Saturday, March 2, 2019

UFC 235 - Should've Gone Home Before the "Title" Fights Edition: Jones Fixes Fight, Askren Almost Dies, Woodley Wilts, & Zabit Looks Human

Woodley said it best, "it was like a bad dream." From the moment he sat back on that half-assed guillotine in the first round, to him virtually doing nothing to scramble from bottom, it was a wrap. He looked distant, like he'd rather be rapping in a studio or driving a nice car, basically anything other than fighting the pressure forward style of Usman. Woodley had literally no spirit in the fight, and as someone who's fought before, I might be a critic, but I rarely desire nor wish to vocalize questioning a fighter's heart, especially at that level. But the lack of response to almost anything Usman did by Woodley was tough to watch. He threw few punches (which comes as no surprise). He backed up, put his back on the cage willingly, almost never circled off the cage, and paid for habits he's formed in his last 3 of 4 title fights against Thompson, and Maia. Made little effort to scramble from bottom once taken down. Made small effort to escape when mounted minus locking his hands from bottom and a few single bridges. For all the wrestling work he claimed to do with Askren, he countered no clinching from Usman with his own takedowns, couldn't stop Usman's takedowns....it was like Askren coming to join him left him less prepared to grapple than in any of his previous fights I've seen.
Perhaps it was Rocky 3 come to life: champ begins to enjoy what fighting allows him to do elsewhere and loses his taste for the preparation necessary to stop every hungry challenger coveting what you have. Usman came in as he said he would and Woodley looked to fade as soon as that first round guillotine attempt failed. Woodley took little damage but seemed to honestly wilt under the top game of Usman who wasn't exactly devastating from top nor did he land much face/head punishment in terms of strikes/punches/elbows. It was a hard performance to understand nor anticipate happening frankly. I feel bummed that my brain seems obsessed with determining why Woodley did so little rathern than what all Usman did, but that's where I'm at.

Munhoz gave me my wish and KO'd Garbrandt who now should take quite awhile off from fighting. 3 violent stoppage losses in a row is no good for anyone's brain, regardless of dumb @$$ traits like "grit" "heart" et cetera that people who don't fight don't understand are terrible for a fighter's long term health and career. Garbrandt came across as the same one-dimensional fighter who predictably goes into kill mode when hurt but now lost to an even less vaunted power puncher in Munhoz. Munhoz had to really land quite a few punches to put the hurt Garbrandt down. The ever increasing evidence of a fading chin that once gone will not and does not return.

Diego Sanchez trashed Mickey Gall who has squandered a gimme situation of a UFC career start by fighting CM Punk and beating Sage Northcutt but this fight looked incapable of dealing with even the most basic MMA situation like cross body/side mount with your feet walked up the cage but unable to even escape from there. He did virtually nothing while Sanchez circled to his back, cleared the whizzer and mat returned him. Sanchez is by no means a real 170 lber, and it's time for Gall to switch camps, pick up wins on the regional circuit and decide if this is really what he wants to do for a living after that "performance." IF he wasn't smart enough to take Sanchez serious as a veteran he should go to the smaller shows and hone his craft. If he's really that incapable in those basic mma situations with obvious go to responses and escapes then he should also go to the smaller shows and hone his craft.

Zhang fought to another lackluster decision. Torres is a much much much more competent opponent than the opponent faced in her debut, but still barely pulled out a win relying on that trash Women's MMA head-arm takedown that almost twice got her back taken and cost her top position. Zhang looked hittable on the feet and barely able to advance position on the ground despite Torres doing little more than figure-four'ing the leg in lockdown and keeping an underhook. Zhang's inability to deal with this low grade resistance is not inspiring much confidence in her alleged BJJ brown belt they touted in the commentary.

Askren....well....what to say? For all his talk about Kron's debut being unimpressive, Askren got head to toe ceiling end over end slammed by Lawler and very nearly finished. The unfortunate stoppage by Dean was that...unfortunate. It's interesting how they'll let you take insane punishment from all manner of attacks to the skull but will stop a choke a few seconds in....out of fear? Protection? It doesn't seem consistent to be honest. They'll let you get slammed literally vertical spike tombstone piledriver style then repeatedly hit in the skull and face but oh no! You're maybe being choked, better stop is early to be safe....I don't get it.

