UFC on FX 8 Results: Musings on Vitor Belfort vs. Luke Rockhold Fight Card

After a three week break, the UFC returned to action on Saturday, May 18 to deliver UFC on FX 8.  The card had a fired up crowd, good refereeing, bad refereeing, controversial endings, a brutal low blow, an impressive UFC debut and a devastating k…

After a three week break, the UFC returned to action on Saturday, May 18 to deliver UFC on FX 8.  The card had a fired up crowd, good refereeing, bad refereeing, controversial endings, a brutal low blow, an impressive UFC debut and a devastating knockout win. 

I’d say that, for the most part, it was a successful return for the promotion.

Here’s a look back at some talking points that developed over the 13 fights on the card.

Tuck Your Chin…or not

If you slept on the UFC on FX 8 Facebook stream, you missed the “Fight of the Night” between Lucas Martins and Jeremy Larsen.  In some ways Martins’ performance was reminiscent of Wanderlei Silva. Martins stood toe-to-toe with Larsen and refused to tuck his chin, even when Larsen’s punches repeatedly found their target. At several points it looked like his fighting style was going to leave Martins on his back looking at the ceiling, but it didn’t and he eventually got the best of Larsen with a perfectly timed punch of his own.

It was a gutsy performance, one that Martins should try not to replicate in the future if he cares at all about his future health. An extra $50,000 is nice, but if you can’t remember what you did to earn it, well, that’s no good.

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If the UFC Acts Like the Flyweights Don’t Matter, Why Should the Fans Care?


If the UFC wants fans to care about the flyweight division, they should at least pretend that they themselves care about it.  When a fight between the fifth-ranked flyweight (Jussier Formiga) and the seventh-ranked flyweight (Chris Cariaso) is buried on the Facebook portion of the preliminary card the message being sent is one of indifference. 

Yes, I understand that there are only 13 flyweights currently on the UFC roster so being in the Top 10 of that division is almost awarded by default, but c’mon UFC, you need to build interest in the division. Don’t hide these fighters or treat them as an afterthought.

If top-10 125-pounders are getting this treatment, when and where are the 115-pounders going to fight if the UFC adds that weight division?

Out in the parking lot before the Facebook prelims?

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Fabio Maldonado: ZFG

Fabio Maldonado, or if you’re Bruce Buffer, Fabiano Maldonado, took one of the worst (or is that best?) kicks to the groin in recent memory on Saturday night.  Maldonado was backed into the fence when Roger Hollett landed a spinning back kick directly to the privates of Maldonado. Maldonado reacted as you would expect, falling to the ground and writhing in pain.

Maldonado took his time, recovered and came back to earn the win.  It wasn’t pretty, but it did save Maldonado’s job.  After all, he did enter the fight on a three-fight losing streak.

One thing that this fight cemented, in case you missed it during his past performances, is that Maldonado doesn’t really care.  As Sherdog.com’s Jordan Breen noted during the fight:

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Nik Lentz vs. Hacran Dias

For the first two rounds of his fight against Hacran Dias, Nik Lentz did his thing, using his grinding style to put himself in prime position to earn the victory.  When Dias went to his corner between rounds two and three, he was told, “It’s all or nothing now, knock him out. All or nothing, go with everything, you have to knock him out.”

Dias obviously took that advice to heart. Dias came out on fire, backing Lentz up with heavy strikes much to the delight of the Brazil crowd.  Dias held nothing back looking for the knockout and then the submission. 

Great performance from both fighters in this one.

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Evan Dunham “Robbed”?

Following the Evan Dunham versus Rafeal dos Anjos bout UFC president Dana White offered the following tweet:

Somewhat confused by the tweet I went back and watched the fight. While the scoring could have gone to either fighter, to call the result a robbery is a huge stretch. 

Strikes landed were almost even throughout the fight.  Dunham landed 90 of 295 strikes with 68 of those being significant strikes.  Dos Anjos landed 86 of 204 strikes with 66 of those being deemed significant strikes. Dunham did have a clear advantage in takedowns, landing three while Dos Anjos did not secure a single takedown.

