UFC 2013 rankings


bleacherreport, anderson silva, jon jones, ronda rousey, gsp

Image by: bleacher report

Pound-for-Pound:
1 Anderson Silva
2 Jon Jones
3 Georges St. Pierre
4 Jose Aldo
5 Benson Henderson
6 Cain Velasquez
7 Dominick Cruz
8 Demetrious Johnson
9 Frankie Edgar
10 Dan Henderson

Flyweight
Champion: Demetrious Johnson
1 Joseph Benavidez
2 John Dodson
3 Ian McCall
4 John Moraga
5 Jussier da Silva
6 Louis Gaudinot
7 Chris Cariaso
8 John Lineker
9 Darren Uyenoyama
10 Ulysses Gomez

Bantamweight
Champion: Dominick Cruz
1 Renan Barao (Interim Champion)
2 Michael McDonald
3 Urijah Faber
4 Eddie Wineland
5 Brad Pickett
6 Brian Bowles
7 Raphael Assuncao
8 Scott Jorgensen
9 Mike Easton
10 Ivan Menjivar

Featherweight
Champion: Jose Aldo
1 Chad Mendes
2 Ricardo Lamas
3 Chan Sung Jung
4 Frankie Edgar
5 Dennis Siver
6 Cub Swanson
7 Dustin Poirier
8 Nik Lentz
9 Erik Koch
10 Clay Guida

Lightweight
Champion: Ben Henderson
1 Gilbert Melendez
2 Anthony Pettis
3 Gray Maynard
4 Nate Diaz
5 Jim Miller
6 Donald Cerrone
7 T.J. Grant
8 Rafael dos Anjos
9 Joe Lauzon
10 Khabib Nurmagomedov

Welterweight
Champion: Georges St. Pierre
1 Johny Hendricks
2 Carlos Condit
3 Nick Diaz
4 Rory MacDonald
5 Demian Maia
6 Jake Ellenberger
7 Martin Kampmann
8 Josh Koscheck
9 Jon Fitch
10 Tarec Saffiedine

Middleweight
Champion: Anderson Silva
1 Chris Weidman
2 Vitor Belfort
3 Michael Bisping
4 Yushin Okami
5 Mark Munoz
6 Constantinos Philippou
7 Luke Rockhold
8 Hector Lombard
9 Alan Belcher
10 Tim Boetsch

Light Heavyweight
Champion: Jon Jones
1 Dan Henderson
2 Lyoto Machida
3 Alexander Gustafsson
4 Glover Teixeira
5 Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
6 Rashad Evans
7 Mauricio Rua
8 Phil Davis
9 Ryan Bader
10 Gegard Mousasi

Heavyweight
Champion: Cain Velasquez
1 Junior dos Santos
2 Fabricio Werdum
3 Daniel Cormier
4 Antonio Silva
5 Frank Mir
6 Alistair Overeem
7 Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
8 Roy Nelson
9 Stefan Struve
10 Shane Carwin

The 12 Days of MMA Christmas


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Chuck Liddell, Shane Carwin, Joe Lauzon, Urijah Faber, Chris Weidman, Brittney Palmer and more of your favorite MMA stars wish you a Merry Christmas.

@ANDREACALLEcorp

More images UFC 148


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ACL injury sidelines UFC’s Cruz


By Dave Deibert, Postmedia News

Ultimate Fighting Championship bantamweight titleholder Dominick Cruz has been sidelined with a torn anterior cruciate ligament, putting his anticipated rubber match against Urijah Faber on hold for the foreseeable future.

Cruz injured his knee while training in Las Vegas, where he has been filming the current season of The Ultimate Fighter: Live. Cruz and Faber have been serving as opposing coaches on the reality TV show, building up to a title match at UFC 148 on July 7.

Cruz, on his official Twitter account, said he was “bummed” about the injury.

“I WILL recover (and) I WILL b back 2put on a show!” Cruz wrote.

The injury was first reported by PhyteGurus.com. UFC president Dana White confirmed Cruz’s status on Monday.

The Cruz-Faber match was originally scheduled to headline UFC 148, but when a middleweight title bout between champion Anderson Silva and Chael Sonnen was shifted from UFC 147 in Brazil to UFC 148, the bantamweight title contest was moved to the co-main event slot.

Faber and Cruz have a long-standing feud that dates back to a 2007 match in World Extreme Cagefighting, when Faber won their first encounter. Cruz defeated Faber last July in the rematch, earning a unanimous decision at UFC 132 in one of the best matches of 2011.

There was no immediate word on a possible replacement for Cruz against Faber, or whether or not an interim title would be created. The likely candidates to take on Faber, should that be UFC’s direction, would be 21-year-old Michael MacDonald or Renan Barao.

MacDonald (15-1) is 4-0 since joining UFC in March 2011, most recently knocking out veteran Miguel Torres at UFC 145 last month. Barao, since losing his professional debut in 2005, has gone 28-0-1 in his last 29 bouts. In February, he defeated Scott Jorgensen at UFC 143.

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ddeibert@thestarphoenix.com

Twitter.com/davedeibert

TUF 15: An 8-second KO, a broken toe, & Cruz and Faber


ESPN staff
Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber are rival coaches on TUF 15 © Getty Images

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The Ultimate Fighter went live from the word ‘go’ for the first time on Friday as 16 individuals battled it out for their place in the TUF house for the 15th and most anticipated series of show. Battling for the right to be trained by one of the two rival coaches, Dominick Cruz or Urijah Faber, the fighters had just one five-minute round to earn their place on the show. Any stoppages would earn them an instant $5,000 bonus. Below is how the 16 fights panned out, with key facts you need to know about the winner, plus what Cruz, Faber or Dana White thought on their victory.

