“Rumble” Returns to the UFC! Faces Phil Davis at UFC 172 in Baltimore

(Oh how we’ve missed you, old friend.)

Anthony Johnson‘s redemptive arch as a fighter is one on par with something typically reserved for a Hollywood movie. The hard-hitting Georgian was once the talk of the town at 170 lbs., lauded as easily the most dangerous potential challenger to Georges St. Pierre‘s throne and a mountain of a challenge for anyone in between. Problem was, Johnson suffered from what is now known as “Lineker’s Syndrome” — the inability to actually make weight for two consecutive bouts in the division he was supposedly competing in.

Johnson’s struggles on the scale seemed as if they would be a thing of the past when he announced that he would be moving up to middleweight, but lo, they only got worse. Johnson missed weight by a staggering 12 pounds for his middleweight debut against Vitor Belfort, was choked out in the first round at UFC 142, and promptly fired by the UFC.

Looking back now, it’s laughable and damn near inconceivable to picture “Rumble” as a welterweight. Once exiting the UFC, Johnson immediately moved up to light heavyweight, then heavyweight, scoring vicious knockouts of Jake Rosholt and DJ Linderman (see above) as well as a decision victory over Andrei Arlovski along the way. Most recently, Johnson dropped back to light heavyweight to violently KO Strikeforce veteran Mike Kyle at WSOF 8 (notice a pattern here?), his third successive win since signing with the WSOF back in 2012.

His weight issues finally behind him, Johnson’s hard work over the years will come to a head at UFC 172, when “Rumble” faces top light heavyweight prospect Phil Davis in a fight that will place the winner on the short list of title contenders.

Also on tap for UFC 172…


(Oh how we’ve missed you, old friend.)

Anthony Johnson‘s redemptive arch as a fighter is one on par with something typically reserved for a Hollywood movie. The hard-hitting Georgian was once the talk of the town at 170 lbs., lauded as easily the most dangerous potential challenger to Georges St. Pierre‘s throne and a mountain of a challenge for anyone in between. Problem was, Johnson suffered from what is now known as “Lineker’s Syndrome” — the inability to actually make weight for two consecutive bouts in the division he was supposedly competing in.

Johnson’s struggles on the scale seemed as if they would be a thing of the past when he announced that he would be moving up to middleweight, but lo, they only got worse. Johnson missed weight by a staggering 12 pounds for his middleweight debut against Vitor Belfort, was choked out in the first round at UFC 142, and promptly fired by the UFC.

Looking back now, it’s laughable and damn near inconceivable to picture “Rumble” as a welterweight. Once exiting the UFC, Johnson immediately moved up to light heavyweight, then heavyweight, scoring vicious knockouts of Jake Rosholt and DJ Linderman (see above) as well as a decision victory over Andrei Arlovski along the way. Most recently, Johnson dropped back to light heavyweight to violently KO Strikeforce veteran Mike Kyle at WSOF 8 (notice a pattern here?), his third successive win since signing with the WSOF back in 2012.

His weight issues finally behind him, Johnson’s hard work over the years will come to a head at UFC 172, when “Rumble” faces top light heavyweight prospect Phil Davis in a fight that will place the winner on the short list of title contenders.

Davis also has strung together something of a win streak lately, scoring a submission victory over Wagner Prado before notching back-to-back decisions over Vinny Magalhaes and Lyoto Machida.

Also on tap for UFC 172 is a middleweight sure-to-be-banger between Luke Rockhold and Tim Boetsch. Following an..ahem…unsucessful UFC debut against Vitor Belfort, the final Strikeforce middleweight champion rebounded in emphatic fashion against Costas Philippou at Fight Night 35 last month, forcing the former top contender to shart out his liver via a brutal kick to the body early in the first round. Boetsch also has had a rocky go of things as of late, recently rebounding from the first two-fight skid of his career with a controversial decision over C.B. Dollaway at UFC 166.

