a replacement and ultimately put the unheralded, unheard of, desperately outmatched Swedish journeyman Ilir Latifi opposite Mousasi in the main event. 

Let that sink in. 

The UFC likes to call themselves the “Super Bowl of MMA,” yet a 7-2 (one NC) fighter that had no significant wins and no name value was deemed good enough to main event one of their cards. True, these were trying circumstances, but the world’s largest and most prestigious MMA promotion should be better prepared. 

An obvious solution to losing a main event is to bump up the co-main event or to otherwise shuffle the card around to make it satisfactory at the very least. 

This couldn’t be done with UFC on Fuel TV 9; the talent on the card was lacking. It was a classic “boxing card’ in the sense that the main event was the only reason to watch; the undercard was less than nothing special. 

When fans vocalized their thoughts to Dana White over Twitter, he berated them:

This isn’t the first time the UFC president has lashed out at unhappy fans. 

UFC 152 featured a flyweight title fight between Demetrious Johnson and Joseph Benavidez. Paying customers weren’t too thrilled with the match, and they made their thoughts known in the form of boos and Internet jeers.

White was characteristically recalcitrant. 

“Let me tell you what: If you didn’t like that flyweight fight, please, I’m begging you, don’t ever buy another UFC pay-per-view again,” he told MMAJunkie.com after the event. 

He continued his incisive rant against the fans, saying “Don’t ever buy another one…I don’t want your money. You’re a moron, you don’t like fighting, you don’t appreciate great talent, or heart, if you didn’t like that flyweight fight.” 

White’s intransigence is concerning. 

When Vince McMahon puts on a terrible wrestling pay-per-view, he doesn’t call the fans idiots. When a boxing match fails to deliver, the promoters don’t take to Twitter to sling insults with trolls or even legitimate commenters. 

Comparisons with other fields aside, we can all agree that telling fans not to buy or watch your product is a peculiar business strategy. Callously insulting your fanbase isn’t the best strategy for long-term growth, either.

White is hurting the brand’s image when he goes off on tirades against his paying customers. What other major company or corporate figurehead does that?

This is not to say that White is inherently bad and needs to be replaced. White’s frequent swearing, choice of clothing (remember his “dickhouse” shirt?), giving away free tickets and positive use of social media (#Hunt4UFC contests and the like) have earned him many fans and more than 2.5 million Twitter followers. 

If speaking and dressing like a regular person rather than a pretentious CEO made him such an uncouth barbarian, would he have been invited to speak at the prestigious Oxford Union Society back in 2010?

White is a unique character and telling him to act like an anodyne drone wouldn’t be constructive. His personality, while polemic, isn’t the problem.  

White plays the “cool rich guy” gimmick well. It works. It appeals to the UFC’s key demographic of 18 to 34-year-old males. Who would a young, testosterone-laden man better relate with and prefer more, a stiff like Bud Selig or a cussing, informal character like White?

But White being ornery and dissing the fans—the people that are carrying and supporting his company in the form of television views, PPV buys and merchandise sales—is inexcusable and can only be harmful. 

When enough of the fans are angry, like they were after UFC on Fuel 9‘s main event vanished, White needs to look at his own organization for the blame. The audience is never at fault for not happily accepting an inferior product.

 

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UFC on Fuel 9: Swedish Commission Under Internal Review on Gustafsson’s Cut

Several parties are extremely unhappy with the way the Swedish MMA Federation killed the original Alexander Gustafsson vs. Gegard Mousasi main event at UFC on Fuel 9, with an internal review hitting the commission.That’s the latest word on the event fr…

Several parties are extremely unhappy with the way the Swedish MMA Federation killed the original Alexander Gustafsson vs. Gegard Mousasi main event at UFC on Fuel 9, with an internal review hitting the commission.

That’s the latest word on the event from The Telegraph, as MMA journalist Gareth A. Davies highlights the issues surrounding the medical staff:

George Sallfeldt, president of the Swedish MMA federation, told Telegraph Sport after the event: “We will be looking into the situation that happened, and the way it happened. We’ll be asking the medical committee how they arrived at their decision [on the Tuesday night] and why it was made when it was.”