Fight 1: Joe Proctor beats Jordan Rinaldi via guillotine choke at 2.08 of the round
After some cautious striking from both men Proctor (8-1) stepped things up a gear to apply an adjusted guillotine choke, forcing a desperate tap from Rinaldi. The win prompts Faber to express: “That Rinaldi guy is tough too man.”
Winner’s fact: Proctor is the No. 1 training partner of UFC lightweight Joe Lauzon, and the man he beat holds a submission win over last year’s TUF runner-up Dennis Bermudez.

Fight 2: Cristiano Marcello beats Jared Carlsten via rear naked choke at 2.43 of the round
Marcello (13-3) threw some good early leg kicks, body kicks and a knee out of the Thai plumb, before forcing his man to the mat, where the Jiu-Jitsu whizz instantly moved to mount. There he kept applying pressure with punches, eventually taking Carlsten’s back to lock on the rear naked choke. Cruz commented: “That is tight!”
Winner’s fact: Marcello is a fourth-degree Jiu-Jitsu black belt from Royler and Rickson Gracie and has trained Wanderlei Silva and Mauricio Shogun Rua.

Fight 3: Sam Sicilia beats Erin Beach via knockout at 0.08 of the round
Sicilia (11-0) instantly landed a huge right to drop Beach with his first punch, leaving Faber to repeatedly shout: “Holy s***”.
Winner’s fact: Sicilia had finished nine of his ten opponents prior to his fight with Beach.

Fight 4: Chris Tickle beats Austin Lyons via knockout at 0.24 of the round
Both men came to strike but Tickle (7-4) landed all the better stuff, initially setting up his punches with kicks. A powerfully built man, he then went all upstairs to land a left-right combo that dropped Lyons.
Winner’s fact: Tickle boasted a five-fight win streak going into the fight, and beat a man in Lyons who used to weigh 260lbs.

Fight 5: Andy Ogle beats Brendan Weafer via unanimous decision
Ogle (9-1) started superbly, landing an early takedown but then Weafer utilised a crippling body triangle that really limited Ogle’s movement and ability to breathe for the majority of the round, restricting him to five-second bursts despite being on top of his man. When the ref finally stood them up, Ogle went for a tight-looking guillotine, it went to the judges and Ogle got the nod.
Winner’s fact: Ogle is a UK fighter from Newcastle riding a seven-fight win streak going into the show at the age of just 22.

Fight 6: Vinc Pichel beats Cody Pfister via rear naked choke at 3.39 of the round
In one of the best fights of the night, Pfister came in recklessly looking for the takedown and got it at the second attempt. Pichel (8-0) showed some nice Jiu-Jitsu off his back and landed a big knee when he was back on the feet, but Pfister stuck to him. Again Pichel stayed patient and waited until he could end up in Pfister’s guard, where he cut him wide open with a huge elbow. “That landed dirty!” shouted Cruz. A few more punches allowed Pichel to move to his rival’s back and lock on the rear naked choke.
Winner’s fact: Pichel had finished all seven of his fights by KO or TKO prior to the show.

Fight 7: John Cofer beats Mark Glover via unanimous decision
Only one man truly came to fight as Cofer (8-1) smothered England’s Glover. The Brit produced some nice stuff at range, including a flying knee that landed, but too often he was put on his back by a man who came to points score.
Winner’s fact: Cofer rode a four-fight win streak into the competition, defeating Liverpool’s Glover.

Fight 8: Chris Saunders beats Chase Hackett via unanimous decision
Saunders (10-2) launched into a tight guillotine choke against a man who claimed his fighting style was “handsomeness”, but he didn’t get it. “His arm is blown,” stated Faber. Both then landed some good shots striking, but Hackett failed to apply any heat to his clearly exhausted rival. Saunders kept coming, landing the better shots, attempting another late guillotine – prompting Dana White to proclaim: “Hackett did nothing the entire fight.”
Winner’s fact: Saunders had a seven-fight win streak snapped by Chris Horodecki going into TUF.

Fight 9: James Vick beats Dakota Cochrane via split decision
Cochrane came out desperately searching for a takedown but couldn’t get one. Vick (5-0), a boxer, showed some good takedown defence against the cage before locking on a front headlock. Cochrane barely landed anything in five minutes, prompting White to declare: “You’ve got to throw a punch at some stage.”
Winner’s fact: Vick is 6ft 3 and is huge for the weight class.

Fight 10: Michael Chiesa beats Johnavan Vistante via rear naked choke at 2.05 of the round
Chiesa (8-0) instantly produced an explosive shot for the takedown, later taking his rival’s back. From there he pounded away, locking on the rear naked choke for one of the most impressive victories of the night.
Winner’s fact: Chiesa is an accomplished wrestler and claims he has a style nobody has seen before

Fight 11: Mike Rio beats Ali MacLean via rear naked choke at 3.32 of the round
Faber described it as a bout between Tito Ortiz (MacLean) and Clay Guida (Rio) based on their looks, and both men came out landing hard. Belfast’s MacLean looked the better when boxing, but as soon as Rio took him down the fight was his. Taking his back, Rio (9-1) delivered a suplex and bloodied his rival up, moving to mount before going back to the back for a rear naked choke. “That guy is a good wrestler and can take a punch,” observed Faber.
Winner’s fact: Rio is a three-time college national wrestling champion, and his only loss came to Efrain Escudero