The difference in the scoring may have been based on style, Dos Anjos was the more technical striker, his footwork and movement may have tilted the judges to his side.  Perhaps the Brazil crowd, obviously in support of Dos Anjos, influenced the decision of the judges.

It’s hard to tell what made all three of the judges score the fight 29-28 for Dos Anjos, but was it a robbery?  Not even close. 

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Jacare Did What We Expected He Would

Ronaldo “JacareSouza entered his UFC on FX 8 middleweight contest ranked eighth in the division. When the new rankings are released early next week expect him to leap over at least the three fighters ahead of him in those rankings.

Souza, who holds black belts in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and judo and has multiple world championships in jiu-jitsu, easily handled Chris Camozzi on Saturday, earning a first round submission via arm triangle choke.

He made the win look effortless and when he slapped on the choke it was lights out for Camozzi in seconds.  It appeared that the choke cut off the blood flow to Camozzi’s brain so quickly he didn’t even have time to react.

Yes, Souza was supposed to defeat Camozzi, but there was no way that his “Submission of the Night” performance was supposed to look that easy. 

Souza, a former Strikeforce champion, earned a shot at a top-flight middleweight in his next bout.

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Vitor Belfort Ruined a Spectacular In-Cage Performance With a Childish Post-Fight Press Conference Display

Vitor Belfort blasted Luke Rockhold with a picture perfect spinning heel kick, ending their UFC on FX 8 main event bout in the first round. The win gave Belfort his second consecutive “Knockout of the Night” victory.

There’s no denying the knockout was spectacular, but Belfort’s performance at the post-fight presser pretty much ended any good feelings that carried over for the UFC veteran.

Belfort, a user of testosterone replacement therapy, was questioned by MMAJunkie.com’s John Morgan. “How frustrating is it that every time you do something good people just want to ask you about testosterone,” asked Morgan, “and how much that’s playing in your life and can you just address that?” 

Belfort’s answer was surprising and a bit off-putting. “Can somebody beat him up for me please? Can somebody beat him up? You’re boring, get out of here,” responded Belfort. Belfort then said he didn’t want to answer any more questions from Morgan. “Talk to my hand.”

Later, another media member asked if his statements about being better than ever were linked to his TRT usage.  Belfort responded, “Are you joking? You’re joking aren’t you? C’mon stop that.”

No Vitor, we are not joking and if you think the questions are going to stop due to your insolent and childish behavior, you’re very wrong.

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Referees

It wouldn’t be an MMA fight card without some discussion of the referees, right?

Early in the evening Mario Yamasaki seemed to set the tone for the night when he quickly deducted a point from Azamat Gashimov for grabbing the fence during his bout against John Lineker. Twitter was alive with congratulations for Yamasaki‘s move and hopes were launched that we would see the endless toothless warnings end from referees.

Those hopes were dashed later by Yamasaki himself when he repeatedly warned Hacran Dias for fence grabs, but never pulled the trigger on the deduction.

It should also be noted that Kevin Mulhall was awful quick on his stand ups on Saturday.

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Title Shot for Belfort?


I’ll make this one simple.  Belfort does not deserve a shot at the UFC title. He’s a fighter that is competing in Brazil because, according to Nevada State Athletic Commission executive director Keith Kizer who spoke to BR MMA, Belfort most likely would not be approved to compete in a location that has an athletic commission.

If the UFC awards Belfort a title shot in any location that does not require a therapeutic use exemption for TRT use, it makes a further mockery of an already silly loophole that allows fighters to legally cheat.





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Vitor Belfort Threatens MMA Reporter When Questioned About His Use of TRT

Although he refers to himself as a “tyrannosaurus” fighting amongst the young lions of the sport, MMA legend Vitor Belfort came off like a kitten this weekend.More than that, he looked like a coward in the aftermath of UFC on FX 8, all because of three…

Although he refers to himself as a “tyrannosaurus” fighting amongst the young lions of the sport, MMA legend Vitor Belfort came off like a kitten this weekend.

More than that, he looked like a coward in the aftermath of UFC on FX 8, all because of three simple little letters: TRT.

