After UFC 204, Where Does Michael Bisping Stand in the Middleweight Division?

Michael Bisping successfully defended his middleweight title at UFC 204 on Saturday, wringing a tight decision from the judges in his native Manchester, England. The 37-year-old champion has now won five fights in a row, taking out the legendary Anders…

Michael Bisping successfully defended his middleweight title at UFC 204 on Saturday, wringing a tight decision from the judges in his native Manchester, England. The 37-year-old champion has now won five fights in a row, taking out the legendary Anderson Silva, new-school kingpin Luke Rockhold and now his nemesis Dan Henderson in quick succession.

Yet Bisping has achieved this success with more than a few caveats about the state of his competition. This leaves a few salient questions about where Bisping stands in the weight class he now rules. How will he fare against the elite competition at the top of the middleweight division? Can he retain his title against the likes of Chris Weidman, Yoel Romero and Jacare Souza?

Bleacher Report’s Steven Rondina and Patrick Wyman debate how Bisping stacks up against his fellow top 185-pounders.

 

Patrick: There’s no denying the impressiveness of Bisping’s accomplishments in the last two years. Since losing to Rockhold in November 2014, he’s run off five wins, beating C.B. Dollaway, Thales Leites, Silva, Rockhold to win the title and now Henderson to defend it.

That’s a great list of scalps, but there are also asterisks.

Dollaway isn’t a top-15 fighter and Leites is just hanging around the fringes of the top 10, and neither was a resounding victory. Silva nearly finished Bisping and the decision, though unanimous, was still close and contentious; Rockhold had only two weeks to prepare following Weidman’s withdrawal and went into the fight with a Grade II MCL sprain; Henderson was 46 and had compiled a 4-6 record in his last 10 fights.

I’m not normally a fan of this kind of resume-questioning, and Bisping has earned the right to be where he is right now, but in this case the caveats are simply too big to ignore. What say you, Steven? Is it fair to question Bisping’s recent run?

 

Steven: Well, Patrick, you might not like it, but I live to question resumes and boy howdy, have I questioned the heck out of Bisping’s resume.

Is Bisping the rightful UFC champion? Yes. Did he win the title fair and square? Yes. Does he live up to the legacy and prestige of the title? Yes. But does that undo all of the flimsiness we’ve seen from Bisping over the years? Heck no.

Bisping came a hair away from losing to Silva. He was one judge away from losing to Leites. He was one fence grab away from losing to Dollaway. There are lots of alternate universes out there where Bisping didn’t win the title at UFC 199, and there are probably even more where he didn’t even get a shot at the championship in the first place.

Bisping is a very good fighter and, again, earned that title. But his numerous losses over the years and shakiness against even middling competition disqualify him from being the best in the world in his weight class.

Not to plug the official Bleacher Report MMA rankings too hard, but I have Bisping ranked as the No. 3 middleweight behind Luke Rockhold and Chris Weidman. Personally, I think that’s fair.

 

Patrick: I can’t really argue with any of that. It’s worth remembering that he got his title shot at UFC 199 on the basis of Weidman’s injury two weeks out; Bisping happened to be in shape, and the fight happened to be in the city where he now lives, Los Angeles.

That’s a series of fortunate coincidences, and while Bisping made the most of his shot by jumping on a hurt Rockhold and finishing him, they’re lucky breaks nonetheless.

It’s worth digging into how Bisping stacks up against his competition at the top of the division. He’s 1-1 against Rockhold, but otherwise his only win over a top-10 opponent came against an obviously diminished Silva. Even then, Silva still came within a hair’s breadth of finishing Bisping at the end of the third round in that fight.

So how would he do against Weidman, Jacare Souza or Yoel Romero?

I can’t honestly say I’d favor him in a single one of those fights, or even in a rematch against Rockhold. Bisping is fighting at his best right now and has made real improvements to his game in recent years, namely with his footwork and his ability to exchange punches in the pocket. Even as the champion, however, he still has some deep flaws.

