UFC 139 Results: Dan Henderson Has No Chance Against Jon Jones

On Saturday night, Dan Henderson and Shogun Rua treated the fans to one of the most epic battles in all of MMA history. In the first non-title fight in UFC history to go five rounds, Henderson edged out Shogun to earn a 48-47 unanim…

On Saturday night, Dan Henderson and Shogun Rua treated the fans to one of the most epic battles in all of MMA history. In the first non-title fight in UFC history to go five rounds, Henderson edged out Shogun to earn a 48-47 unanimous decision victory. Henderson put everything he had on display, from his power, to his wrestling, […]

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UFC 139 Results: Dan Henderson Has No Chance Against Jon Jones

UFC 139: Urijah Faber Wants To Coach TUF Opposite Dominick Cruz

Former WEC featherweight champ Urijah Faber earned a definitive victory over Brian Bowles on the main card of UFC 139 Saturday (Nov. 19, 2011) night. Faber earned himself another shot at the UFC bantamweight title and champ Dominick Cruz, ‘The California Kid’ wants to do it after coaching opposite one another on the next season of “The Ultimate Fighter”.

HT: MMAFighting.com

Former WEC featherweight champ Urijah Faber earned a definitive victory over Brian Bowles on the main card of UFC 139 Saturday (Nov. 19, 2011) night. Faber earned himself another shot at the UFC bantamweight title and champ Dominick Cruz, ‘The California Kid’ wants to do it after coaching opposite one another on the next season of “The Ultimate Fighter”.

HT: MMAFighting.com

UFC 139 Results: Dan Henderson Has No Chance Against Jon Jones

On Saturday night, Dan Henderson and Shogun Rua treated the fans to one of the most epic battles in all of MMA history.In the first non-title fight in UFC history to go five rounds, Henderson edged out Shogun to earn a 48-47 unanimo…

On Saturday night, Dan Henderson and Shogun Rua treated the fans to one of the most epic battles in all of MMA history.

In the first non-title fight in UFC history to go five rounds, Henderson edged out Shogun to earn a 48-47 unanimous decision victory.

Henderson put everything he had on display, from his power, to his wrestling, to his incredible heart, chin and determination.

However, even with everything that Hendo put on display, he still has no chance in a fight against light heavyweight champion, Jon Jones.

Henderson has one punch knockout power, but so did Rampage Jackson. Jones was able to beat him easily.

Henderson has outstanding wrestling, which he can generally use to dictate where the fight takes place. Jones’ wrestling is better.

However, the thing that would kill Henderson the most in a fight against Jones would be his cardio.

I take nothing away from Henderson after his performance on Saturday night. It was a grueling fight, and any man would have been gassed in the fifth round.

However, the ground and pound of Jones is much better than that of Shogun.

If Jones gets this fight to the ground in the later stages, and if Hendo has the same gas tank that he had on Saturday, he’s going to be in some serious trouble against Jones.

Be sure to stay tuned to Bleacher Report for all things UFC 139. B/R is your home for complete coverage of the November 19 fight card, including results and post-fight analysis.

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UFC 139 Press Pass: Fight Night News and Notes

Filed under: UFCAmong the MMA media who log serious frequent flier miles following the UFC around the country all year, it takes something major to jar them out of the vague sense that fight night is another day at the office.

That’s not to say that …

Filed under:

Among the MMA media who log serious frequent flier miles following the UFC around the country all year, it takes something major to jar them out of the vague sense that fight night is another day at the office.

That’s not to say that even the most grizzled road warriors on press row aren’t appreciative of having a job they love following a sport they’re passionate about, but when you start to hear the UFC’s in-arena playlist in your sleep (damn you, techno remix of “Hotel California”!), some of the action can start to feel routine.

Then you get an event like UFC 139, which ended with quite possibly the best fight any of us had ever seen. As Dan Henderson and “Shogun” Rua battled back and forth for five rounds, a sense of baffled astonishment set in. It’s that rare moment where you realize you’re witnessing something amazing, even as that something is still happening. You could look at the faces of the fans in the arena and picture them preparing to tell their grandchildren about this night decades from now.

Afterwards, I tried to compare scorecards with ESPN writer (and fellow University of Montana alum — go Griz) Chad Dundas. Personally, I had the fight a draw, but you could make case for almost any result, and I was curious how Chad scored it.

“Awesome,” he replied. “I scored it ‘awesome.'”

Two things about that: 1) It’s a good thing he isn’t an actual judge, because the phrase, “Judge Chad Dundas scores the bout awesome,” probably wouldn’t go over well with any commission (well, maybe Texas wouldn’t care), and 2) I can’t disagree. That fight was awesome, and it almost doesn’t matter who got the official nod from the judges at the end.