Put “The Phenom” inside the Octagon and he often looks like an unstoppable wrecking machine, but just ask Belfort about the testosterone replacement therapy that’s fueled his training during camp—or any of his past drug use—and he mentally runs away.

That was the scene at the UFC on FX 8 post-fight presser, where the former UFC champion went back to 1992 and told MMA Junkie’s John Morgan to “talk to the hand” before threatening to have him physically assaulted for asking about TRT.

It’s pretty sad to see that’s the attitude that Belfort is continuing to adopt this late in the game, especially since the more he wins, the more TRT will cloud his career.

Even UFC president Dana White and Nevada State Athletic Commission executive Keith Kizer have shined a spotlight on the headliner’s performance enhancement, with Kizer telling B/R MMA that Belfort would be unlikely to get approved for a bout in Las Vegas, America’s fight capital.

Fortunately for Belfort, that probably suits him just fine.

After counting his winnings and bonus money, he’ll simply continue to hide away between Brazil and his training camps with the Florida-based Blackzilians, alongside drug-use suspects like Alistair Overeem, safe from public scrutiny.

That’s the mark of someone who’s lost touch with reality: an ego inflated by steroids and testosterone shots as much as by dominance in the middleweight division.

Fight Opinion—an MMA outlet consistently ahead of the game on drugs in the sport—outlines “the Vitor Belfort problem” best of all by showing that when it comes to The Phenom, his TRT use has the UFC scrambling to make the best of a bad look:

For those who wanted MMA to be accepted as a mainstream sport, well… the one sport whose drug testing policy most resembles combat sports right now is horse racing. A baseball player gets busted for testosterone and all hell breaks loose. A testosterone user in UFC gets a promotional push.

So, the fighters using testosterone don’t want to defend themselves to the press. UFC management policy is supportive of T use but slams usage of marijuana. And the doctors involved in pushing or enabling the testosterone usage don’t want to talk and aren’t being pressured to talk either in the press or in the court system.

The commissions aren’t going to do anything. If anything, the tenuous financial & political nature of these regulatory bodies means they are more prone to allowing testosterone usage in order to get UFC cash.

And, on the Vitor front, Dana White said he would face the winner of Anderson Silva/Chris Weidman… which has prompted Vitor to say that he would like to take a long vacation. Well played. (emphasis added.)

Any way you look at it, the situation is a bad joke, and the idea of Belfort getting a title shot should be a slap in the face to every clean athlete who’s ever competed in the sport and every fan who has ever looked upon MMA with pride.

It’s a real shame, especially when the sport has more eyes on it than ever.

Hopefully, the UFC comes to its senses and retracts the plan to match Belfort up with the winner of the Anderson Silva vs. Chris Weidman bout at UFC 162.

Hopefully, athletic commissions make a real effort to ban TRT use with the UFC simultaneously funding blood tests and adopting secondary drug screening to catch those wealthy enough to work their way around the system. (Scaling back marijuana penalties would be great, too.)

And at the very least, Belfort himself might have to start showing at least the barest sense of self-awareness and stop threatening to have MMA reporters beaten up for asking him questions about his new fountain of youth scheme.

Testosterone may give Belfort all the confidence in the world during training and fight week, but that only makes it all the more embarrassing when he can’t handle a single mention of the performance enhancing substance outside of the Octagon.

 


McKinley Noble is an MMA conspiracy theorist. His work has appeared in NVisionPC World, Macworld, GamePro, 1UP, MMA Mania and The L.A. Times.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on FX 8: Belfort vs. Rockhold Aftermath — The Debate Rages On


Photo courtesy of Getty Images.

“Can somebody beat him up for me, please?”

Aside from a genuine, non-ironic “talk to the hand” that I had no idea people still said, that was all that Vitor Belfort had to say to reporters during the post-fight press conference last night about the elephant in the room. And frankly, I’m not going to add much else about it, either. You couldn’t talk to many fans – or even the fighters involved – about this fight without engaging in a lengthy discussion about drug usage. Naturally, Belfort winning the fight only intensified these discussions, as though there should be an asterisk next to the W on his record.