But he added: “It someone contacts the federation it is difficult to do anything different to what happened. But I have to say that this situation has never happened before.”

Just a handful of days before the event in Stockholm, Sweden, news broke (via Swedish MMA news site MMANYTT) that Gustafsson would most likely be medically unfit to compete at UFC on Fuel 9 against Mousasi due a cut over his left eye, suffered in training.

UFC president Dana White and his staff was forced to scramble to find a late replacement in local Swedish fighter, Ilir LatifiGustafsson‘s training partner.

Although he had just a few days to prepare and cut weight, Latifi lasted 15 minutes in a one-sided decision to Mousasi.

While the crowd seemed to want more action from the former Strikeforce and two-division DREAM champion, Mousasi admitted in his post-fight interview that he was ill and suffering from an injured knee as he handily improved to 34-3-2 in his UFC debut.

White posted a picture of Gustafsson on Twitter roughly three days before the card, where the light heavyweight’s cut seemed healed, calling it the “worst decision” he had “ever” seen to pull a fight.

Gustafsson is expected to be medically cleared for an upcoming bout soon enough. But his next opponent is unclear, although many UFC fighters in his division are currently awaiting upcoming event contracts and announcements.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, MacworldGamePro1UP, MMA Mania & The L.A. Times.

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Quote of the Day: Conor McGregor Was Collecting Welfare Before 60k “Knockout of the Night” Bonus


(I can’t tell you what my strategy was going in, nor can I tell you who the UFC would like me to face next. All I can tell you is that I’m just a man looking for the bastard children who took me Lucky Charms.) 

There was something incredibly familiar about Conor McGregor from the moment he started mean-mugging Marcus Brimage at the UFC on FUEL 9 weigh-ins. His brash arrogance, his complete lack of respect for his opponent’s game, hell, even his body type was positively…Diazian. And although his actual respect for Brimage in his post-fight interview and snappy attire at the post-fight press conference were anything but, we couldn’t help but be reminded of Nick Diaz while McGregor was explaining how dire his financial situation was before earning a $60,000 “Knockout of the Night” bonus last weekend:

I’m just happy I won $60K. I’m just thinking on what I’m going to spend it on. I’ll buy myself a car anyway. A nice car, may be some suits or something. Custom made suits, I don’t know.

Just last week I was collecting the social welfare, you know what I mean? I was in there saying to them like, ‘I don’t know what going to happen. I’m signed to the UFC. I don’t know what….blah, blah, blah. But now I supposed I’m gonna have to tell them to f— off!

I didn’t have money before this… I was collecting 188 Euro ($245) a week off the social welfare. And now here I am, with like 60gs bonus and then my own pay. I don’t know what the f—s going on to be honest, right? 

Granted, it’s not exactly “I didn’t go to school for buying a house” levels of silliness, but you’ve got to…respect is the wrong word here…appreciate (?) the guy who openly admits to being on welfare literally seconds before sharing his plans to purchase custom tailored suits. Like Old Dirty Bastard before him, Conor McGregor will be an OG until the day he dies.

A full video of the UFC on FUEL 9 press conference is after the jump. 


(I can’t tell you what my strategy was going in, nor can I tell you who the UFC would like me to face next. All I can tell you is that I’m just a man looking for the bastard children who took me Lucky Charms.) 

There was something incredibly familiar about Conor McGregor from the moment he started mean-mugging Marcus Brimage at the UFC on FUEL 9 weigh-ins. His brash arrogance, his complete lack of respect for his opponent’s game, hell, even his body type was positively…Diazian. And although his actual respect for Brimage in his post-fight interview and snappy attire at the post-fight press conference were anything but, we couldn’t help but be reminded of Nick Diaz while McGregor was explaining how dire his financial situation was before earning a $60,000 “Knockout of the Night” bonus last weekend:

I’m just happy I won $60K. I’m just thinking on what I’m going to spend it on. I’ll buy myself a car anyway. A nice car, may be some suits or something. Custom made suits, I don’t know.

Just last week I was collecting the social welfare, you know what I mean? I was in there saying to them like, ‘I don’t know what going to happen. I’m signed to the UFC. I don’t know what….blah, blah, blah. But now I supposed I’m gonna have to tell them to f— off!