Walker landed his first strike attempt of the night and lights out'd Cirkunov who now has lost to the 3 dangerous strikers he's faced (Oezdemir and Teixeira, and LHW is a dangerous division even with the "non" dangerous strikers, am I right? They all hit hard at that weight class).

Stamann picked up a super boring win after being unwilling to shoot or chain wrestle for much of the fight.

Zabit could've had a coming out party over upper tier opposition but chose to Babe Ruth the win in the closing seconds by raising his hand/finger, and looked decidedly human in this fight. I don't think he ever really wobbled Stephens, seemed winded at the start of the third round despite it not being an overly taxing fight, but he's kept a busy schedule so perhaps repeated weight cuts in short turn arounds are to blame? I wanted a better showing as a real leap frog up the food chain for him, but this fight also made him look more human so perhaps he won't have as much trouble getting another top 10 opponent booked.

Shabazyan made use of the Travis Browne downward elbows that seem borderline illegal as they're supposed to be defined but clubbed in the area near the ear/temple of his opponent for a stoppage off the first shot as he turned his opponent's takedown attempt into a single leg.

Chiasson put a nice 3 piece combo with some accurate punching to put down Mazany who was bereft after the stoppage in the cage. For having only 3 pro fights, looked good at her new home at bantamweight. She should ignore the dumb@$$ women at 145 telling her to stay at 145 because they need contenders. That's not her problem. Now that she's coming into her pro career, she's probably found her professional weight class. It's not her problem 145 basically has almost no actual real 145 lb fighters and instead has been puffed up 135'ers and the like imported into the UFC as cannon fodder for Cyborg...and surprise, Cyborg lost as soon as she faced a woman remotely her size and level of tenacity.

At any rate, what an odd event overall. From the inexplicable performance to Woodley whereby it was hard to tell if Usman is that dominating or if Woodley just didn't do anything to stop him, to the most obviously fixed outcome fight I've seen in a very long time in what was Jones vs Smith where Smith spent portion of the fight (EXTENDED PORTIONS) in complete control of an opponent refusing to do almost anything, but Jones REFUSED to land any strikes to his head of even lock up a submission.

It looked fake. It seemed fake. It looked almost nothing like any Jones fight I've ever seen.

Anyway, somehow this double title fight night felt anything but, but that's the fight game: mercurial, unpredictable, often ugly, sometimes majestic, and at times wildly unpredictable for just those reasons.

Who's next for Usman? No one wants to see Woodley get an immediate rematch and after all the rigamarole with Woodley over various perceived slights, I don't think he will, nor is it compelling by any way shape or form. Not to mention despite Woodley mentioning how dominant he was at champ (was he? he had a draw, barely beat Thompson, had an atrocious fight against Mai, and stopped Till who no one gave much shot at due to a complete lack of a ground game and barely being able to make weight in his own weight class).

Jones - who does he fight? There's really no one. Other than Santos. The good thing is...Santos will absolutely not fight whatever the &*^% that was that Smith did. Santos will literally hit every video game combo button mashing nonsensical move that comes to him on the fly and perhaps after so many static, xyz paced fights Jones has been used to fighting on his terms, that is the most dangerous style for Jones to face now - a fighter who will simply not allow him to fight at the pace and timing and range that he wishes to.

Garbrandt should take quite awhile off from fighting. He's had 3 violent stoppage losses in a row.
Walker now needs a top 10 opponent to see where he fits with the other mainstays of the division. Zhang continues to uninspire but do to the lack of depth of the divisions will get a title shot by year's end if she continues to win.