UFC 172: Jones vs. Teixeira (Finally) transpires at the Baltimore Arena in Maryland on April 26. Who do you like for these pair of slugfests, Nation?

J. Jones

Rousimar Palhares to Fight for Welterweight Title at WSOF 9 vs. Steve Carl

Embattled leg lock specialist and former UFC fighter Rousimar Palhares now has his first opponent with his new promotion, World Series of Fighting. Palhares will face off with WSOF’s 170-pound champion Steve Carl at WSOF9.  Palhares won his welterweight debut, defeating well-grounded gatekeeper Mike Pierce at UFC Fight Night 29 after spending most of his career […]

Embattled leg lock specialist and former UFC fighter Rousimar Palhares now has his first opponent with his new promotion, World Series of Fighting. Palhares will face off with WSOF’s 170-pound champion Steve Carl at WSOF9.  Palhares won his welterweight debut, defeating well-grounded gatekeeper Mike Pierce at UFC Fight Night 29 after spending most of his career […]

Yushin Okami on Bridging the East-West Training Divide and Moving Forward After His UFC Release [Tokyo Dispatch #2]


(Photo via Getty)

By Elias Cepeda

I got off the Oedo subway line from Shinjuku station at the Kiyosumi Shirakawa stop and waited for a few minutes to meet up with my guide for the night, Stewart Fulton. Stewart is a Scottish ex-pat who has lived in Tokyo for over a decade. He’s also a professional fighter and has bled and sweated with some of the best fighters in all of Japan.

On this Friday night, Stewart is taking me to the gym of the man UFC president Dana White has said is the best fighter to have ever come out of Japan — Yushin Okami. Uncle Dana may very well be right about that.

It’s an interesting time to visit with “Thunder” because, despite White’s lauding of him, the UFC released Okami last fall. Now, the former middleweight title challenger is signed with the World Series of Fighting (WSOF) and is expected to make his promotional debut in March against a yet-to-be-determined opponent.

Stewart has told me that I can train with the group of select professional fighters that Okami will lead tonight but also warned me that it is a sparring day and that they go hard. After three straight days of hard grappling at other schools in Tokyo, I’m fine with sitting through tonight’s session as a spectator and leaving with my head still attached to my body.

I wonder out loud to Stewart what kind of mood Okami will be in tonight. He hasn’t done many interviews since being cut by the UFC. Okami’s release shocked some observers since he is still clearly a top middleweight. Surely, it shocked Okami as well. Who knows how eager he’ll be to talk about the topic.

Luckily, there are plenty others to discuss. Namely, training.

Stewart tells me that over the years he’s been amazed that Yushin has never appeared to be injured during training. Injuries happen constantly in training and fighters are almost always nursing several of them that vary in severity.

“I’ve never noticed him favoring an injury during practice,” Stewart tells me.

“Either he doesn’t get hurt or he’s very good at not showing it.”


(Photo via Getty)

By Elias Cepeda

I got off the Oedo subway line from Shinjuku station at the Kiyosumi Shirakawa stop and waited for a few minutes to meet up with my guide for the night, Stewart Fulton. Stewart is a Scottish ex-pat who has lived in Tokyo for over a decade. He’s also a professional fighter and has bled and sweated with some of the best fighters in all of Japan.

On this Friday night, Stewart is taking me to the gym of the man UFC president Dana White has said is the best fighter to have ever come out of Japan — Yushin Okami. Uncle Dana may very well be right about that.

It’s an interesting time to visit with “Thunder” because, despite White’s lauding of him, the UFC released Okami last fall. Now, the former middleweight title challenger is signed with the World Series of Fighting (WSOF) and is expected to make his promotional debut in March against a yet-to-be-determined opponent.

Stewart has told me that I can train with the group of select professional fighters that Okami will lead tonight but also warned me that it is a sparring day and that they go hard. After three straight days of hard grappling at other schools in Tokyo, I’m fine with sitting through tonight’s session as a spectator and leaving with my head still attached to my body.

