Tag Archives: Dana White

UFC 164 results and gifs: Pettis taps Henderson

Another UFC in the books, and we have a new lightweight champion.

Anthony Pettis def. Benson Henderson via verbal submission (armbar) – Round 1, 4:31 – wins UFC lightweight championship

I’d thought the most likely outcome for this fight would have involved Bruce Buffer keeping everyone on the edge of their seats as he read the judges close scorecards. Ben Henerson i snot generally the kind of man that get’s finished even if his opponent is Anthony Pettis and we saw evidence of that in their fist fight.

The round started with some control against the cage from the champion that Pettis was able to survive without taking too much punishment. No-one stamped their authority on the fight until the challenger rattled off four consecutive right kicks to the body. THese weren’t even on Henderson’s live side, but he was visibly affected by their thunderous impact. From there, it looked like Pettis made the first error of the fight bey truing a flashy cartwheel kick and ending straight on his back in guard.

However, he used this to his advantage very quickly, controlling Bendo’s position and switching his hips tight and quick to lock in an armbar. A few seconds later and a futile attempt by Henderson to escape and the verbal tap came.

In the post-fight interview the new champ was calling out José Aldo, but I think he’ll probably have to defend his new 155lb prize a couple of times before the Brazilian makes his way up to  challenge for the belt. I can;t see the UFC brass letting him drop to featherweight. I also see Pettis handling anyone the lightweight division has to offer. If I had to pick one man to give him problems it would be Gilbert Melendez, but considering how capably Showtime has handled his last four opponents I would say he will have a rough go at that.

Josh Barnett def. Frank Mir via TKO (strikes) – Round 1, 1:56

Josh Barnett got a win in his return to the UFC after nearly a decade with a TKO of the always TKO-able Frank Mir. He had a perfect gameplan, rushing Mir early and throwing a barrage odf strikes to the head and body. I honestly thought he was on the way to screwing everything up when knees started missing their mark, the face became the secondary target and Mir started firing back, but I need not have had any doubt as Barnett delivered a knee which crumpled the former champ to the mat and brought the stoppage.

I think the stoppage was a tad early, but not terrible. Mir should have been allowed the chance to recover (which he did seconds later), but if Barnett had been able to throw a couple more punches Mir would have had his lights out in short order. Where’s Dan Miragliotta when you need him.

Barnett has set himself up for some high-profile fights at heavyweight now, but I don;t think he’ll ever really be in for a title hunt with guys like Velasquez, Dos Santos and Cormier around. Mir has lost three straight but still has a place in the division. He’s a good fighter who’s lost to three top 10 fighters and he could still crush most heavyweights with ease. His title hunting days are over though.

Chad Mendes def. Clay Guida via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 0:30

Chad Mendes is a stone-cold killer, and really proved it by grabbing a fourth KO in a row against a notoriously impossible-to-KO fighter.

Clay Guida had nothing for Mendes in the grappling or striking departments, and when the Team Alpha Male prospect finally uncorked the kind of punches that had the potential to end the fight the fight was well and truly ended.

Mendes is ready for an Aldo rematch now. He might not win, but I don;t think he’ll get blown up like he did last time. He’s by far and away proved himself to be the number one contender and improved his skills enough that a rematch is still compelling. If he is given one more fight before he gets that chance you won;t find me complaining though. It will just be another chance for us to see hime flex his skills and blow up another 145 pounder.

Ben Rothwell def. Brandon Vera via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 1:54

This could finally be Brandon Vera’s ticket out of the UFC. He fought quite well at first, but he couldn’t stop Rothwell putting him up against the cage and when the big mid-westerner finally turned on the power Vera was helpless.

Big Ben might want to be careful what he asks for in his post-fight interviews though. A fight with Travis Browne is likely to nring one thing his way. A severe ass kicking.

Dustin Poirier def. Erik Koch via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-27, 29-27)

This was the fight of the night for sure (despite what the official list of UFC bonuses might say). A back and forth battle with high offensive output in all areas of mixed martial arts. It looked like Poirier was done for when he was caught in a tight triangle early in the first and even when he finally managed to escape he looked like he was close to passing out. However, he gritted his teeth and swung the momentum back in his favour.

After this excellent punch ‘The Diamond’ rained down blows on ‘New Breed’ until the end of the round before following up with a second round of dominance. The punishment he dealt out in the first was so great in fact, that two judges gave him a 10-8 score despite the trouble he’d been in earlier on.

To his credit, Koch came back and won the third round, but unless he was about to score a finishing blow or hail-Mary submission the fight was Poirier’s.

Whatever the outcome of this fight my sentiments would have been the same as they are now. I can;t wait to see these young exciting fighters matched up with other high-quality featherweights for years to come. Boredom will never be an issue with these men fighting.