Askren - I guess you give him Darren Till? He won't fight Woodley. He beat Lawler. I hope they give him Maia, because for us hardcore fans it's a dream wrestling vs JiuJitsu match-up, and after the near death experience Lawler gave him, Askren would prefer a punch averse opponent I'm sure. I'd really like to see Askren fight Rory MacDonald to be honest, but that's a no go. Askren's bend at the waist lock hands for double leg nearly cost him the fight, as Lawler stunned him with that knee to the point that he Daniel Cormier style tossed Askren like no one ever has before. Askren vs Usman down the road is an interesting fight. Perhaps you give him Covington. It's interesting because this is a grappling centric time for the welterweight division and Askren arrives having to face either very dangerous one-dimensional strikers like Lawler or Till or pressure forward grinding grapplers like Usman and Covington. I pray to God they don't pair him with Thompson because that would literally be the most boring fight of all time in any era of MMA. Fun fact, I won my first MMA fight by bulldog choke, so I have something in common with the Troll King Askren. 

UFC 235: Jones vs Smith the most obvious fix I’ve seen in ages

I guess Smith didn’t get the memo that Jones was gonna carry him to a 5th round decision. Because Jones literally spent the 5th round doing every non fight finishing move in MMA. Remember when John Jones had Anthony Smith literally sitting on his butt in front of him and did nothing to even finish the fight, he wasn’t even punching him? What a fake @$$ Fight.

Normally they do a better job of selling fixed fights because this was pathetic. Jones threw virtually no head kicks, barely punched Smith in the face, and even on the mat when Smith did LITERALLY NOTHING TO DEFEND FROM BOTTOM Jones basically refused to punch or elbow him in the face.

What else could it be other than a *%$#ing fix? It's insulting to think that it could be so poorly done but I guess not, because people will still refuse to believe it was fixed even though so much of the fight was inexplicable.

Jones literally refused to do anything that was potentially fight ending other than one last semi convincing jumping knee in the last second, meanwhile had Smith on the ground, sitting on his butt, or against the cage, prone, virtually helpless and refused to hit him from top position.
#lookinto it
#thinkaboutit



The Frightfully Increasing Speed of Knowledge in Grappling

So, I've been consuming a ton of competition footage and other grappling related content in this phase where I'm very limited in what I can drill due to my leg locked in a brace, and I was watching all of the IJF (International Judo Federation) matches of my favorite competitor (to gameplan takedowns for Gi competition upon my return) and I had watching something like 50 matches thus far (and more to go) dating back the past 2 years, and it hit me...I'm able to sit in the comfort of my own home and watching basically the International level career of my favorite competitor accumulated over a couple years.

When I started JiuJitsu, I had to lie to my mom to trick her into renting the UFC VHS tapes for me from Blockbuster. There was no YouTube of JiuJitsu content (both good and bad, which is another topic). The other weekend I coached at the Finishers Sub Only Open Tournament, then watched the Pro -145 the next day, and this weekend I'll watch the Midwest Finishers -155 and Sub Spectrum -135, then watch the UFC tonight. For all the criticism and complaining of steroids, and trash talk, and whatever else is stuck in the craw of the day, let's not forget we have such a dearth of opportunities to consume combat sports knowledge and enjoy spectating whether we can get to the event or not. I pay $10 or something a month to have access to all the EBI's on UFC Fight Pass. I also have access to a ton of old ADCC matches as a result. That alone is a treasure trove of grappling information. ESPN+ is something like $4.99 a month depending how you buy it. There was a time when it was revolutionary that BudoVideos sold the Worlds that would stream from their website.

Have appreciation. 

UPDATED LINK -- Don't Forget: Midwest Finishers Sub Only -155 & Sub Spectrum -135 Both Today

Click HERE for the YouTube Page for Finishers Sub Only, beginning at 4pm EST, and CLICK HERE for the YouTube Page for Sub Spectrum which begins at at 7pm EST.

Solid day for pro level non IBJJF grappling events in one weekend. Let the movement continue to grow. 

Friday, March 1, 2019

UFC 235 Picks: Picogram Jones vs Lionheart, Nigerian Hug-mare vs Tyron, Ben Ambien vs Robbie Mauler



The only guy to be stripped of a belt 3 times versus a dangerous striker with questionable takedown defense and Usman vs  more dynamic and less volume verison of Usman with dynamite punching.