He’s a slow starter and needs a little while to work up to his preferred pace. Power isn’t his strong suit, and he only really sits down on his punches in the later rounds, when he’s sure that his opponent is wearing down. Against Henderson, he had been so scared by the big right hands early (justifiably, to be sure) that he never set his feet to throw with power.

The 46-year-old Henderson was able to land brutal counters when he got lazy with his lead hand, a flaw that has bedeviled Bisping for the better part of the last decade. Even in his younger years, he has never taken a great punch, and that’s not going to get better at the tender age of 37.

What do you think of those matchups, Steven? Is there anyone in the middleweight elite you’d favor Bisping to beat?

 

Steven: I actually dissent from you a bit there. I’d pick him to lose a rubber match with Rockhold without a second thought. The same goes for a fight with Weidman.

Romero and Souza, though? Not so much.

Romero is an absurdly powerful man but he gets remarkably sloppy once his gas tank starts running low. Just look at his fight at UFC 194. Sure, he could snap Bisping in half with a takedown the way he did Lyoto Machida last year, but if the fight goes past the second round, all bets are off.

As for Souza, I just don’t buy into him as the unstoppable monster so many others do. He has some great tools, but we haven’t really seen them used against prime competition. He has thrived in the UFC, for the most part, by cutting the cage without any difficulty and I wouldn’t be shocked in the least if they didn’t hold up against a fighter as savvy as Bisping.

All that said, I wouldn’t confidently pick Bisping over either of them!

So who do you think is next for Bisping? It’s a bit tough to pin down at this point with all four of them set to fight in the near future, but who do you think will challenge the champ next?

 

Patrick: While I’m almost certain Rockhold would win the rubber match and Weidman, if he could stay healthy, would beat him like a drum, your points about Souza and Romero are well taken.

Romero’s sheer dynamism and freakish athletic gifts are a huge problem for a fighter like Bisping, who is essentially defined by his lack of those things, but Bisping’s cardio would present major issues if the fight went longer than eight minutes or so. The same holds true against Souza, who isn’t exactly a cardio machine himself.

The problem there is survival. Bisping’s not exactly hot out of the gate, and both Romero and Souza are perfectly capable of walking him down, slamming him to the mat and brutalizing him from top position. They’ve both done exactly that to more accomplished fighters than Bisping.

As for what comes next, it depends on who emerges victorious from Weidman-Romero at UFC 205 and Souza-Rockhold II two weeks later.

The UFC, I imagine, is hoping for Weidman and Rockhold. Even if it was due to a tainted supplement, Romero’s failed drug test can’t leave the promotion feeling good about his long-term promise as the champion. At this point, it seems clear that the UFC wants nothing to do with Jacare in a title fight; if they’d wanted to give him a shot at the belt, they would have done it two years ago.

Between Weidman and Rockhold, it depends on who can stay healthy. That’s much more likely to be Rockhold than Weidman, so I’d guess we’ll end up with the rubber match.

How does that sound to you, Steven?

 

Steven: It sounds good, but there is a major variable in play when it comes to both men’s recent gripes about pay. Rockhold pulled no punches when discussing his contract situation last month, flatly labeling it “bulls–t”. Weidman, similarly, hinted at a rift between himself and the current UFC ownership group, which nearly resulted in him being left off the UFC 205 card.

It wouldn’t be the least bit shocking if the UFC pulled a power move and passed over one of them for a title shot. And as you alluded to, it wouldn’t be the least bit shocking if Weidman, Romero or Souza broke something and wound up on the shelf for six months.

Personally, I’m rooting for another stop on the “Michael Bisping 2016 Revenge Tour.” Maybe the winner of UFC 205’s Tim Kennedy vs. Rashad Evans?

 

Patrick: Any way you slice it, there’s a profusion of interesting matchups waiting out there for Bisping. Whether any of them go his way is another story.

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Chris Weidman Doesn’t Trust Yoel Romero After USADA Violation

Coming off of the first loss of his professional mixed martial arts (MMA) career, former UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman will engage on his quest back to the 185-pound title when he takes on the talented No. 4-ranked Yoel Romero. Romero is coming off of a six-month suspension after failing a United States Anti-Doping Agency

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Coming off of the first loss of his professional mixed martial arts (MMA) career, former UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman will engage on his quest back to the 185-pound title when he takes on the talented No. 4-ranked Yoel Romero.