I wonder out loud to Stewart what kind of mood Okami will be in tonight. He hasn’t done many interviews since being cut by the UFC. Okami’s release shocked some observers since he is still clearly a top middleweight. Surely, it shocked Okami as well. Who knows how eager he’ll be to talk about the topic.

Luckily, there are plenty others to discuss. Namely, training.

Stewart tells me that over the years he’s been amazed that Yushin has never appeared to be injured during training. Injuries happen constantly in training and fighters are almost always nursing several of them that vary in severity.

“I’ve never noticed him favoring an injury during practice,” Stewart tells me.

“Either he doesn’t get hurt or he’s very good at not showing it.”

********

Yushin is dressed in spats and a long-sleeved rash guard but doesn’t mix it up with the other fighters tonight. Tonight, he is Coach Okami and, stop-watch in hand, he leads two straight hours of drilling and sparring for the other five pros in the room.

Stewart wasn’t lying — they go hard in sparring. A number of times, fighters clearly get their bells rung but don’t back down. Afterwards, the training partners still smile and joke with one another as well.

Yushin is stern when giving instructions but seems happily engaged in this role. He tells us that he’s held that position of group leader for about five years.

All of the fighters are around Okami’s age but it’s clear they have respect for the top-ranked middleweight.

After practice, with Stewart as our interpreter, I ask Okami about coaching, what he’s got next and how prepares for fights. First off, is it true that he doesn’t really get injured?

Okami laughs and says that luckily, right now he doesn’t have any major injuries.

“I get injured just as much as anyone,” he says.

“But, no, I don’t have any big injuries now at all. There’s no secret to staying healthy. I make sure I get taken care of. If it’s a small injury, you just work around it and keep getting stronger in other ways.”

When pressed, Yushin does allow that a lot of effort goes into staying in shape. For Okami, as is the case for boxing great Bernard Hopkins and UFC hall of famer Randy Couture, not having an off-season is key.

“I do take care of what I eat all year round,” he says. “Even if I’m not fighting in the near future, if it’s quite a ways away, I don’t take any time off. There’s no off-season. It’s pretty much consistent training.”

That approach has served the 32-year-old well throughout his career and is likely his best chance at getting back on the winning track in this uncertain time for him. Okami has won three out of his last four UFC fights but was still cut after losing last September to Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza.

Now, Yushin waits to see who and where he’ll fight next in the WSOF. His UFC release is clearly not a topic he enjoys talking about as he looks towards the future, but he does admit to being shocked by the move.

“At the time I was shocked,” he says. “But the only way is to move forward…All that matters are my actions from here on out.”

Okami has trained a bit in recent years in America with the likes of former opponent Chael Sonnen. As he talks about fight preparation in his own Tokyo gym, Yushin says that his goal is to combine the best elements of America-style training with Japanese methods for himself and the teammates he leads here.

“In Japan, training is a daily thing,” he says. “What you do in a day is important. But, in the States it seems like what matters most is what you can do in a week. That’s one of the main things I’ve brought over here – how to plan your training out over a week, rather than just think about what you’re doing that day.”

Here in his Tokyo gym, Okami is trying to create a new, hybrid way of training. “Basically, I want to take the good points of what I’ve learned in America and the best parts of what I learned here in Japan and mix them,” he says.

“It’s an amalgam of what I’ve learned in both countries.”

Okami also says that, though he wants to himself return to the U.S. for more training camps, whether he does for his next one will depend on who he fights next. Also, the ultimate goal is to eventually re-create the well-rounded training environments he’s experienced in America, here in Tokyo.

“I have been helped a lot by training in America and I do want to return there,” he says.

“It depends on the opponent but I do want to train there again with people who have helped me a lot. I also want to bring more of that atmosphere to Japan so I can have camps like that here in Tokyo.”

After seeing the hard sparring he facilitated, it isn’t a surprise to learn that Okami believes what makes Japanese training special and unique has a lot to do with a simply love for going hard.

“The strong point for Japanese fighters and training comes from a long time ago,” he explains.