I didn’t have money before this… I was collecting 188 Euro ($245) a week off the social welfare. And now here I am, with like 60gs bonus and then my own pay. I don’t know what the f—s going on to be honest, right? 

Granted, it’s not exactly “I didn’t go to school for buying a house” levels of silliness, but you’ve got to…respect is the wrong word here…appreciate (?) the guy who openly admits to being on welfare literally seconds before sharing his plans to purchase custom tailored suits. Like Old Dirty Bastard before him, Conor McGregor will be an OG until the day he dies.

A full video of the UFC on FUEL 9 press conference is below.

J. Jones

UFC on Fuel 9: The Jack Slack Tactical Breakdown

UFC on Fuel 9 was an entertaining enough card, bringing a few good finishes and some excitement as any good event should. While it will not be remembered as anything great, it certainly played out much better than it could have, having lost its main Sw…

UFC on Fuel 9 was an entertaining enough card, bringing a few good finishes and some excitement as any good event should. While it will not be remembered as anything great, it certainly played out much better than it could have, having lost its main Swedish draw, Alexander Gustafsson at the eleventh hour. 

Matt Mitrione picked up an easy knockout victory against the always-over-aggressive Phil De Fries, Brad Pickett picked up a decision victory over Mike Easton, and Diego Brandao submitted the gangly Pablo Garza earlier in the night.

My job is to analyse the more technically expert skills displayed at UFC on Fuel 9, so I will be focusing on Conor McGregor‘s UFC debut, Ross Pearson’s halting of Ryan Couture’s ascendancy and on Gegard Mousasi‘s systematic flattening of Ilir Latifi‘s nose.

 

Ross Pearson vs. Ryan Couture

Couture looked every bit his father’s son when he came out and immediately pressed Pearson against the fence. Couture is—unfortunately for him—nothing like his father in terms of fighting ability along the fence.

Where Randy Couture could make an opponent carry his weight, force them to stumble and have them eating four or five jolting uppercuts and a knee to the midsection as they stumbled to stay upright, Ryan Couture spent the entire first round with Pearson attempting to flatten Pearson to the fence without using any effective offense. 

Pearson, to his credit, did an excellent job of shifting his hips, creating space and stifling Couture’s offense by working to get his head into Couture’s face or under his jaw. 

Pearson, with his back to the fence, was happy to simply stifle Couture’s efforts in this way. Often, it led to Couture getting impatient and giving Pearson the space to escape. 

Pearson’s destruction of Couture in the second round was attributed by many in the media to Pearson “finding his timing,” but in truth, it was more to do with the fact that Couture chose to engage Pearson with single punches and kicks.

A master of the inside slip, Pearson will take his head off line to the left, avoiding strikes and combine the movement with a hard right hook or come back from his crouched position with a beautiful left hook. To stop Pearson doing this, it is necessary to threaten him with high kicks, knees and uppercuts every time he looks to move his head. Couture, on the other hand, opted to run in with punches.

Couture took a step back from that strategy and started throwing low kicks, which did little to stop Pearson moving forward. As Pearson caught one such low kick, he was able to throw Couture to the mat and follow with some ground-and-pound. 

As Couture regained his footing, Pearson swarmed on him against the fence. From here, Pearson took an angle to the right to land his left hook more effectively. Notice how Pearson’s left hook was no longer an attack that entered on Couture’s left side but came straight through the middle of his guard from 12 o’clock. 

Here is Mike Tyson demonstrating his methods for getting to the side of opponents in order to throw his hooks from dominant angles.

To read more about Pearson’s inside slip and boxing game, check out my previous piece:

Best of the Best: Ross Pearson and the Inside Slip.


Conor McGregor vs. Marcus Brimage

For many the breakout fighter of the night was Conor McGregor. Far from the stereotypical scrappy Irish brawler, McGregor seemed every bit the striking technician in his bout.

The wonderful thing about striking as a concept rather than a discipline is that while there is a great list of things not to do—there is no one comprehensive list of things that a fighter should do. One can watch a card like UFC on Fuel 9 and see several wonderfully different but equally effective striking styles.

