Fight fans will have their fingers on the remote control on Saturday night, as MMA‘s top three promotions will go head-to-head on live television for the first time. World Series of Fighting and Bellator will both start at 9 p.m. ET with stacked cards, joining the UFC prelims on Fox Sports 1 already in progress […]
Fight fans will have their fingers on the remote control on Saturday night, as MMA‘s top three promotions will go head-to-head on live television for the first time. World Series of Fighting and Bellator will both start at 9 p.m. ET with stacked cards, joining the UFC prelims on Fox Sports 1 already in progress […]
The people’s main event bout between Melvin Guillard and Justin Gaethje has now elevated itself to the most anticipated fight of the entire weekend after an explosive verbal exchange during Thursday’s WSOF 15 media conference call. Guillard, who was released by the UFC in March, told Bleacher Report on Tuesday that he felt like an […]
The people’s main event bout between Melvin Guillard and Justin Gaethje has now elevated itself to the most anticipated fight of the entire weekend after an explosive verbal exchange during Thursday’s WSOF 15 media conference call. Guillard, who was released by the UFC in March, told Bleacher Report on Tuesday that he felt like an […]
Jessica Aguilar (18-4), who defends her strawweight championship against Kalindra Faria (15-3) in Tampa, Florida, on Saturday, has two messages to the women’s MMA world. First, she’s happy where she is, fighting for the World Series of Fighting and flying the flag for women’s MMA on NBC sports. “They’ve given me this opportunity” Aguilar told Bleacher Report […]
Jessica Aguilar (18-4), who defends her strawweight championship against Kalindra Faria (15-3) in Tampa, Florida, on Saturday, has two messages to the women’s MMA world. First, she’s happy where she is, fighting for the World Series of Fighting and flying the flag for women’s MMA on NBC sports. “They’ve given me this opportunity” Aguilar told Bleacher Report […]
Forget Ortiz vs. Bonnar. Forget Werdum vs. Hunt (lol jk). Justin Gaethje vs. Melvin Guillard is going down at WSOF 15 this weekend with the lightweight championship on the line and promises to be the most knock-down, drag-out, didyouseethatbro barnburner of them all. Both fighters have become well known for their relentless aggression and knockout power, and both have promised to put a serious hurtin’ on the other, so what else do you need to get excited for this fight, you buncha nerds?
“How about a few of their recent fight videos accompanied by some base-level insight and a noncommittal prediction, Danga?”
Well, YOU FUCKIN’ GOT IT. Here…we…GO!
The Challenger
(Sorry for the quality, but the original got pulled. GEE I WONDER WHY.)
Look, you already know who Melvin Guillard is, how he fights, which one-hit wonder he fashioned his look after, etc. Gaethje vs. Guillard is one of those rare matchups where the challenger is actually more of a household name than the champion — like Weidman vs. Belfort or Martinez vs. Zimmer. This fact has not been lost on Guillard, who recently told MMAMania that he is “an A-list fighter, fighting in the B-league” and that Gaethje is “nowhere near his level.”
While it’s evident that humility (and submission defense) cannot be found among Guillard’s many great qualities, a few things that *can* be found among them are a lightning fast jab, a murderous left hook, and at the risk of sounding racist, explosive athleticism. Simply put, when Guillard is having an on night, it’s his ability to get off first that usually leads him to victory. He may be in perpetual search of the highlight reel KO, but Guillard is also a tactician when it comes to how he mixes up his combinations with body shots and leg kicks. Guillard also has great head movement and takedown defense, and it’s his confidence in said takedown defense that allows him to throw from the clinch with reckless abandon, where he has overwhelmed many a fighter with the pure volume of strikes he is willing to throw.
After the jump: Watch Justin Gaethje KTFO some dudes.
(Photo via World Series of Fighting.)
Forget Ortiz vs. Bonnar. Forget Werdum vs. Hunt (lol jk). Justin Gaethje vs. Melvin Guillard is going down at WSOF 15 this weekend with the lightweight championship on the line and promises to be the most knock-down, drag-out, didyouseethatbro barnburner of them all. Both fighters have become well known for their relentless aggression and knockout power, and both have promised to put a serious hurtin’ on the other, so what else do you need to get excited for this fight, you buncha nerds?
“How about a few of their recent fight videos accompanied by some base-level insight and a noncommittal prediction, Danga?”
Well, YOU FUCKIN’ GOT IT. Here…we…GO!
The Challenger
(Sorry for the quality, but the original got pulled. GEE I WONDER WHY.)