Fight 12: Justin Lawrence beats James Krause via TKO at 1.25 of the round
Lawrence (4-0) came out with some unorthodox karate kicks and he proved to be extremely elusive. As Krause looked for the takedown Lawrence stuffed it and poured it on, throwing a wheel kick followed by a series of punches in the most impressive performance of the night. “Wow!” shouted Faber.
Winner’s fact: Lawrence trains with Anderson Silva at Team Black House

Fight 13: Daron Cruickshank beats Drew Dober via unanimous decision
Cruickshank (11-2) emerged in trademark Taekwondo stance but Dober went hunting a takedown. Cruickshank than landed two lethal head kicks followed by a series of punches before landing a double-leg. “Oh man!” shouted Cruz and White. Back on their feet Cruickshank landed more heavy kicks, stuffing a huge takedown attempt, before putting a rubber stamp on his fine performance with another takedown of his own.
Winner’s fact: Both of Cruickshank’s parents are black belts in Karate or Taekwondo

Fight 14: Jeremy Larsen beats Jeff Smith via unanimous decision
In the most controversial fight of the night, Larsen (9-2) suffered a cut to his head inside the first 30 seconds, and then had to escape a guillotine attempt. He then surprisingly went for a double-leg, prompting White to ask: “When you’ve just said you love to knock people out, why would you double-leg the Jiu-Jitsu guy?” In a real scramble of a fight, Smith locked on a kneebar that forced a tap not seen by the ref, and Larsen moved into side control, where he stayed on top long enough for the win.
Winner’s fact: Larsen’s only losses have come against Efrain Escudero and Edgar Garcia

Fight 15: Al Iaquinta beats Jon Tuck via unanimous decision
Tuck came out looking calm and happily went to ground, looking for an arm triangle before transitioning beautifully to Iaquinta’s (6-1-1) back. Both men then stood off each other, forcing Faber to state: “Come on guys, this is your time”. Tuck suffered a nasty broken toe midway through the round, the toe pointing in the completely wrong direction, and Iaquinta took advantage for the win.
Winner’s fact: Iaquinta was selected for season 12 of TUF but broke his hand days before taping

Fight 16: Myles Jury beats Akbarh Arrreola via unanimous decision
Jury – known well by Faber – shot early for the takedown and pounded away until the ref stood them up. From there Jury went straight for another takedown, delivering more G&P in a dominant display of wrestling. “Akbarh needs somes wrestling,” was White’s final quote.
Winner’s fact: Jury was part of Team Lesnar on TUF 13 but a torn ACL forced him off the show

More to TUF 15′s Urijah Faber Than Dominick Cruz Rivalry


By Luke Thomas – Senior Editor

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

Mar 9, 2012 – Urijah Faber is aware there’s a lot on the line as he prepares to coach against Dominick Cruz in the upcoming season of ‘The Ultimate Fighter’. As he inches closer to what is arguably his last real opportunity at a UFC title, Faber’s fighting career – and how it will be judged when he’s done competing – feels impossible to consider beyond his strained relationship to his top rival.

Faber, however, rejects the idea his rivalry with Cruz is the defining issue of his career. The questions surrounding his rivalry are necessary conditions of the show and his career right now, but they are not sufficient by themselves. Faber’s got more on his mind. Can the bantamweights carry the most important show in MMA and the subsequent pay-per-view where the coaches will fight? Will they be able to honor the live format with strong coaching? How can they navigate reality television without presenting a cheap facsimile of their true personality?

In this interview with MMA Fighting, Faber makes his case for why performance against Cruz does not define his career, what he views as coaching best practices, how he plans to adapt his camp to the reality show’s needs, why the Dakota Cochrane situation is ‘weird’, and why this reality show is all a part of his plan to live a life of fulfillment and fun.

Full audio and partial transcription below:

The MMA stock Exchange: A look at the Rising and Failing in the UFC Bantamweight Division


By Brad Walker MMATourch

Here is a brief summary of what I will be doing here; I’m going to look at the current champ from each division and label them “now.” Then I will look at who I feel has the best chance to dethrone that champ and label them “next.” Next I will select two each of the following: fighters with rising stock, fighters with stagnant (unchanging) stock, and fighters with dropping stocks. I will give explanations as to why I feel each one is placed where they are, and feel free to give me any feedback you believe would be a credible argument, after all analysis is partially opinion, now let’s roll our sleeves up and dig in.

BANTAMWEIGHTS

Now: Dominick Cruz. Cruz is currently the lightest weight champion in the UFC, and one hell of a dominant fighter inside of the cage. His wresting is impeccable, and his boxing isn’t too shabby either. Cruz holds wins over almost every fighter at the top end of the division, and has only lost once in his seven year career, which was to Urijah Faber. He has the ability to hold guys down and hammer on them for entire rounds, but he doesn’t have the most sparkling jiu-jitsu game to go along with his strength. Dominick has defended his UFC Championship twice, but prior to that he held the WEC Title, which he defended twice as well. He’s game for any fight, and will do whatever it takes to bring home the win. Cruz needs to work on his BJJ before he becomes a full-fledged dominant champion, because his lack of submission defense led to his only career loss. We are going to be seeing a lot more of him in the months to come coaching opposite Faber on The Ultimate Fighter.