Where Pearson’s head is always over his forward foot, in anticipation of slipping and coming back with a counter punch, McGregor‘s weight is centered, and he looks to use his footwork more than movement.

Both styles have their own strengths and weaknesses, but the strength of McGregor‘s is the same as that of Gustafsson and Lyoto Machida—it makes back peddling exceptionally easy when a fighter’s weight is not over his lead foot.

While McGregor‘s punches lack the visible movement of a front-foot, heavy fighter like Pearson, they can also carry a good snap because the upright stance keeps the shoulders directly over the hips, making it easier to turn them together.

When crouched over the lead foot, a fighter can become too focused on turning his shoulders around, forgetting his hips because they are not always directly under him.

McGregor‘s A-game seems to be to draw his opponent’s out and counter punch them. This he demonstrated with a beautiful step back to left straight in the opening seconds.

McGregor, as he moves back, routinely swings his lead hand out but keeps his rear hand cocked. This allows him to slap in with a counter right hook or turn his hips into a counter left straight as he sees fit. Whichever hand he uses, McGregor likes his opponents to charge him.

A final neat trick which McGregor showed was a bolo punch. Made famous by Kid Gavilan, this punch is whipped in with the arm after a slight back swing. The arc of the arm makes it a confusing punch to deal with, and the back swing makes it difficult to time.

Many fighters, like Roy Jones Jr. or Ray Leonard, would use a faked bolo punch to keep their opponent confused and to show boat. Here is the great Gavilan talking about the bolo punch. 

 

Gegard Mousasi vs. Ilir Latifi

There isn’t that much to say about this bout, except that Mousasi dealt well with a last-minute change of opponent, especially given how different the two Swedes are. Instead of having to walk down the elusive, rangy and constantly moving Gustafsson, Mousasi was instead charged with fighting a much shorter, stockier wrestler. 

Much has been made of Mousasi‘s flicking jab, but in truth, his success was more to do with Latifi‘s lack of competence on the feet. 

Mousasi would come in with his lead hand low and simply flick it up through the middle of Latifi‘s guard. The difference between the two fighters was Mousasi‘s active right hand.

Mousasi‘s right hand would move to check Latifi‘s as he came in, while Latifi‘s remained nailed to the side of his jaw in anticipation of a left hook which never came.

Mousasi‘s active right hand made it possible for him to move in without fear of a jab from Latifi, leaving the slower, shorter left hook and right hand as Latifi‘s only hope of connecting on Mousasi. Covering Latifi‘s lead hand, Mousasi would snap in a jab and immediately perform a defensive movement such as a step back or a parry.

As the bout progressed, because of Mousasi‘s active right hand, he got caught with a couple of left hooks from Latifi.

Fighters with an active rear hand can often be caught off guard by the left hook—it was the story of Joe Louis’ career. By the end of the second round, however, Mousasi had almost abandoned his backward movement and instead was ducking under punches after his jabs.

Another nice technique which Mousasi used effectively was what I term the “skipping stone” punch. When Latifi switched to a southpaw stance, Mousasi would use his lead hand to tear down Latifi‘s lead hand and immediately jab through the hole presented with the same hand.

While he didn’t pick up the finish and his opponent was clearly overmatched, this was exactly the type of performance which Mousasi should have put on.

In a debut against an unknown, last-minute replacement, too many fighters would have gone all-out because of the expectation that they should finish the opponent easily.

Mousasi showed the patience and efficiency which he is known for and never gave Latifi a chance.

Jack Slack breaks down over 70 striking tactics employed by 20 elite strikers in his first ebookAdvanced Striking and discusses the fundamentals of strategy in his new ebookElementary Striking.

Jack can be found on MMA” target=”_blank”>Twitter, Facebook and at his blog: Fights Gone By.

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UFC on Fuel TV 9 Results: Breaking Down Top Performances from Sweden

Another big night of UFC action took place this weekend from Stockholm, Sweden, with a number of big standout performances taking place on the night.From rapid-fire knockouts to courageous comebacks, UFC on Fuel TV 9 was certainly not short of talking …

Another big night of UFC action took place this weekend from Stockholm, Sweden, with a number of big standout performances taking place on the night.