In many ways, the elephant in the room seemed to overshadow the actual fight between Belfort and Rockhold. That’s tragic, considering what we were treated to.

I won’t write that Belfort’s chemical wizardry is completely meaningless in a fight; if it was, he wouldn’t bother with it. But attributing the absolutely brilliant spinning kick that ended this fight – and made a strong case for Knockout of the Year for this year’s Potato Awards – to a loaded syringe is just as laughably misinformed. Belfort was Rockhold’s first true test, and The Phenom simply proved to be too much for him.


Photo courtesy of Getty Images.

“Can somebody beat him up for me, please?”

Aside from a genuine, non-ironic “talk to the hand” that I had no idea people still said, that was all that Vitor Belfort had to say to reporters during the post-fight press conference last night about the elephant in the room. And frankly, I’m not going to add much else about it, either. You couldn’t talk to many fans – or even the fighters involved – about this fight without engaging in a lengthy discussion about drug usage. Naturally, Belfort winning the fight only intensified these discussions, as though there should be an asterisk next to the W on his record.

In many ways, the elephant in the room seemed to overshadow the actual fight between Belfort and Rockhold. That’s tragic, considering what we were treated to.

I won’t write that Belfort’s chemical wizardry is completely meaningless in a fight; if it was, he wouldn’t bother with it. But attributing the absolutely brilliant spinning kick that ended this fight – and made a strong case for Knockout of the Year for this year’s Potato Awards – to a loaded syringe is just as laughably misinformed. Belfort was Rockhold’s first true test, and The Phenom simply proved to be too much for him.

Still, I wouldn’t be as optimistic about the idea of Belfort taking on the winner of Silva vs. Weidman as some people are being. Does Belfort deserve to fight the winner? Absolutely. But there’s a reason the UFC danced around the issue during the post-fight press conference, and yes, that reason is related to the same elephant in the room that overshadowed this fight. I’ll put it this way: If Silva wins, hosting a rematch against Belfort in Brazil makes sense. If Weidman wins? Not so much, and hosting Weidman vs. Belfort in the United States is playing with fire, as far as NSAC Executive Director Keith Kizer is concerned.

Elsewhere on the card…

– The co-main event pitted former Strikeforce champion Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza against last-minute replacement Chris Camozzi. Most of us dismissed this fight as little more than a bump in the road for Jacare, and most of us were correct in doing so.

Okay, that might be a little too harsh. Camozzi deserves a ton of credit for even accepting this fight on short notice, let alone for putting up the fight that he did. But Jacare is just that much better than Camozzi, and without much time to prepare, Camozzi was little more than a slightly-resistant grappling dummy. It’s a thrill to watch Jacare’s ground game, and hopefully we’ll get to see him test it against the deep end of the division soon.

– Here goes nothing: Did I think Dunham won? Yes. But did he get “ROBBED!!!!” in an unforgivably biased decision? No. This fight wasn’t under Stockton Rules – the blood on the face of dos Anjos shouldn’t affect your opinion on who won the fight. I personally think dos Anjos won round one, Dunham won round two, and the third round – although I gave it to Dunham – could have gone either way. It wasn’t a robbery, it was a very close fight that arguably deserved Fight of the Night honors. There’s a big difference between the two.

– Rafael Natal defeated Joao Zeferino. Zerefino was completely spent by the second round, and Natal couldn’t have given less of a fuck while in the cage with him. Not in the fun “I’m going to throw a bunch of spinning stuff because whatever you can’t stop me” way, but in the “Mir vs. Cro Cop: someone has to win, I guess” way. Move along people, there’s nothing to see here.

– I’m willing to bet that you didn’t watch the Fight of the Night winning scrap between Lucas Martins and Jeremy Larsen that kicked off the Facebook preliminaries. That’s a shame, because you missed a great fight. This wasn’t a technical masterpiece by any stretch of the imagination, it was a downright brawl that saw Larsen control the first two rounds before walking into a devastating punch from Martins just thirteen seconds into the final round. It sucks to lose like that, but the $50,000 both fighters took home probably numbs the pain a bit.