Some more fight night musings, scribbled from 35,000 feet and culled from a brain suffering from severe sleep-deprivation:

– Hendo will likely get a title shot soon, but in which division? Dana White said he was open to letting Henderson challenge for a belt at either middleweight or light heavyweight, depending on which one is available first. The thing about that is, Henderson has made it very clear that he doesn’t want to be a 185-pounder full-time. Even if he won the belt, he told us earlier this week, he might not stick around to defend it. He simply hates the weight cut that much. Don’t tell that to White, however, who said that if Hendo did beat Anderson Silva, a rubber match would only make sense.

“I think Hendo would go back down [to 185 pounds] for that too,” said the UFC prez. “I think these guys will go wherever the big money fights are.”

In other words, White’s betting that Henderson likes money more than he hates dieting. He might have a point.

– Even though both the UFC middleweight and light heavyweight champs have contenders in line to face them, don’t assume that those match-ups are set in stone.
Henderson tweeted from the hospital that he was suffering only from a sprained thumb, which seems almost impossible to believe, but might mean that he won’t need as much time off as you’d expect after a fight like that. That could be important if the UFC finds itself suddenly in need of his services. Talking with UFC matchmaker Joe Silva before the event, he claimed that he’d gone back and crunched the numbers for this year and was slightly amazed to discover that about half his original main events in 2011 had been altered or scuttled entirely by injuries. He seemed to think that the intensity of the sparring in many gyms was to blame, but regardless of the cause, it makes you think twice about assuming that any title shot promises are truly guaranteed. An injury to the champ or the challenger, and the picture could change in a hurry. The show must go on, after all.

Wanderlei Silva‘s win doesn’t automatically extend the life of his career indefinitely.
Even with the dramatic TKO victory over Cung Le, White didn’t seem like he was at all ready to retract his previous statements about wanting to see Silva hang it up. When the knockouts start piling up, he said, it’s time to go — regardless of whether you can still win one here or there.

“People can disagree with me or whatever. Go start your own organization. I’m not doing it,” he added.

As for how Silva will take that message, White sounded an optimistic tone, saying “I think he gets it. It’s pretty clear. I’ve been very open and honest about it.”

So has Silva, and he doesn’t sound like a man who’s ready for the rocking chair just yet. File this little battle under ‘To be continued.’

– If you think the UFC schedule is crazy now, just wait.
White had to sit out from some of the pre-UFC 139 media responsibilities because he was just so worn down after the stress of the first FOX show, which is understandable. But after this emotionally-draining night in San Jose, the UFC is back in Vegas in two weeks, then Toronto the week after that, then Vegas again for the end of the year. In 2012, with the FOX deal starting up and ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ going live, things really get insane.

“The schedule is looking ugly, man. Especially for me,” White admitted. “There’s 26 weeks alone of live television. 26 weeks of live television, every Friday night ends in a live fight, then I have to jump on a plane and fly to wherever we are on Saturday, then start all over again on Monday.”

That’s a travel schedule that even pro wrestlers and Rolling Stones roadies would wince at, and it already appears to be taking a toll on White. What will become of the organization if he runs himself into the ground? He doesn’t sound too worried about it.

“This is McDonald’s, man,” he said. “This thing goes on forever without me. Is it different without me? Yeah maybe it’s a little different without me, but they don’t need me, man.”

– I’m not sure how the UFC so consistently manages to position press row so near to each arena’s foremost striking expert, but it does. This time, media members were treated to several hours worth of one ticket-holding genius shouting for the “2-4” combination. He must have thought it was a flawless attack, since he offered the same advice to nearly every fighter, from Nick Pace to Wanderlei Silva to Dan Henderson. None of them listened to him, of course, but that didn’t dampen his enthusiasm any. A note to those of you who plan on attending a live event: it’s not a damn Lynyrd Skynyrd concert, people. The fighters are not taking your requests, no matter how loudly you shout the MMA equivalent of ‘play Free Bird!’ at them.

– Anybody complaining about an early stoppage in the Cung Le-Silva fight obviously didn’t see Le’s face as he made his way to the locker room. Remember how badly his nose was smashed at the end of his first bout with Scott Smith? It was a lot like that, only with more assorted lumps about the rest of his face to accompany it. You could tell by the way he lunged for that desperate takedown attempt: Le was done. Even if he could have gone on a few more seconds, better to stop it just a tad too soon than to let it go on a punch too far.

Urijah Faber is more willing than ever to be Dominick Cruz’s bantamweight nemesis.
Before their rematch, he was somewhat reluctant to assume that mantle. Now that he’s had some time to stew on that decision loss, however, he’s all about the rivalry. Not only did he call out Cruz in his post-fight remarks, telling him to “throw some gel in that widow’s peak,” but he later insisted that Cruz’s narrow win didn’t prove him to be the better fighter, hence the need for a rubber match.

“We’ll find out who’s the man for the rest of our lives,” Faber said. “That’s important to me.”

No kidding.