From rapid-fire knockouts to courageous comebacks, UFC on Fuel TV 9 was certainly not short of talking points—and it certainly wasn’t short of speculation about where the future lies for certain fighters. Yet, before we go down that path, we’ve first got to see what made their performances in Stockholm so special and worth getting excited about.

Read on to see the top performances from UFC on Fuel TV 9. 

 

Gegard Mousasi: Def. Ilir Latifi

It might not have been the dominant performance that many wanted to see from Mousasi in his UFC debut, but with a concise and well-calculated victory, he still emerged looking very strong on the night.

In his first UFC fight, Mousasi was tactical and refused to give in to Latifi, and in the end, that style saw him emerge victorious. Which, given how dangerous his opponent was in terms of takedowns and grappling, is a very fair achievement.

The fact that all of this happened on one leg is even more remarkable, with reports emerging afterwards that Mousasi won the fight with a busted knee that will now require immediate surgery (Yahoo! Sports).

Talk about a memorable performance for your UFC debut.

 

Conor McGregor: Def. Marcus Brimage

It took McGregor just 67 seconds to go from starting a fight to celebrating wildly with an Irish flag—such was his dominance in UFC on Fuel TV 9.

McGregor came into the fight with a strong following and the belief that he could challenge Brimage, but few expected that he would do it in the way that he did. After all, Brimage is a solid fighter who was more than capable of challenging the young Irishman.

Or so we thought.

McGregor showed he is the real deal with a devastating victory here and will now look forward to his next fight, which could see him against some very strong fighters. But, having seen him thrive here, you’d have to think he’ll be more than okay there as well.

 

Matt Mitrione: Def. Philip De Fries

If you thought 67 seconds was quick, then the 19 seconds that Mitrione took to get past De Fries was just something else. And whilst many might want to point out that Mitrione didn’t really do anything to get the win here, the reality was that this was a big performance.

Without a win in nearly two years of fights, Mitrione showed that he hasn’t lost a step at the top level and that he is more than capable of mixing it with the best. What’s more, he showed that understanding of the Octagon can be a real weapon moving forward—perhaps even enough to bring him out of his slump and into the winners circle once more.

A win is a win regardless of how it comes about, and Mitrione will gladly take the victory and the confidence that it will no doubt give him.

 

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UFC on Fuel 9 Results: Musings on the Gegard Mousasi vs. Ilir Latifi Fight Card

It’s hard to look at a UFC fight card objectively as it takes place. It’s easy to get caught up in the moment, to become overwhelmed by the action and to think that everything that is happening at that very moment is “the best (insert x here) to ever h…

It’s hard to look at a UFC fight card objectively as it takes place. It’s easy to get caught up in the moment, to become overwhelmed by the action and to think that everything that is happening at that very moment is “the best (insert x here) to ever happen inside the Octagon.” 

The purpose of this (hopefully) ongoing feature will be to look at each UFC event removed from the moment, reviewing the goings on from start to finish with a slightly colder eye.

What follows are my thoughts on UFC on Fuel 9.

 

The main event:

Did it live up to expectations? I would have to say that not only did it live up to expectations, but it most likely exceeded those expectations.

Let’s be frank, it was the rare individual who didn’t get the news that Alexander Gustafsson had been replaced in the main event by Ilir Latifi, with a softly muttered, “who the f*** is that?” and then immediately began contemplating just how quickly Gegard Mousasi would earn the stoppage win. 

After all, Mousasi was 33-3-2 entering the fight with 29 stoppages to his name and Latifi appeared to be some Swede that could make the weight on short notice.

Did the fight exceed expectations because Mousasi played it safe, or did it exceed expectations because Latifi was able to take a fair amount of abuse for 15 minutes without falling down? To be honest, who cares? Mousasi won the fight, Latifi lived to fight another day in the UFC and fans got to see a fairly entertaining scrap. 

I would also like to give a nice hand to the crowd that packed the Ericsson Globe Arena on Saturday night. Their boos and catcalls were enough to crack the stone-faced countenance that Mousasi usually displays before, during and after his fights. 