“The Japanese are crazy about training. We just go at it. It’s always been there. Having said that, having to train at different gyms for different skills — I’d rather it be in one place like it is in the States.”

Yushin Okami the fighter may have years yet left on his accomplished competitive career. However, one can’t help but look forward a bit and be excited at the prospect of his leading the next generation of Japanese MMA coaches.

Like all career fighters, “Thunder” Okami has learned a lot about fighting over the decades. Unlike most of them, however, he’s already eager to share that knowledge with others to help create new champions.

Previously: Shinya Aoki on Survival, Rebounding from Defeat and how PRIDE Changed his Life [Tokyo Dispatch #1]

WSOF Matchmaker Ali Abdelaziz Says Newell vs. Gaethje Is Not Official

Nick Newell might not challenge newly-minted World Series of Fighting lightweight champion Justin Gaethje for the lightweight title, after all. 
Recent reports indicated that the lightweight standout Newell had been granted a title shot again…

Nick Newell might not challenge newly-minted World Series of Fighting lightweight champion Justin Gaethje for the lightweight title, after all. 

Recent reports indicated that the lightweight standout Newell had been granted a title shot against Gaethje, but WSOF matchmaker Ali Abdelaziz said nothing is official just yet. 

“I said this is a fight, I think Nick Newell deserves it, but I have to talk to both camps,” Abdelaziz told Bleacher Report. “It’s going to be a timing issue.” 

Newell last fought at WSOF 7, where he submitted Sabah Fadai in Round 1 via guillotine choke. The win placed Newell in the lightweight title picture, but Abdelaziz said he does not know if Newell and his camp would be willing to wait until the summer for a potential showdown with Gaethje. 

“I don’t know if Nick Newell will want to wait this longuntil June or July,” Abdelaziz said. “I just have to be sure both guys agree and it fits our TV schedule. It has to make sense all around because it’s such a big fight. It would go down in the summer, but it’s not confirmed yet.” 

Newell, for his part, said he is open to any road that leads him to the title. 

“Yeah, absolutely (I’d wait for the title shot),” Newell told Bleacher Report. “I’m willing to fight him; it’s just whenever they book it. If I have to beat somebody else first to get a title shot, I’ll do that, too. I’m down with whatever.”

At 11-0 with 10 first-round finishes, Newell boasts a championship resume. 

A fight with Gaethje, however, would represent the toughest test of Newell’s career to this point, and the consequences of this showdown could either completely legitimize his spotless record or cause detractors to point out that he was over-hyped all along. 

If Newell and Abdelaziz get their way, we will find out this summer in what will be a hotly-anticipated lightweight showdown between two undefeated juggernauts. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

WSOF 8 Results: Should the UFC Sign Anthony Johnson After His Huge KO Win?

Anthony Johnson might want to keep his phone handy.
UFC President Dana White could ring any second to talk about a spot on his promotion’s light heavyweight roster. 
The World Series of Fighting standout and former UFC combatant Johnson recently d…

Anthony Johnson might want to keep his phone handy.

UFC President Dana White could ring any second to talk about a spot on his promotion’s light heavyweight roster. 

The World Series of Fighting standout and former UFC combatant Johnson recently disposed of longtime MMA veteran Mike Kyle at WSOF 8 in devastating fashion, giving White and the UFC brass something to think about in the upcoming days. 

During his match at WSOF 8, Johnson followed a glancing left hand with a crushing right, and Kyle was out before he started his slow, dramatic fall to the canvas (GIF courtesy of Zombie Prophet, @ZProphet_MMA).

With the dominant victory, Johnson pushed his current winning streak to six, and he appears to be in the midst of a career resurgence. 

This is where the story gets fun. 

“Rumble” Johnsonthe massive light heavyweight you just saw in the GIF—used to fight at a lighter weight class inside the UFC Octagon. 

He wasn’t a middleweight.

He was a welterweight. 