Look, you already know who Melvin Guillard is, how he fights, which one-hit wonder he fashioned his look after, etc. Gaethje vs. Guillard is one of those rare matchups where the challenger is actually more of a household name than the champion — like Weidman vs. Belfort or Martinez vs. Zimmer. This fact has not been lost on Guillard, who recently told MMAMania that he is “an A-list fighter, fighting in the B-league” and that Gaethje is “nowhere near his level.”
While it’s evident that humility (and submission defense) cannot be found among Guillard’s many great qualities, a few things that *can* be found among them are a lightning fast jab, a murderous left hook, and at the risk of sounding racist, explosive athleticism. Simply put, when Guillard is having an on night, it’s his ability to get off first that usually leads him to victory. He may be in perpetual search of the highlight reel KO, but Guillard is also a tactician when it comes to how he mixes up his combinations with body shots and leg kicks. Guillard also has great head movement and takedown defense, and it’s his confidence in said takedown defense that allows him to throw from the clinch with reckless abandon, where he has overwhelmed many a fighter with the pure volume of strikes he is willing to throw.
Finally, let’s talk about Melvin’s ground-n-pound for a second. Melvin Guillard packs some of the most furious, ill-intentioned hammerfists in the game — see his absolutely brutal KO of Mac Danzig at UFC on FOX 8 above. Remember those punches Ryan Shultz finished Chris Horodecki with in the 2007 IFL World Grand Prix finals? Guillard throws *everything* like that. Simply put, there’s a few reasons why Guillard holds a UFC record 8 finishes by KO/TKO, and chief among them is his aggression when he has you hurt.
His most recent win over Gesias Cavalcante in his WSOF debut was a classic example of this. The evidence of his move to America Top Team was heard in every thudding kick to the body he landed that night, and while the final sequence of the fight resulted in what many would call an early stoppage, there was no denying that Guillard was eating Cavalcante alive that night.
Still, it’s inconsistency that has plagued “The Young Assassin’s” career, and the reason he finds himself fighting in the so-called “B-League” today. There is perhaps no fighter in MMA that looks greater in victory and worse in defeat than Guillard, who went 2-5 1 NC in his last 8 UFC appearances. When it’s not simple overconfidence has led to his undoing (see his fight with Joe Lauzon), it’s usually some other mental deficiency that has. His final UFC fight against Michael Johnson saw Guillard uncharacteristically tentative and unwilling to engage as the fight progressed, resulting in perhaps one of the most underwhelming performances of his career. Likewise, his losses to Cowboy Cerrone and Jim Miller came following split-second mental errors.
With nearly 50 professional bouts to his credit at just 31 years of age, Guillard brings an almost unprecedented amount of experience into his title fight at WSOF 11. But then, it’s never really been Guillard’s lack of know-how that’s cost him a fight, but rather his inability to apply what he’s learned to the fight itself. Let’s hope his time with ATT has curbed some, but not all, of his brawlerish tendencies.
The Champ
At 12-0, Justin Gaethje is already being heralded by some as “the best lightweight in the world.” Despite this, he is apparently not significant enough a fighter to warrant a Wikipedia page (one in English, anyway).
But it’s styles that make fights, not Wikipedia pages, and Justin Gaethje possesses a style that can be best described as “Melvin Guillard-esque.”
With 10 KO/TKO finishes in those 12 contests including 5 in the first round, Gaethje is a straight up assassin, whose wrestling background allows him to not only dictate where the fight goes, but when and how it goes there. (Spoiler: It usually stays in the feet and ends with a fury of uppercuts). He’s been rightfully compared to an early Chuck Liddell in his ability to stop the takedown and punish anyone who dares attempt one on the way out, and like Guillard, Gaethje is perhaps most dangerous from the clinch.
Just check out the manner in which he dispatched Richard Patishnock at WSOF 8 to win the lightweight title, if you don’t believe me. Gaethje only fights at one speed, and although his aggressiveness often leaves him open for the counter (sound familiar?), it is his solid chin and dynamic striking arsenal that leaves him the last man standing.
That, and his speed.
At 25 years old, Gaethje may very well be the first guy Guillard has faced that might actually be faster than him. Notice how Gaethje is able to bait Patishnock with the threat of the knee (3:15 in the video above ), then land both that knee and a follow-up right hook before Patishnock can even scramble to his feet. From there, Gaethje keeps Patinshock perpetually off-balance with a beautiful series of uppercuts followed by standing elbows until the ref is forced to step in.