The reaction from the crowd when Mousasi was introduced brought a painful looking smile, awkward and somewhat painful looking smile to the face of Mousasi. Well done, Sweden, well done.

—–

The co-main event:

I’m sure I wasn’t alone in my confusion when the UFC announced that the co-main event of UFC on Fuel 9 was going to pit Ross Pearson against a fighter who had never set foot inside the Octagon before, Ryan Couture.

Couture showed some promise early in the bout, but big picture, he didn’t stand much of a chance against a fighter as experienced as Pearson.

When the booking was announced, it stank of the UFC looking to capitalize on the Couture name. Now that the fight is over, it still smells that way. Couture should never have been put in the Octagon against someone like Pearson for his UFC debut, and he never should have been in a co-main event-level fight. 

Couture deserves another shot in the Octagon, but against a more suitable opponent and maybe not in a fight that is such a focal point.

—–

Mitrione vs. De Fries:

In one of the stranger knockouts in UFC history, the bout between Matt Mitrione and Phil De Fries ended in a mere 19 seconds. 

Perhaps, Mike Goldberg knew something that we didn’t when he twice referred to the matchup as a “heavyweight collision” prior to the start of the bout.

And a collision it was. Early in the first round, De Fries rushed for the takedown just as Mitrione was stepping in, and the impact knocked De Fries to his back where Mitrione quickly turned out the lights for his opponent.

The win saved Mitrione’s job with the UFC.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but I think Mitrione was trying to rebuild some bridges he may have burned in the recent past when he said, in his in-cage interview with Kenny Florian,  “I’ve been out for a long time so I appreciate the UFC giving me this fight. The UFC’s been great to me. Whatever I can do I appreciate it, whoever they think it’s appropriate for me to get down, let’s get down.”

The bridges needing repair were originally scorched when Mitrione turned down the chance to replace an injured Frank Mir against Daniel Cormier in Strikeforce. When Mitrione opted not to take that fight, UFC president Dana White said, “It f—ing makes me sick. Listen, you don’t want big opportunities, I hear you. I get it, then. All I can say is, I guess he doesn’t want big opportunities. I get it. Duly noted.”

—–

Michael Johnson vs. Reza Madadi:

Michael Johnson looked very close to finishing this fight in the first round when he landed a perfectly timed kick to the head of Reza Madadi near the end of the first stanza. Madadi recovered well between rounds and went on to dominate Johnson, eventually earning a D’Arce choke submission in the third round.

Lazy analysis of this fight will write off the result as another example of how the seemingly snake-bitten Blackzillian camp can’t buy a win, but that overlooks the fact that Madadi was very impressive in this bout. Johnson didn’t lose this fight; Madadi won it. Give credit where it is due.

—–

Conor McGregor vs Marcus Brimage:

Connor McGregor came into his fight with Marcus Brimage with all kinds of hype behind him. In the past, we have seen that this type of talk can be more of a curse than a blessing, elevating expectations to the point where the result almost has to be a letdown. That was not the case for McGregor.

McGregor shrugged off the bullrush of Brimmage to start the bout and showed absolutely no fear or Octagon jitters in the process of earning a brutal first-round TKO as well as Knockout of the Night honors. 

The brief UFC debut may have actually increased the expectations on McGregor, a fact that wasn’t helped when UFC president Dana White threw out the following tweet:

It’s early in the process, but the kid looks like he has all the makings of a star, from his style of fighting to how he handled himself in the post-fight presser.

—–

Diego Brandao vs. Pablo Garza:

After winning Season 14 of The Ultimate Fighter, Diego Brandao lost a unanimous decision to Darren Elkins. Brandao got back in the win column in his next bout, defeating Joey Gambino, setting up a bout against Pablo Garza in Sweden.

It was a more mature Brandao we saw in Sweden, perhaps the calm of trainer Greg Jackson is wearing off on him or maybe he’s realizing that growth is necessary in a sport where emotion can actually be a disadvantage. Either way, Brandao looks to be on the path to taking the step to the next level in the UFC.