Somehow, that hulking figure pictured above cut to 170 pounds, where he fought hilariously outsized opponents such as now-lightweight Charlie Brenneman

This cut was not met without challenge, however. Johnson became infamous for his inability to make weight, and this problem eventually led to his release from the UFC, per MMA Mania. 

Following his release, Johnson was scooped up by Titan Fighting Championships and slated to fight another UFC castoff in David Branch. 

The fight was contested at middleweight, a fact which would bode well for Johnson in the making-weight department, right? 

Nope. 

Johnson stepped on the scales and weighed in at 194.2 pounds, nearly 10 pounds off of the 185-pound limit, according to 5th Round. 

With the exception of a heavyweight bout at WSOF 2—where he won a unanimous decision over former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski—Johnson has settled in at light heavyweight since that time, and the results speak for themselves. 

He notched knockout victories in four of his last six fights, and his latest one-punch masterpiece was downright scary. 

Making Johnson’s case stronger, UFC light heavyweight contender Phil Davis recently made headlines due to his inactivity. His coach, Eric Del Fierro, said, per MMA Fighting, “Phil’s ready to fight. We’re just not getting the fight.”

In addition, the UFC light heavyweight roster is old. 

Bloody Elbow writer Mookie Alexander summarized the situation nicely on Twitter:

Maybe Johnson doesn’t deserve a fight against a top-tier UFC light heavyweight like Davis just yet, but the fact remains that he has looked unstoppable of late, and his weight-cutting issues seem to be a thing of the past. 

Would you like to see Johnson back in the UFC? If so, whom would you like to see him face first?

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

World Series of Fighting 8: Results and Recaps from Gaethje vs. Patishnock

World Series of Fighting 8 went down Saturday night from Hollywood, Fla.
In the main event of the evening, Justin Gaethje captured the inaugural WSOF lightweight title with a quick and definitive first-round knockout of Rich Patishnock.
Gaethje started…

World Series of Fighting 8 went down Saturday night from Hollywood, Fla.

In the main event of the evening, Justin Gaethje captured the inaugural WSOF lightweight title with a quick and definitive first-round knockout of Rich Patishnock.

Gaethje started the fight looking for the finish, as did Patishnock. The two traded punches in the center of the cage, though the 25-year-old Gaethje got the better of the exchanges. Gaethje punished Patishnock against the fence with heavy shots, and the referee was soon forced to call a stop to the contest.

With the win, Gaethje moved to a perfect 11-0. Patishnock drops to 6-2.

Patishnock was third in line for this. After Gesias Cavalcante went down, WSOF officials called on Lewis Gonzalez. But then he went down, too. Enter Patishnock.

In a fight that served as the unofficial second-most important bout of the evening, Jessica Aguilar captured the very first WSOF women’s strawweight title with an impressive submission defeat of Alida Gray. The win further cemented Aguilar as the best 115-pound women’s fighter on the planet.

In the co-main event, former UFC fighter Anthony Johnson knocked out Mike Kyle in the first round. In so doing, Johnson established himself as one of the most interesting knockout artists outside the UFC. 

 

Full Card Results

Main Card

Justin Gaethje def. Rich Patishnock by TKO, 1:09, Rd. 1 (for inaugural WSOF Lightweight Championship)

Anthony Johnson def. Mike Kyle by KO, 2:23, Rd. 1

Jessica Aguilar def. Alida Gray by submission (arm-triangle choke), 2:45, Rd. 1 (for inaugural WSOF Women’s Strawweight Championship)

Cody Bollinger def. Tyson Nam by unanimous decision

Luis Palomino def. Jorge Patino by KO, 4:20, Rd. 2

Preliminary Card

Tyler Stinson def. Valdir Araujo by KO, 2:23, Rd. 3

Derrick Mehmen def. Scott Barrett by unanimous decision 

Alexis Vila def. Sidemar Honorio by unanimous decision

Freddy Assuncao def. Brenson Hansen by split decision

Anderson Melo def. Jose Caceres by submission (heel hook), 1:10, Rd. 1

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com