Next: Urijah Faber. The California Kid – a man who has a huge fan following throughout the world, and the abilities to capture the title from Cruz. After all, he is the only fighter ever to defeat him, but then again, he did lose the rematch in a fight of the night effort from both men. Faber has a phenomenal jiu-jitsu game that he has shown off frequently, winning 14 career fights via submission, including one over Cruz. His stand up is pretty solid too, taking home seven ko/tko wins meaning he has finished 21 of his 26 career wins. Faber is probably one of the most solid fighters in the game right now; his only problem is he needs to remember that his strongest point is submissions, not knockouts.

I don’t know if I would place a bet of Faber to defeat Cruz in their rematch following the next season of TUF but I do know that I would place a solid bet that it’s going to earn a fight of the night nod, and if it doesn’t make it to the judges probably a submission or knock out of the night too. Urijah has become a phenomenon in the cage and fans just seem to gravitate towards him, but now he needs to rise to the occasion and capture his first UFC gold.

Rising Stock: Renan Barao. This guy is so dominant inside of the cage that he hasn’t lost since his very first MMA fight seven years ago – and since then has gone 28-0-1. That is one hell of a streak, and most fighters never even see their winning streaks go into double digits, much less 29 fights without a loss. Barao’s jiu-jitsu is insane, and he never misses a chance to show it off, whether it’s an arm-bar, rear naked choke, or a kimura he’s going to make you tap one way or the other. His striking is pretty solid for his size, but he uses it properly, and strikes to set up take downs and submission attempts. His fight against Scott Jorgensen at UFC 143 was extremely impressive and he took home a very decisive victory against a very game opponent. I expect to see Barao’s next fight be labeled a title eliminator fight with Dustin Poirier which could very well be a bitter war on the ground to see who can lock in the first submission.

Rising Stock: Michael McDonald. Perhaps the biggest statistic in McDonalds favor is his age; this guy is only 20 years old with a 14-1 record. He’s fought mostly top notch talent throughout his career and may just have the heaviest hands in the division. With a staggering eight career wins by knockout it makes me wonder why people want to stand and trade with him He’s still very young and has more than enough time to build momentum and sharpen his skills inside the cage. He’s already held bantamweight gold once in his career (in Tachi Palace Fights) and its hard to imagine that he won’t get his hands on the UFC strap in the future. In a division stacked with submission experts McDonald brings weapons to the table that will have them scrambling for guard in a heartbeat. His next test will be his biggest to date going toe to toe with Miguel Torres, if he gets a win there hes going to be sitting pretty just within reach of the title picture.

Stagnant Stock: Miguel Torres. I don’t know which is scariest about Miguel Torres, whether it be his sheer size at 135 pounds, or his incredible jiu-jitsu game that is nearly unmatched. Since joining the ranks of the elite fighters in mixed martial arts, he has posted an impressive eight wins against three losses in the WEC and UFC. Torres’ overall record of 39 wins and four losses is extremely impressive and one of the best amongst active fighters right now, and with 23 of those wins coming via submission this is not a dude you want to be stuck on the ground with. I had the fortunate luck to bump into Miguel twice over the UFC on Fox 2 weekend in Chicago, and he looks absolutely massive for a bantamweight. He sports an impressive 76 inch reach and the scariest mohawk in all of MMA.

The only thing holding Miguel back right now is the quality of the opponents he has beaten lately, and I would like to see him get a step up in competition and see him flash more of his BJJ skills inside of the cage. Once he can get a few fights against better opponents behind him I fully expect to see him make his way into the title picture.

Stagnant Stock: Mike Easton. Easton is just barely getting his feet wet inside the UFC right now with only two fights behind him so far, but he has won both of them, most recently a fantastic war with Jared Papazian in which he edged out a majority decision. This guy is so overwhelmingly impressive, his physique is downright scary and his striking is extremely crisp. To date his most notable win was in 2008 over the most recent TUF winner John Dodson, and that’s not the most impressive name to have on your resume. I would love to see Easton get tested against a Brian Bowles or Miguel Torres to see how stable his game will stay as the level of his opponents increases. I’m not saying we should throw this guy in the shark tank, but we can start him out with a few stingrays and go from there. I expect to see him take a loss or two, but come back stronger and ready for a new challenge.

Easton has nowhere to go but up from where he is now, but he needs to be fighting guys who are not making their first appearance inside of the Octagon.

Falling Stock: Eddie Wineland. Now don’t get me wrong, I am certainly not saying Eddie is a bad fighter because that is very far from the truth, all I’m saying is that he hasn’t looked like himself lately. Eddie made his UFC debut on a four fight win streak coming out of WEC, and has since lost two consecutive decisions to Faber and Benavidez. If you look at the statistics Wineland has never been the most consistent fighter as he always seems to pick up a couple wins then take a decisive loss. The fact is Eddie needs to get back to basics, his striking has always been his strongest point and he needs to work on his wrestling and jiu-jitsu skills to maximize the amount of time he can spend on his feet utilizing his power. I have no idea who I would recommend he fights next because the division is so deep, but whoever they put him in the ring with, I hope he comes prepared, or else we may see him get the chop from Dana White.

Falling Stock: Damacio Page. Page started out his career impressively, racking up a clean 5-0 record before taking three consecutive losses. Since then he has seemed to stay on the same path of being wildly inconsistent in his fights, and he seems to be the easiest guy to submit in the division. Of his six career losses, five have come via submission, and considering he fights out of Jackson’s Gym in Albuquerque I seriously wonder how this can continue to happen. His next fight will be against Brad Pickett in April, but Pickett has nine wins via submission, so I have to ask myself if Page is going to stand a chance. We all know that UFC tends to hold fighters to the three strikes and you’re out rule, so if Page loses to Pickett, he’s probably out.