—–

Tom Lawlor vs. Michael Kuiper:

Subtle is not a word that is usually associated with “Filthy” Tom Lawlor. Lawlor, famous for his over-the-top weigh-in and Octagon entrances appeared to have toned down things for UFC on Fuel 9, walking to the Octagon sans any added accoutrements.

If the crowd was disappointed by that, those sad faces were quickly transformed when they caught the music Lawlor chose as his walkout song, entering to the music made famous by Silence of the Lambs character Buffalo Bill. 

As far as the fight, Lawlor needed a win. Early in the fight, Lawlor didn’t look like himself, perhaps the result of a noticeably hobbled leg.

The damaged Lawlor was able to find an opening in the second round, slapping on a guillotine choke and forcing the tap from Kuiper. It was a solid display of a fighter focusing on the task at hand instead of the physical pain he was enduring, and it may have saved Lawlor’s job with the UFC.

—-

Papy Abedi vs. Besam Yousef:

When Papy Abedi made his UFC debut, he did so with a major push and some pretty high expectations. Two first-round submission losses later he was competing in the opening fight on the UFC on Fuel TV 9 fight card.

In his first two UFC bouts, Abedi swaggered into the Octagon sporting a flat cap and holding an unlit cigar between his teeth, while draped in the flags of Sweden and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

For UFC on Fuel 9, the flat cap and cigar were gone as was most of the swagger. Perhaps by shedding some of the vestiges of his unsuccessful past, Abedi hoped to approach his bout against Besam Yousef as a rebirth—a fresh start with the UFC.

After 15 minutes, Abedi did enough to earn the split-decision victory, essentially saving his job. True, a win is a win, but if Abedi was hoping to shake the tag of disappointing prospect, he didn’t. He’ll most likely get another chance to make a positive impression, but don’t expect that chance to be much higher on the card than this fight was.

—–

Dude, where’s my shirt?

The “act like you’ve been there before” award has to go to the corner of Benny Alloway who, between the walkout and end of the fight, seemed to have lost their fighters’ shirt. Lucky for Alloway, one of his corner men was quick to disrobe, possible saving some sponsorhip money for Alloway.  After all, no sponsor is paying a fighter to stand shirtless on camera as fight results are read.

—–

Memorable post-fight quotes:

Tom Lawlor to Kenny Floria on his injury, “I didn’t hurt my knee guys, Michael Kuiper hurt my knee on the first judo throw that he did. It was hard to fight back from it.”

An emotional Lawlor would also take the time to dedicate his victory to his late sister, “I want to dedicate this fight to the memory of my sister Katie, her birthday was recently. She passed away in a car accident 12 years ago and that’s what I was thinking about the whole time.”

Akira Corassani was honest in his assessment of how hard he was hit by Robbie Peralta telling Kenny Florian during his in-cage interview, “I was rocked as hell, I was going down.”

He was also quick to throw a lot of praise to his opponent, “Robbie Peralta is my idol. The guy has two kids and he works a full-time job and he comes in here and he gives everyone hell. I want to give all the credit to Robbie Peralta, everything is possible.” 

Conor McGregor to Kenny Florian after knocking out Marcus Brimage: “Dana, 60 g’s baby!” He got his wish, earning the “Knockout of the Night” bonus.

Reza Madadi to Kenny Florian on the kick Michael Johnson hit him with: “Very hard. He got me. Not 100 percent, 99. I was totally gone, but when you don’t have any brain in your head.” 

Matt Mitrione brought a “translator” with him into the Octagon—former UFC fighter Chris Lytle. The joke fell a little flat, but he gets a “C” for effort.

Mitrione also revealed to Florian that he had an interesting Friday night, saying “I did almost get arrested last night. Your undercover cops almost arrested me last night going to get some food.”

Mitrione then put his friend in a precarious position, “I got a really fat friend over here named Wood, anybody that slaps him gets a free beer.” No news if anyone in Sweden drank for free on Saturday night.

Gegard Mousasi to Kenny Florian after the fight: “Coming into this fight I was injured and the last week I also got a cold so I didn’t go berserk.” Mousasi then pre-emptivley answered some of his critics, “I fought smart. Some people lay and pray, maybe I did a little bit of that stand up.” 

 

 

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