Romero is coming off of a six-month suspension after failing a United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) drug test for the release stimulator and growth hormone ibutamoren.

Prior to his suspension Romero was riding a seven-fight win streak, steadily making his climb to the UFC middleweight championship after his split decision win over Ronaldo ‘Jacare’ Souza at UFC 194.

Weidman, who has been a big advocate for a cleaner sport, recently spoke to FOX Sports to discuss Romero’s troubled past with USADA, claiming he wouldn’t be surprised if Romero wasn’t still abusing PEDs:

“(Romero) failed while USADA was testing him randomly so he had the balls to take it then along with a lot of other guys. I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s still taking something, maybe he’s getting smarter with it,” Weidman said.

“Once a guy fails a drug test, I’m never naïve enough to think now he’s clean.”

Leading up to their massive middleweight clash in Weidman’s backyard of New York City, ‘The All American’ is hoping Romero is being thoroughly tested by USADA ahead of UFC 205; and hopes all PED abusers in MMA go clean ‘like a man’:

09_1200_800643003087490791474981423.6325.jpg“I’m really hoping he’s being tested properly leading up to this next fight,” Weidman said. “I heard that they were going to test him, switching up the times, because you hear guys know the times they are going to be tested. Supposedly they are going to come at a bunch of different times so it’s completely random.

“So if these guys are taking stuff it’s a really risky thing. I hope they all get caught, every single one of them gets busted taking something. Hopefully the guys who were on stuff, they become pros and come off stuff and fight like a man like everybody else.”

It’s hard for the former middleweight king to trust past abusers, who Weidman isn’t sure how far will go to preserve their ability to get an upper edge on the competition when they step into the Octagon:

“I just don’t trust anything,” Weidman said. “I don’t know if these guys got doctors and they’re getting their bloodwork checked everyday. I don’t what lengths they’re willing to go to.

If they’ve been on steroids for a long time and they don’t want to come off, what kind of money are they willing to spend? What support they have to figure out ways to beat these drug tests? Buy different drugs that don’t show up on tests?

“I don’t trust any of it.”

Weidman and Romero will clash on the main card of UFC 205 live on pay-per-view (PPV), from the Madison Square Garden arena on November 12, 2016.

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Michael Bisping Does Not Feel Yoel Romero Deserves UFC Title Shot

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Michael Bisping is able to see through what others haven’t – at least in the eyes of the reigning UFC middleweight champion.

As Bisping prepares for his first title defense Saturday at …

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Michael Bisping is able to see through what others haven’t – at least in the eyes of the reigning UFC middleweight champion.

As Bisping prepares for his first title defense Saturday at UFC 204 opposite Dan Henderson, he explained why he doesn’t view Yoel Romero as a potential challenger down the road during an appearance on “The MMA Hour” Monday.

Romero meets former UFC champion Chris Weidman next month at UFC 205.

“I’ll tell you who I don’t think deserves it — Yoel Romero,” Bisping said (thanks to MMAFighting for transcribing). “I don’t think he deserves it. There’s no smoke without fire. He got a reduced sentence, but the fact is, he still got a sentence. Even if you take performance enhancing drugs, the benefits of those stay in your system for a long, long time. So I don’t think Yoel Romero deserves it.”

Romero was given a six-month suspension for a failed test, down from the two-year ban originally expected. He claimed the result came from a tainted supplement.

UFC 205 Press Conference Live Stream

Hot on the heels of last night’s announcement that featherweight champion Conor McGregor would face lightweight champ Eddie Alvarez in the main event of November 12’s UFC 205 from New York, the promotion gets the hype for the huge event rolling with an official pre-fight press conference from the Big Apple tonight. McGregor and Alvarez

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Hot on the heels of last night’s announcement that featherweight champion Conor McGregor would face lightweight champ Eddie Alvarez in the main event of November 12’s UFC 205 from New York, the promotion gets the hype for the huge event rolling with an official pre-fight press conference from the Big Apple tonight.