Don’t get me wrong, Page himself has had some very impressive fights and great knockouts in his career, but I have to question whether or not he is in the right camp for his type of fighting and what he needs to learn to become a better fighter. We haven’t seen him in the cage since last March because of injuries, but I truly hope we see a whole new fighter when he makes his return, otherwise we won’t be seeing much of him anymore in the future.

MMA Official Pound-for-Pound Rankings for January


Of course if i did it for football i have to do it for MMA here are the top 25

By Sal DeRose

25. Johny Hendricks

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Richard Wolowicz/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 12-1
Most Recent Fight: 1st Round KO victory vs. Jon Fitch
Next Fight: N/A
Johny Hendricks scored a big win over former top welterweight contender, Jon Fitch at UFC 141 last week. The knockout broke the welterweight division wide open and brought Hendricks into the top welterweights of the UFC.

24. Quinton “Rampage” Jackson

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Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 32-9
Most Recent Fight: 4th round submission loss versus Jon Jones
Next Fight: vs. Ryan Bader (UFC 144)
Rampage Jackson has been a top light heavyweight for a long time now and his most recent loss to Jon Jones was for a shot at the belt. Unfortunately for Rampage, things didn’t go as planned but now he has a shot to get back into the title picture with an upcoming fight against Ryan Bader in Japan at UFC 144.

23. Kenny Florian

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Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 14-6
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision loss versus Jose Aldo
Next Fight: N/A
Ben Stiller look-a-like, Kenny Florian comes in at No. 23 after a title fight loss to Jose Aldo. Florian has fought all over in every conceivable weight class during his career. Now, Florian will return to lightweight after a two fight stint in the featherweight division.

22. Lyoto Machida

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Richard Wolowicz/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 17-3
Most Recent Fight: 2nd Round submission loss versus Jon Jones
Next Fight: N/A
Lyoto Machida comes in at No. 23 this time around after suffering a loss against Jon Jones at UFC 140 earlier in December. Machida’s only three losses in his career have come against former UFC champions Rampage Jackson, Jon Jones and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua.

21. Ian McCall

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 11-2
Most Recent Fight: 3rd round submission victory versus Darrell Montague
Next Fight: vs. Demetrious Johnson (UFC on FX 2)
Ian McCall is the first flyweight to make their way into these rankings and is set to make his UFC debut in Australia in March. McCall is part of the tournament that will determine the first UFC flyweight champion against names like Joseph Benavidez and Demetrious Johnson. McCall hasn’t lost since he fought Dominick Cruz three years ago at bantamweight.

20. Chad Mendes

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 11-0
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Rani Yahya
Next Fight: vs. Jose Aldo (UFC 142)
Chad Mendes will finally get his title shot against Jose Aldo this month when he travels south to Brazil. Mendes has rose to the top with great wrestling and his improving striking that has earned him the moniker “Urijah Faber 2.0″ after his teammate.

19. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 20-6
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision loss versus Dan Henderson
Next Fight: N/A
Shogun Rua beat Forrest Griffin at UFC 134 to avenge an earlier loss. He then came in and faced Dan Henderson at UFC 139 and lost what is considered one of the greatest UFC fights ever. Shogun has yet to make moves for his next fight, but after his last fight fans might be waiting to see how great his next fight will be.

18. Alistair Overeem

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 36-11 (1 NC)
Most Recent Fight: 1st round TKO victory versus Brock Lesnar
Next Fight: vs. Junior dos Santos (TBA)
Alistair Overeem finally makes his way into the rankings after a big win over former UFC heavyweight champion, Brock Lesnar. It was Overeem’s first UFC bout and he did what he needed to do to knockout and send Lesnar into retirement.  Overeem will now cash in with a title shot against Junior dos Santos sometime this year.

17. Gilbert Melendez

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Promotion: Strikeforce
Record: 20-2
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Jorge Masvidal
Next Fight: N/A
Melendez showed how complete a fighter he is with his win over Masvidal in December. The Strikeforce lightweight champion will be staying with the promotion instead of making the jump over to the UFC. With the depleted and un-amazing talent in Strikeforce, how long can Melendez stay on this ranking?

16. Cain Velasquez

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Victor Decolongon/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 9-1
Most Recent Fight: 1st round KO loss versus Junior dos Santos
Next Fight: N/A
In November, Cain Velasquez suffered the first loss of his career in his first defense of his heavyweight title. Velasquez is still considered a top three heavyweight even after the loss because of his wrestling and striking ability. No word yet on who Cain will face in his first fight post-title.

15. Joseph Benavidez,

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 15-2
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Eddie Wineland
Next Fight: vs. Yasuhiro Urushitani (UFC on FX 2)
Joseph Benavidez is the highest ranked flyweight here and is considered the favorite to be the first UFC flyweight champion. Benavidez has only two losses in his career and both were decision losses to Dominick Cruz. After his tremendous success at bantamweight, flyweight could be where we really see just how good he is.

14. Gray Maynard

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 10-1-1 (1 NC)
Most Recent Fight: 4th round TKO loss versus Frankie Edgar
Next Fight: N/A
Unfortunately for Maynard his trilogy with Frankie Edgar ended with a knockout loss at UFC 136. Maynard couldn’t capitalize on his back-to-back title shots and now finds himself in lightweight limbo now that a fourth fight with Edgar seems out of the question.

13. Benson Henderson

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 15-2
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Clay Guida
Next Fight: vs. Frankie Edgar (UFC 144)
Despite not having a finish in the UFC yet, Benson Henderson has been utterly entertaining inside the cage. His last three victories over Mark Bocek, Jim Miller and most recently Clay Guida, have brought Henderson his first UFC title shot.