Gaethje’s previous fight against Dan Lauzon was no different. The Arizona native rocked Lauzon early and often with body shots, knees, and even a spinning elbow in tight quarters while bringing Lauzon’s momentum to a complete stop with leg kicks from distance. But perhaps most impressive was the final sequence of the fight, wherein Gaethje was able to both drop Lauzon with a right hook and finish him off with a right uppercut while Lauzon was falling to the mat. If it’s Gaethje’s speed isn’t impressive enough, his accuracy sure as Hell is.
Noncommittal prediction: Believe it or not, my stance on how this fight goes is eerily similar to Gaethje’s prediction, which was that ”[Guillard’s] either going to get really lucky and knock me out or I’m going to beat the (expletive) out of him and make him look really bad.” If Gaethje overcommits on a punch early and leaves his chin exposed, Guillard will put him away. Guillard can put anyone away. That said, I don’t see it happening against someone of Gaethje’s caliber. The WSOF champ will retain his title by outworking Guillard on the feet, mixing up the occasional takedown, and cutting the UFC vets legs out from beneath him with leg kicks en route to a second round TKO. Thoughts?
Is it too dramatic to say that on Saturday Melvin Guillard and Justin Gaethje will battle over World Series of Fighting’s very soul?
Yeah, OK, that’s probably a little bit over the top.
Still, when Gaethje defends his lightweight title aga…
Is it too dramatic to say that on Saturday Melvin Guillard and Justin Gaethje will battle over World Series of Fighting’s very soul?
Yeah, OK, that’s probably a little bit over the top.
Still, when Gaethje defends his lightweight title against the longtime UFC veteran this weekend—on a night when America’s three largest MMA promotions all simultaneously vie for our affections—the stakes will seem fairly high.
If Gaethje wins, it’ll constitute a nice feather in the cap of WSOF’s highest-profile champion. As arguably the mid-major company’s only real homegrown star, it’ll advance his undefeated professional record to 13-0 and provide further justification of the flattering things people are already writing about him.
Easy to see how WSOF benefits from that outcome. One of the best things the organization and Gaethje have going for them is that right now he’s a completely unknown product. Just like Eddie Alvarez and Michael Chandler in Bellator a few years ago, we have no reliable way to suss out how good he might really be, and so as long as he keeps winning we’re all content to give him the benefit of the doubt.
Who knows, maybe the 27-year-old phenom from Grudge Training Center really is one of the best 155-pounders in the world.
That ambiguity keeps Gaethje’s career interesting and alive with possibility. We want to see what happens next with him, and that gives WSOF a foothold in MMA’s most compelling weight class. If he defeats The Young Assassin, promoters can hold up Gaethje as an elite talent who would likely hold his own, even in the shark tank of UFC competition.
Meanwhile, a victory by Guillardwouldn’t be a disaster but would come with clear drawbacks.
On the positive end, it would give WSOF a champion at 155 pounds who is recognizable to most MMA fans. In that regard, Guillard would fit in nicely alongside current welterweight champ RousimarPalhares and whoever emerges from David Branch’s fight against YushinOkami with the middleweight strap on Saturday.
Yet a Guillard win would also further the perception that WSOF is merely surviving on the UFC’s scraps. He made his home almost exclusively in the Octagon from 2005-14, appearing in some 22 fights there before a 2-5-1 slump doomed him to the chopping block. He’d join other UFC washouts like Jon Fitch and Jake Shields in making WSOF look less like viable alternative programming and more like a slightly more generic version of the UFC.
In addition, it’s not like Guillard appears particularly dedicated to making WSOF his home. In fact, he hasn’t had many nice things to say about anyone of late.
The former contestant from season two of The Ultimate Fighter has decried the UFC’s overstuffed live event schedule and expanding roster, which he—correctly—notes have both undermined what it means to be a UFC fighter. In conversation with MMAMania’s Alex Schlinsky this month, Guillard even lumped members of his own fight team in alongside those he appears to believe don’t really deserve to be in the big show.
Every time you turn around there is a different guy in the UFC,” Guillard said. “I train at American Top Team in Coconut Creek and there are a bunch of guys right now that are on my team, and some of them I know and some I don’t, but every time I ask them when is your next fight, they say ‘Oh, the next UFC card’ and I say ‘Really? Okay.’ But you look at these guys and you’ve never even heard of them before making it to the UFC. It is getting a little weird man.
That would be a pretty good talking point for Guillard and for WSOF, too, were he not also occasionally saying less-than-complementary things about his new workplace.
“I’m an A list fighter, fighting in the B league,” he told Schlinsky of his impending bout against Gaethje.
So at least we know his confidence hasn’t been affected.
Still, that doesn’t exactly make Guillard sound like the guy you want as your champion.
Better to stick with Gaethje, who has the potential to take you farther and—hopefully—more he’s willing to give.