Prelim results

The official fight of the night was Hyun Gyu Lim’s destruction of Pascal Krausss. This was a hugely entertaining few minutes of violence, and striking to see how ENORMOUS Lim is at 170lbs. With reckless gameplanning like that he won’t be troubling the division’s elite any time soon, but he will definitely give some top-25 fighters some trouble and provide some outrageous excitement whether he’s delivering the damage or eating it.

The Jacaré award for upkick eating goes to Kyung Ho Kang, who pretty much lost his fight with Chico Camus as a result of taking this beauty.

The early contender for submission of the night was this nice guillotine from Magnus Cedenblad in the night’s opening contest.

Finally, I can’t not mention the slop-fest that was Soa Palelei win over Nikita Krylov in his return to the Octagon. The big Aussie was not impressive in his first UFC fight all those years ago, and broken rib or not, he was not impressive here. The blame can;t lie squarely at his door though. I’d herad Sherdog.com’s Jordan Breen describe how bad Krylov was on Friday, and the young Ukrainian scertyainly lived up to his billing. He played right into Paleelei’s limited abilities and deserveddly got beaten. I guess these horrorshow fight sare a bit of fun every once in a while, but I hope most of this sort of thing is reserved for the likes of Bellator and World Series of Fighting in future. It was BRUTAL to watch.

Gleison Tibau def. Jamie Varner via split decision (29-28, 27-29, 29-28)
Tim Elliott def. Louis Gaudinot via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-26, 30-26)
Hyun Gyu Lim def. Pascal Krauss via TKO (strikes) – Round 1, 3:58
Chico Camus def. Kyung Ho Kang via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27)
Soa Palelei def. Nikita Krylov via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 1:34
Al Iaquinta def. Ryan Couture via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
Magnus Cedenblad def. Jared Hamman via submission (guillotine choke) – Round 1, 0:57

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Dana White UFC 164 post fight media scrum

Dana gets on the mic with the assembled media to chat all things UFC 164.

For those familiar with Dana White, you will also be familiar with his brutal honesty. Occasionally this might be grossly misinformed, just plain wrong or controversial to the point he gets into a bit of bother with the media.. However, his there are times when his insistence on calling a spade a spade is admirable, particularly in the case of his criticism of the Soa Palelei/Nikita Krylov fight. That fight really deserved to be slammed, and the UFC president duly obliged.

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Dana White media scrum overload

There’s just so much UFC content this week it’s hard to keep up.

Here’s Dana’s reaction to Wednesday’s fight night, along with some thoughts on Vitor Belfort, Dan Henderson, Bjorn Rebney and lots of other MMA issues.

Cut to yesterday, and here he is just a few hours later with a one-on-one chat with Ariel Helwani, as well as a group sit down the assembled media.

Overeem, Wanderlei, Frankie Edgar, FOX ratings, business in Milwaukee, Joan Jett and Harley Davidsons.. Everything is up for discussion

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UFC Fight Night: Shogun vs. Sonnen: Dana White pre-fight interviews

Following pre-fight ceremonial duties, Dana White talked to Ariel Helwani about all things UFC Fight Night 26/UFC on FOX Sports 1.

Up for discussion was licensing issues, politics, tonight’s fights, Nick Diaz, An impending return to Dublin, Ronda Rousey’s film career and the now-concluded saga of the Eddie Alvarez/Bellator contract disputes.

For everyone who has close to an hour (!), Dana also spent time with the media congregation after the pre-fight press conference and talked some more. A lot more.

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Dana White UFC on FOX 8 Post-Fight media scrum video

Dana White sounds off about UFC on FOX.

He reserves parrricular criticism for the Rory MacDonald/Jake Ellenberger, spraying a surprising amount of vitriol in the direction of ‘The Juggernaut’ in particular.

Other topics include fighter pay, Vitor Belfort’s delusions and fighters putting it all on the line.

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UFC 162 Silva vs Weidman results and recap: WTF

It’s probably best I didn;t write this post until now, because it took me so long to process what happened in Las Vegas on Saturday night. A fantastic fight card was capped with one of the most shocking and disappointing outcomes in combat sports history.

UFC middleweight championship – Chris Weidman def. Anderson Silva via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 1:18 

First of all, this wasn;t a fix, Anderson Silva didn’t want to lose and the UFC certainly didn’t want Anderson Silva to lose.

What happened was Anderson got a bit too cocky against a phenomenal fighter, and ended up eating a fistful of leather as a result. Just like that, years  of success ended.

I think Silva could have won this fight at almost any time he wanted. The problem was, for as much success as he had slipping most of Weidman;s punches, he was not countering with any of his own.

Once he got up from the takedown in the first round he never looked in too much danger, and I had expected him to explode on his opponent in much the same way as he did against Belfort, Sonnen, Franklin and the rest.