12. Urijah Faber

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 26-5
Most Recent Fight: 2nd round submission victory versus Brian Bowles
Next Fight: vs. Dominick Cruz (TBA)
Urijah Faber will get his second shot at Dominick Cruz’s bantamweight belt after he beat Brian Bowles by submission at UFC 139. Faber and Cruz will headline The Ultimate Fighter 15 in the show’s debut on FX.

11. Nick Diaz

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 26-7 (1 NC)
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus B.J. Penn
Next Fight: vs. Carlos Condit (UFC 143)
Super Bowl weekend, Nick Diaz will finally get his shot at a UFC belt when he fights Carlos Condit for the interim UFC welterweight championship. Diaz is coming off a hugely impressive win over B.J. Penn where he battered around the former two-time division champ.

10. Dan Henderson

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 29-8
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Mauricio “Shogun” Rua
Next Fight: N/A
Dan Henderson has been one of the top fighters in MMA for a longtime. The former Pride and Strikeforce champ has won his last four fights and is well on his way to earning a title shot in his current stint with the UFC. His last two wins have come against two Pride legends, Shogun and Fedor Emelianenko.

9. Rashad Evans

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Promotion: UFC
Record: 16-1-1
Most Recent Fight: 2nd round submission victory versus Tito Ortiz
Next Fight: vs. Phil Davis (UFC on FOX 2)
Rashad Evans has been waiting and waiting for his shot at former teammate, Jon Jones. Unfortunately for Evans, injuries have derailed their title fight and Evans has opted to stay active and will face Phil Davis in the beginning of 2012. With a win over Davis, Evans could finally cement himself as the No. 1 contender.

8. Chael Sonnen

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 27-11-1
Most Recent Fight: 2nd round submission victory versus Brian Stann
Next Fight: vs. Mark Munoz (UFC on FOX 2)
Chael Sonnen has trashtalked his way back into title contention and backed it up with a huge win over Brian Stann. Sonnen has had only one fight since his loss to Silva in 2010, but regardless he will get a fight with Mark Munoz to determine the No. 1 contender for the middleweight crown.

7. Junior Dos Santos

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Jason Merritt/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 14-1
Most Recent Fight: 1st round TKO win versus Cain Velasquez
Next Fight: vs. Alistair Overeem (TBA)
JDS won his belt back in November and now already has first title defense lined up. When he returns from injury, JDS will face former Strikeforce, Dream and K-1 kickboxing champion, Alistair Overeem. JDS has slugged his way to the top with his impressive boxing skills. Now he will get a true test against another top striker.

6. Jose Aldo

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 20-1
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Kenny Florian
Next Fight: vs. Chad Mendes (UFC 142)
Jose Aldo use to be a very impressive featherweight. Then his time came in the UFC and he has earned two decision victories. Fans are starting to think he is playing it safe and maybe against Chad Mendes this month he will prove otherwise in front of his home country, Brazil.

5. Dominick Cruz

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 19-1
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Demetrious Johnson
Next Fight: vs. Urijah Faber (TBA)
Dominick Cruz is recovering from yet another hand injury and in the mean time will coach opposite future opponent, Urijah Faber, for The Ultimate Fighter‘s first season on FX. Cruz hasn’t lost at bantamweight and, in fact, hasn’t lost since his first fight in the WEC against Faber.

4. Frankie Edgar

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Michael Cohen/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 14-1-1
Most Recent Fight: 4th round TKO victory versus Gray Maynard
Next Fight: vs. Benson Henderson (UFC 144)
Frankie Edgar beat Gray Maynard in the epic ending to their trilogy. After being hurt early on—again—Edgar came back and rallied to finish Maynard. Edgar is now set to face Benson Henderson in Japan at UFC 144 in what will be an awesome main event for Japan. Since then Cruz has been on a tear and has beaten fighters with his untouchable boxing and great wrestling skills.

3. Jon Jones

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 15-1
Most Recent Fight: 2nd round submission victory versus Lyoto Machida
Next Fight: N/A
Jon Jones had perhaps the best year of any fighter in MMA history. Wins over Mauricio Rua, Quinton Jackson, Ryan Bader and Lyoto Machida graced his 2011 resume. Now with two title defenses under his belt, Jones awaits his next challenger.

2. Georges St-Pierre

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Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 22-2
Most Recent Fight: Unanimous decision victory versus Jake Shields
Next Fight: N/A
Even without having fought in almost a year, Georges St-Pierre comes in at No. 2. GSP was expected to face Nick Diaz at UFC 143 in February, but due to a knee injury he had to pull out. GSP won’t be ready to fight until at least the near end of 2012, but in the mean time the interim belt will be defended by either Diaz or Carlos Condit.

1. Anderson Silva

LAS VEGAS, NV - NOVEMBER 30:  Mixed martial artist Anderson Silva arrives at the Fighters Only World Mixed Martial Arts Awards 2011 at the Palms Casino Resort November 30, 2011 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Promotion: UFC
Record: 31-4
Most Recent Fight: 2nd Round TKO victory vs. Yushin Okami
Next Fight: N/A
Do I really need to make a case for him? Silva has been one of the top fighters since coming into the UFC and his numerous title defenses and wins in a different weight class put him here at numero uno.