Ronda Rousey got the UFC president’s attention with her grisly armbar win at Strikeforce: Challengers. White actually referenced the nasty ending to that fight when lambasting the referee in the Chris Weidman-Tom Lawlor fight for being slow to step in. Weidman claimed he didn’t blame the ref for not believing him that Lawlor had been choked unconscious since “I could be trying to get a cheap victory with that,” for all the ref knew. White disagreed:

“I blame him. I do. You’re referee. You should know when somebody’s out. Get your ass in there and stop the fight. Same thing with the armbar last night in Las Vegas. …I blame him. 100 percent.”

Okay, so he didn’t call out Rousey by name, but we all know who he’s talking about. Just getting him to admit to watching a women’s MMA fight is a step in the right direction, even if he later insisted that his general feeling on the lack of depth in the women’s division is a deal-breaker for him. Baby steps.

– UFC headed to Sao Paulo in June? Magic Eight Ball says, ‘Outlook good.’ I was reluctant to believe White’s claim that Brazil is “our new Canada,” but the regular presence of Brazilian media members at UFC fights lately makes me think otherwise. One Brazilian reporter quizzed White about a newspaper report that the organization was headed for Sao Paulo in June — a question that clearly caught White off-guard.

“How’s this stuff get out?” he said, before changing gears and trying to play it coy, yet gleefully unsubtle. “I don’t know if we’re going to Sao Paulo in June, and if Anderson Silva’s headlining the card. No clue. That would be awesome, though.”

– Unsolicited travel tip:
When you realize that you didn’t pack enough underwear for your excessively long road trip spanning back-to-back MMA events, think twice about trying to wash a pair in your hotel room’s bathroom sink. It takes longer to dry than you’d think, and attempting to wear them while still even a little bit damp will be a decision you immediately regret.

 

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Stephan Bonnar Appologizes To Josh Koscheck For T-Shirt Fiasco

Tweet Ultimate Fighter season one runner up, Stephan ‘The American Psycho’ Bonnar (14-7) picked up his third straight victory at last nights (Nov. 19, 2011) UFC 139 event in San Jose, California. Bonnar turned in a solid performance against opponent Kyle Kingsbury on the pay-per-view opener of the event, showcasing his ground game and erasing […]

Photo by Josh Hedges for UFC.com

Ultimate Fighter season one runner up, Stephan ‘The American Psycho’ Bonnar (14-7) picked up his third straight victory at last nights (Nov. 19, 2011) UFC 139 event in San Jose, California.

Bonnar turned in a solid performance against opponent Kyle Kingsbury on the pay-per-view opener of the event, showcasing his ground game and erasing a previous three fight losing skid which looked as if it might be the end of his time in the Octagon.

It wasn’t the dominant win that was most interesting, it was Bonnar’s confession after the victory to color commentator Joe Rogan that peaked everyone’s interest.

“I have a little confession to make. I had this big plan to get this win, and then call out Koscheck. But you know what? Something about fighting makes you be honest with yourself. The truth is, he asked me not to make those shirts, and I did it anyway. So Koscheck, I apologize. You taught me a valuable lesson. From now on, fighters gotta approve of those shirts, and they’ll get paid for every one of them.”

Bonnar had an ongoing legal feud with former welterweight contender Josh Koscheck after ‘The American Pyscho’ produced t-shirts depicting Koscheck (shown), along with other UFC fighters, in a cartoon fashion emulating the 1980′s trading cards “Garbage Pail Kids” collectibles.

Through legal action, Koshcheck had the sale of the shirts parodying himself stopped, incensing Bonnar to the point that he responded by challenging the smaller fighter.

Now it appears that is all in the past with Bonnar’s apology Saturday night, well at least for ‘The American Psycho’. I guess we’ll have to wait for Koshcheck’s response in his next interview.

UFC 139: Dan Henderson Wants The Next Light Heavyweight Title Shot

An exhausted Dan Henderson talks about his UFC 139 main event bout versus Mauricio ‘Shogun’ Rua, saying he tried to finish the former UFC champ early leaving him exhausted for the later rounds of the bout. ‘Hendo’ says he was “one or two” shots away from finishing ‘Shogun’ in the fight.

As a point of just how much Henderson gave in the unanimous decision win, a paramedic is shown inserting an IV to give the former Strikeforce champ some much needed fluids.

When asked “Who’s next?” Henderson feels he’s the next in line for the 205 pound title and wants the winner of the upcoming UFC 140 bout between champ Jon Jones and Lyoto Machida.

Click here to view the embedded video.

An exhausted Dan Henderson talks about his UFC 139 main event bout versus Mauricio ‘Shogun’ Rua, saying he tried to finish the former UFC champ early leaving him exhausted for the later rounds of the bout. ‘Hendo’ says he was “one or two” shots away from finishing ‘Shogun’ in the fight.

As a point of just how much Henderson gave in the unanimous decision win, a paramedic is shown inserting an IV to give the former Strikeforce champ some much needed fluids.

When asked “Who’s next?” Henderson feels he’s the next in line for the 205 pound title and wants the winner of the upcoming UFC 140 bout between champ Jon Jones and Lyoto Machida.