To Weidman’s credit, he kept cool, landed a devastating shot when he was given the opportunity and followed up the knockdown with a guided missile of a punch that put the lights out on the longest title reign in UFC history.

Anderson says he doesn’t want a rematch. I will be staggered if Dana White can’t persuade him to fight Weidman next Superbowl weekend. The PPV buy rate will be unbelievable, and a win for Silva could even enhance his legacy.

I’ll be waiting with bated breath.

Frankie Edgar def. Charles Oliveira via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 30-27)

This was one of the more competitive 30-27 decisions you’re likely to see, and one where the reputation of the loser may have even been enhanced even more than the winner.

Frankie Edgar confirmed what everyone knew. He’s a top class fighter, he can strike, he can wrestle, he can sure as hell scramble and his work rate is about as high as you can get. Actually, that’s selling him short. Edgar’s boxing was outstanding on Saturday. The footwork he displayed to move inside and land punches was first class.

He got tagged a few times, but he hit back with even more blows, and came so close to finishing Oliveira in the third with some heavy, heavy blows.

To his credit, the Brazilian still threatened with his grappling on a regular basis, absorbed those shots and even hit the former lightweight champ with a few of his own.

Edgar still couldn’t get the finish he wanted, but I’d wager 99 per cent of the featherweight division would not have done in that fight.

It was great, back and forth, relentless and fully deserving of fight of the night honours.

Tim Kennedy def. Roger Gracie via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

It all started so well for Roger Gracie. He got back mount in the first round, and looked to be in an excellent position to threaten with submissions. However, Tim Kennedy is apparently very underrated on the ground, and kept his cool.

From then, Gracie was out of gas and Kennedy had too much to offer wherever the fight went. He could keep his distance with kicks and a good jab on the feet, and he was more than capable of shrugging off takedown attempts or even gaining dominant positions on the ground if he wanted.

Kennedy is no world beater, but he’ll give any man at 185lbs a fight, and take care of most outside the top ten.

Mark Munoz def. Tim Boetsch via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-27, 29-28)

Mark Munoz looked great shrugging off all the doubts after his loss to Chris Weidman last year.

His striking looked dangerous, his grappling gave him complete control and his ground and pound looked absolutely deadly.

Boetsch didn’t have an answer, and will have to take his place back in the middle of the middleweight pack.

Munoz is a world away from title contention, but wins against the likes of Bisping, Rockhold or Belfort could start to launch him back to the top. If he continues like this he’ll deserve his top ranking this time too.

Cub Swanson def. Dennis Siver via TKO (punches) – Round 3, 2:24

Cub Swanson is creeping ever closer to that #1 spot at 145lbs.

He did not run over Dennis Siver by any means, who was competitive at first, but he stayed active with a high work rate until the last rounds, and decisively stopped the German with a barrage of punches.

He’s going to have to shrug off that loss to Ricardo Lamas and convince everyone that he can forget about that José Aldo double knee, but there coud be a title shot in his future.

Prelim results

Highlights included:

Gabriel Gonzaga flattening Dave Herman and removing him from the UFC roster.

Edson Barboza’s brutal leg kicks, that frankly became difficult to watch.

Lowlights included Chris Leben’s putrescent performance, and an even worse showing from the judge that gave him the fight. I love Leben. He’s provided great entertainment and some of my favourite KOs over the years, but he’s just not a UFC calibre fighter any more.

Andrew Craig def. Chris Leben via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)
Norman Parke def. Kazuki Tokudome via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)
Gabriel Gonzaga def. Dave Herman via TKO (punches) – Round 1, 0:17
Edson Barboza def. Rafaello Oliveira via KO (leg kicks) – Round 2, 1:44
Brian Melancon def. Seth Baczynski via knockout (punches) – Round 1, 4:59
Mike Pierce def. David Mitchell via TKO (punches) – Round 2, 2:55

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Dana White UFC 160 post-fight video scrum

Dana’s traditional post-fight musings on the nights fights, and the current goings on in the world of the UFC. Some Forrest Griffin love, enthusiasm for the Cain/JDS rematch and no hateful rants.

Excellent.

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Dana White UFC 160 Vlog Day 1

Episode one of Dana White’s UFC 160 video blog, featuring behind the scenes action  from UFc 159: Jones vs. Sonnen.

Strangely, one of the clips features Bryan Caraway congratulating Pat Healy after his submission of the night earning victory over Jim Miller. A bonus that Caraway was very quick to claim just days later when Healy’s victory was changed to a no contest when he tested positive for marijuana metabolites.

Other highlights include Chael Sonnen (no surprises there) and a couple of exchanges between Joe Silva and Dana White, including the moment they realise their light heavyweight champion’s toe is all mangled.

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Dana White UFC 159 Post-Fight Media Scrum

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