UFC 139: “Shogun vs. Hendo” Fighter Salaries Revealed


By MATT MOLGAARD
MMANEWS.COM Staff Writer

Sometimes it pays to get your ass handed to you: just ask Cung Le, who banked an event high $350,000 for the two round trouncing he received at the hands of the legendary Wanderlei Silva. Le looked good early, keeping Silva at bay with his wide arsenal of kicks, but the second frame showcased a major swing in momentum, as vintage Wanderlei came out swinging, and landing – brutally. Le was finished off courtesy of some nasty punches and knees with just 11 seconds remaining in the second round.

Dan Henderson, who played his role in one of the most exciting fights in MMA history also took home a hefty paycheck: the former Pride and Strikeforce champion earned $250,000 for his five round decision win over Mauricio “Shogun” Rua.

Check out the full salaries from UFC 139:

Dan Henderson: $250,000 (no win bonus)
def. Mauricio Rua: $165,000

Wanderlei Silva: $200,000 (no win bonus)
def. Cung Le: $350,000

Urijah Faber: $64,000 (includes $32,000 win bonus)
def. Brian Bowles: $19,000

Martin Kampmann: $58,000 (includes $29,000 win bonus)
def. Rick Story: $19,000

Stephan Bonnar: $68,000 (includes $34,000 win bonus)
def. Kyle Kingsbury: $10,000

Ryan Bader: $48,000 (includes $24,00 win bonus)
def. Jason Brilz: $13,000

Michael McDonald: $14,000 (includes $7,000 win bonus)
Alex Soto: $6,000

Chris Weidman: $24,000 (includes $12,000 win bonus)
def. Tom Lawlor: $12,000

Gleison Tibau: $34,000 (includes $17,000 win bonus)
def. Rafael Dos Anjos: $16,000

Miguel Torres: $60,000 (includes $30,000 win bonus)
def. Nick Pace: $4,000

Seth Baczynski: $16,000 (includes $8,000 win bonus)
def. Matt Brown: $12,000

Danny Castillo: $34,000 (includes $17,000 win bonus)
def. Shamar Bailey: $8,000

UFC 139: Henderson Outlasts Rua in Bloody Slugfest


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Dan Henderson celebrated his return to the UFC with a unanimous decision over Mauricio Rua on Saturday night in a slugfest that left both fighters bloodied and battered and had many at ringside buzzing long after the fight ended.

Henderson took such a beating in the final two rounds of the light heavyweight bout with Rua that he wasn’t able to make the post-fight press conference.

And he was the winner.

I had to finish strong.

- Mauricio Rua, UFC Fighter

“That’s without a doubt one of the top three best fights ever in MMA,” UFC President Dana White said. “I have so much respect for both of those guys to dig down that deep in a five-round fight. That was like our Ali-Frazier III. It was incredible.”

The 41-year-old Henderson (29-8) controlled the first three rounds of the fight, then held on over the final 10 minutes when Rua (20-6) made a furious comeback.

Both fighters’ eyes were severely swollen afterward, while Rua’s white-and-green shorts were nearly entirely covered in crimson from the blood that flowed from each man.

“That guy can take a punch,” Henderson said, speaking from the middle of the ring before being taken to a local hospital for treatment. “I hit him hard and I thought I could finish him the first two or three rounds but he finished strong.”

All three judges had Henderson winning 48-47 in the main event of UFC 139.

That puts him in line for a possible title shot against light heavyweight champion Jon Jones. White said Henderson could also drop down to the middleweight division for a crack at title-holder Anderson Silva.

“The guy’s so talented, he can do both,” White said. “I’m sure it will be a matter of timing, whichever one he can get first. There are guys lined up to fight for those titles but anything can happen. We’ll see.”

Henderson had not fought in the UFC since 2009 when he had a falling out with management. He joined Strikeforce and won that company’s welterweight and middleweight championships before returning to the UFC.

Now Henderson is back in line for a title shot he felt he deserved before he left two years ago.

Wanderlei Silva is also back in contention in the middleweight division after getting got off the mat in the first round to knock out former Strikeforce champion Cung Le at 4:49 of the second in the co-main event.

Silva (34-11-1) stunned Le with a hard left and followed it up with a right jab to the chin and a stiff right foot to the side of Le’s head. Silva then moved in and hit Le with four knee shots to the head that dropped the San Jose native.

Once Le (7-2) went down, Silva quickly pounced and landed several hard right hands before referee Dan Snell stepped in to stop it.

While a battered and bloodied Le was helped to his stool, Silva pranced around the ring and jumped on the cage as the crowd at HP Pavilion roared.

“He had tough kicks, strong kicks,” Silva said about Le. “My coach told me we were going to attack more in the second round, and that was the plan.”

Henderson came out the aggressor in his bout, pushing Rua against the cage and going for a standing chokehold submission early in the first round. Rua escaped but Henderson came back with several right hands to the head that opened a cut over Rua’s left eye.

Rua, who lost the light heavyweight title to Jon Jones in March, later had Anderson on the ground and landed several left hands before Henderson fought back with a left-right combination to Rua’s head.

The pace slowed dramatically in the second round, though Henderson continued to score. He also bloodied Rua’s nose with a hard left uppercut that landed squarely in the middle of Rua’s face. Blood streamed down Rua’s face the rest of the fight.

“I should have had him finished there,” Henderson said. “His tank was running low there.”

Still, the former UFC champ didn’t go quietly.

After getting knocked to the floor following a hard right hand by Henderson, Rua was able to grab Henderson’s left foot and went nearly had a submission hold locked in before Henderson escaped. Rua later had Henderson against the cage and scored with several punches.

Henderson missed on a rear chokehold early in the fourth and Rua nearly made him pay for it. He wobbled Henderson with a hard right hand then landed several left hands and right elbows after Henderson was down.