– Submission of the Night went to Jacare, and Knockout of the Night went to Belfort. All bonuses were worth $50,000.

Full Results:

Main Card:
Vitor Belfort def. Luke Rockhold via KO (spinning heel kick and punches), 2:32 of Round One
Ronaldo Souza def. Chris Camozzi via technical submission (arm triangle choke), 3:37 of Round One
Rafael dos Anjos def. Evan Dunham via Unanimous Decision
Rafael Natal def. Joao Zeferino via Unanimous Decision

Preliminary card:
Nik Lentz def. Hacran Dias via Unanimous Decision
Francisco Trinaldo def. Mike Rio via submission (arm triangle choke), 3:08 of Round One
Gleison Tibau def. John Cholish via submission (guillotine choke), 2:34 of Round Two
Paulo Thiago def. Michel Prazeres via Unanimous Decision
Yuri Alcantara def. Iliarde Santos via TKO (punches), 2:31 of Round One
Fabio Maldonado def. Roger Hollett Unanimous Decision
John Lineker def. Azamat Gashimov via TKO (punches), 1:07 of Round Two
Jussier Formiga def. Chris Cariaso via Unanimous Decision
Lucas Martins def. Jeremy Larsen via KO (punch), 0:13 of Round Three

@SethFalvo

UFC on FX 8 Results: Matches to Make for the Entire Fight Card

Luke Rockhold received a wake-up call in his Octagon debut at UFC on FX 8. The former Strikeforce champion had a long winning streak end with a spinning heel kick from Vitor Belfort in the first round.Now the owner of back-to-back wins over opponents, …

Luke Rockhold received a wake-up call in his Octagon debut at UFC on FX 8. The former Strikeforce champion had a long winning streak end with a spinning heel kick from Vitor Belfort in the first round.

Now the owner of back-to-back wins over opponents, who likely would have earned title shots had they beaten him, Belfort has emerged as the middleweight most deserving of a fight with the winner of an upcoming title bout between Anderson Silva and Chris Weidman.

The only reasonable way for Belfort to be denied that chance would be Silva taking a superfight or the champion finding himself in an immediate rematch with Weidman after an upset loss.

Rockhold, meanwhile, might have to take a significant step down in competition and prove he really is among the elite UFC middleweights. 

With UFC on FX 8 in the books, let’s take a look at what should be next for Rockhold and the rest of the event’s competitors.

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The Top 10 Head-Kick Knockouts in UFC History

Vitor Belfort became the first person in UFC history to score back-to-back head-kick knockouts with his first-round decimation of former Strikeforce middleweight champ Luke Rockhold at Saturday night’s UFC on FX 8.Fighting in his native Brazil, “The Ph…

Vitor Belfort became the first person in UFC history to score back-to-back head-kick knockouts with his first-round decimation of former Strikeforce middleweight champ Luke Rockhold at Saturday night’s UFC on FX 8.

Fighting in his native Brazil, “The Phenom” wowed the home town crowd by landing a vicious wheel kick right on Rockhold‘s chin in the opening frame, cementing his second straight Knockout of the Night honor in the process.

The brutal finish once again showed just how devastating a foot to the face can be inside the octagon.

In honor of the MMA legend’s breathtaking performance, let’s take a look at the top 10 head-kick KOs in UFC history.

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UFC on FX 8: What’s Next for the Losers

UFC on FX 8 has come and gone, and the focus is now on the victors of the evening. However, there are 13 others fighters who competed on the card.Not all will stay with the promotion, but many will get another shot at UFC glory.In the main event, No. 5…

UFC on FX 8 has come and gone, and the focus is now on the victors of the evening. However, there are 13 others fighters who competed on the card.

Not all will stay with the promotion, but many will get another shot at UFC glory.

In the main event, No. 5-ranked Luke Rockhold got dropped by a spectacular spinning back kick from a UFC legend. Vitor Belfort finished Rockhold off with some big ground-and-pound. It was an unfortunate end for Rockhold, but the loss will not define his career.

Ranked fighters and unranked alike failed on Saturday.

This is what is potentially next for the losers of UFC on FX 8.

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