McGregor and Alvarez will join fellow title fight participants Tyron Woodley, Stephen Thompson, Joanna Jedrzejczyk, and Karolina Kowalkiewicz in addition to other main card fighters like Chris Weidman, Yoel Romero, Donald Cerrone, and Kelvin Gastelum. Watch the presser streaming live at 6 p.m. EST here:

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Five Fights That Prove UFC 205 Will Be Better Than UFC 200

The official card for November 12’s awaited UFC 205 pay-per-view (PPV) event was finally released by the promotion with the confirmation of Conor McGregor vs. Eddie Alvarez in the main event late last night, and it’s safe to say that the UFC’s New York debut from historic sports venue Madison Square Garden is one of, if

The post Five Fights That Prove UFC 205 Will Be Better Than UFC 200 appeared first on LowKick MMA.

The official card for November 12’s awaited UFC 205 pay-per-view (PPV) event was finally released by the promotion with the confirmation of Conor McGregor vs. Eddie Alvarez in the main event late last night, and it’s safe to say that the UFC’s New York debut from historic sports venue Madison Square Garden is one of, if not the, most anticipated MMA moments of 2016 – and even all time.

However, that distinction may have once belonged to July’s UFC 200, the supposed “biggest, baddest event ever,” which was pegged as arguably the most stacked card of all time before a slew of problems, including last-minute changes and disappointing drug testing issues, lead to a wholly lackluster, uninspired event outside of the Fight Pass preliminaries.

Thankfully for the UFC – and the overall state of MMA as a whole – UFC 205 has a long list of high-profile bouts that could (should?) serve to quickly erase the bad memories of UFC 200 from their minds, if they haven’t been already.

Let’s break down five fights that will prove UFC 205 has the star power to decimate UFC 200 on paper.

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5.) Donald Cerrone vs. Kelvin Gastelum:

This welterweight card-starter already trumps UFC 200’s welterweight offering between Gastelum and former champ Johny Hendricks, which Gastelum won via ho-hum unanimous decision. “Bigg Rigg” may be a former champion, but he’s also looked like a shell of his formerly dominant self this year, and it was hard for the much more spry Gastelum to put on a good show at UFC 200 without a willing dance partner.

It may not be the “Ruthless” Robbie Lawler vs. “Cowboy” bout we were all hoping for, yet it does provide a potentially exciting scrap to set the tone for the PPV card.

Cerrone has absolutely been on fire in his last three fights, finishing off Alex Oliveira, Patrick Cote, and most recently, Rick Story to reinvent himself at 170 pounds following a stoppage loss to Rafael dos Anjos for the lightweight strap late last year. Gastelum has quietly planted himself as a top five contender in arguably the UFC’s most talented division, making this bout a crucial one with pivotal title implications.

No matter who wins, the welterweight division will have a new contender towards the top; one who could contend for the title after Demian Maia gets his shot (or face Maia himself).

Either way, it would seem this fight is a can’t-miss bout that will get the UFC’s New York party started right.

The post Five Fights That Prove UFC 205 Will Be Better Than UFC 200 appeared first on LowKick MMA.

Chris Weidman-Yoel Romero Officially Added To UFC 205

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Former UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman will get his homecoming after all, as he meets Yoel Romero at UFC 205.

The promotion finally confirmed the long-rumored fight for the Nove…

chris-weidman-champion

Former UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman will get his homecoming after all, as he meets Yoel Romero at UFC 205.

The promotion finally confirmed the long-rumored fight for the November event on Tuesday, hours after announcing Conor McGregor would challenge Eddie Alvarez for the lightweight title.

Weidman, a 32-year-old native of Baldwin, New York, last competed in December when he was bested by Luke Rockhold for the belt. That loss snapped a 13-fight win streak for “The All-American.”

Romero (12-1) is unbeaten inside the Octagon, winning each of his seven bouts. That includes victories over Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, Lyoto Machida and Tim Kennedy.

UFC 205 takes place November 12 from Madison Square Garden and features three title fights along with Weidman-Romero.