Rua continued to control the pace in the fifth while Henderson simply tried to hang on. Rua got on top of Henderson while both were on the mat and landed numerous shots to the head, but neither fighter could sustain much of an attack at the end.

“I had to finish strong,” Rua told the crowd, before also being taken to the hospital.

The bout easily stood up as the fight of the night — sharing honors with the Silva-Le fight. The Henderson-Rua bout likely will also be the fight of the year as well.

Silva’s win puts him back in line for a possible title shot after many thought his career to be over only four months ago following a 27-second knockout loss to Chris Leben. It was Silva’s sixth loss in eight fights and had White suggesting the former Pride champion should retire

Now Silva’s a part of the title picture once again.

The 39-year-old Le set the tone early in his UFC debut, landing a spinning backfist early in the first round that put Silva down. The Brazilian got to his feet then landed a hard kick to the left side of Le’s head. Silva couldn’t follow up but opened a cut over Le’s right eye.

The two fighters exchanged punches in the second round before Silva took over.

Crowd favorite Urijah Faber, who grew up two hours north of San Jose in Sacramento, made short work of Brian Bowles, using a guillotine choke to make Bowles to tap out at 1:27 of the second round.

“I felt like I could go anywhere in this fight,” said Faber, now the No. 1 contender for a shot at bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz. “Get ready Dominick. You can run but you can’t hide.”

Faber (26-5) landed a hard right uppercut that stunned Bowles early in the second round then followed it up with a left knee. As Bowles fell against the cage, Faber closed in and landed a series of right hands and forearms then finished the fight off by getting Bowles (10-2) to submit.

In a three-round welterweight bout, Martin Kampmann of Denmark won a split decision over Rick Story. Both fighters were bleeding from cuts over their eyes in the first round. Kampmann (18-5) also had a small cut on his forehead following a series of left jabs from Story (13-5) but came back to win the final two rounds for his first victory in more than 17 months.

In the night’s first bout, Stephan Bonnar (17-7) scored a unanimous decision over Kyle Kingsbury (11-3) in the light heavyweight division.

Based on reporting by the Associated Press.

Las preliminares del UFC 139


Por Emiliano Candido

El 19 de noviembre el UFC 139 encabezado por Mauricio “Shogun” Rua y Dan Henderson tendrá una cartelera preliminar que sacará chispas. En la categoría gallo, Urijah Faber y Brian Bowles pelearán por  la posibilidad de enfrentar a Dominick Cruz. En los semicompletos regresarán Stephan Bonnar y Ryan Bader y, en los welter, se verán cara a cara dentro del octágono el danés Martin Kampmann y Rick Story.

Las peleas preliminares podrán verse por la página de Facebook de UFC Latino.

La pelea central de la velada se lleva todas las miradas acompañada de la co estelar que verá enfrentarse a Wanderlei Silva y Cung Le. Pero no sólo ellos formarán parte de un atractivo evento que se realizará en San José, California.

En el límite de las 135 libras, Urijah Faber y Brian Bowles buscarán ganar la posibilidad de medirse  con el campeón de peso gallo Dominick Cruz. Pero antes tendrán que ganar esta eliminatoria titular en un combate que promete ser de los mejores de la noche.

Ambos poseedores de un nivel de lucha excelente podrán anularse en esa faceta, pero a la hora de intercambiar golpes tampoco se hacen a un lado. Tanto Faber como Bowles buscan finalizar a su oponente con cada golpe y el primero que se descuide puede pasar un mal momento.

En la división welter retornan a la acción Martin Kampmann y Rick Story. El danés viene de perder de manera muy controvertida sus últimas dos peleas frente a Jake Shields, en el UFC 121, y contra Diego Sánchez en el UFC Live 3. Es decir que si esas decisiones a favor de sus rivales hubiesen caído de su lado estaríamos hablando de un contendiente al título.

Por su parte Story poco pudo hacer ante Charlie Brenneman en el UFC Live 4 y así concluyó una racha de 6 victorias consecutivas que lo habrían acercado al cinturón. Cuando se cierren las puertas del octágono, ellos decidirán quién debe volver a la senda del triunfo.

En la categoría de los semicompletos regresan dos peleadores que siempre dejan todo para salir con su brazo en alto. Stephan Bonnar lo hará contra el complicado Kyle Kingsbury que viene con una interesante seguidilla de buenas actuaciones, mientras que Ryan Bader intentará recuperarse de las primeras dos derrotas de su carrera cuando se enfrente con el también luchador Jason Brilz.

Bonnar, uno de los peleadores más carismáticos de la historia viene de vencer a Krzysztof Soszynski e Igor Pokrajac, mientras que Kingsbury acumula 4 peleas sin conocer la derrota. Este combate promete y mucho ya que ambos competidores son muy ofensivos.

Mientras tanto Bader intentará finalizar un 2011 para el olvido y salir con su brazo en alto contra Brilz, quién también perdió en su última presentación. El nivel de lucha de ambos es similar, la ventaja en poder de nocaut la tiene el ganador de The Ultimate Fighter 8 y en cuanto a las sumisiones la diferencia va para su rival.

Entre otros también regresarán a la acción el ex campeón de peso gallo de WEC considerado uno de los mejores libra por libra hace unos años, Miguel Torres, que se enfrentará con Nick Pace y también hará su tercer combate en UFC uno de los proyectos más valorados en la categoría de las 185 libras: Chris Weidman que tendrá un duro escollo en Tom Lawlor.