Overall, it's been awhile since I was interesting in the stylistic match-ups of the 2 title fights. Woodley is no fan favorite of mine after atrocious performances 2x against Thompson and Maia, but I don't think Usman will allow Woodley to fight those type of fights so I'm hopeful. We also get the UFC debut of Askren, talk about the "sands of time" changing the landscape of MMA. Askren was unofficially swapped for Mighty Mouse who was recently dethroned and here's the card we have.

Jones vs Smith: it's hard to pick Smith here because he's facing the most dominant champ in LHW history, and also a more frustrating style of striker than himself. Smith wades in with volume and Jones has shown if nothing else a willingness to thwart that style by punshing with lead knee/quadricep kicks, slashing elbows against the cage, and the like. I think we'll be in for either a masterful Jones performance or a 2 round barn burner with Smith hoping to throw the onslaught at Jones and clip him early and put him on the backfoot.

Jones by 2nd round KO from spinning back elbow against he cage

Woodley vs Usman: It was refreshing to not hate Woodley after his last fight. He put together a mixed martial arts displace culminating in a strangle and for once I didn't have to berate him afterward. I think Usman will also be coming forward, throwing in volume, and will therefore make this an entertaining affair. The only way Usman makes this winnable is by walking down Usman, staying busier and avoiding that soul crushing right hand of Woodley. I don't think he does. I think he gets blasted by a straight right in the 2nd or 3rd round and gets RNC'd after taking ground and pound very reminiscent to the way Woodley pounced on Till once he had him hurt.

Woodley by 2nd round RNC

Askren vs Lawler: There's 2 things I hate figuring into my gambling - a long layoff and a fighter unproven on the UFC stage. So many great fighters looked good in Japan and abroad but absolutely struggled in the cage against solid UFC level opposition. Askren as his best beat guys who were Bellator level fighters. It's hard to gauge his grappling acumen against guys who I have to believe were barely blue belt level grapplers at best. That being said, Lawler hasn't fought in quite awhile.

I'm going to side with conventional wisdom of strength of experience and resume and pick Lawler in this one. That being said, in no way shape or form would I actually bet money on this fight.
Lawler by 3rd round TKO.

Garbrandt vs Munhoz: I never get tired of watching Garbrandt get knocked out. The question remains, is he someone who only loses to the very best (Dillashaw) or has he been exposed in some capacity. It's concerning to see that Decision or Submission is Munhoz' statistical likelihood of winning, versus Garbrandt who's punch centric style makes him hard to take down. He's always been fleet of foot, and Munhoz' best shot at winning is to fake enough takedowns to tag Garbrandt with his hands at shoulder height, put him down and finish him on the mat. Do I think Munhoz can do that? I'm doubtful. But, I can't stand Garbrandt so I'll pick Munhoz to move quite a bit up the ladder with a submission victory here.

Zabit vs Stephens: Talk about a treat on the undercard. Buddy. Anyone not excited to see Zabit's wild stylings of unpredictability on the feet is a hater. He's inventive, mixes in trips from standing, chain wrestles, submits....truly the real MIXED in mixed martial arts. That being said, he's not made of steel, and Stephens does what Stephens does well. Looks to land what he knows he's good at and is durable in most positions. This is a real step up that Zabit thinks he deserves and his cool, calm, and collected composure in the cage versus Stephens at times all out aggression.

The pick is Zabit by RNC in round 3.

Cirkunov vs Walker: Walker's hype train is accelerating. Cirkunov is the party crasher. Cirkunov has two stoppage losses to two deadly strikers: Oezdemir and Teixieira. Walker certainly possibly fits that bill. That being said, Cirkunov also has submission wins against Cummins, Krylov, and Cutelaba, no slouches or bums in terms of experiences and resume.

I think Cirkunov gets hurt but drags the younger fighter to the mat and arm-triangles him as he wilts under a sustained ground and pound assault.


BJJ Scout Breaks Down Askren vs Lawler Takedown Truth (All Hail King Troll Askren!)

Some cool sections on inside wrist control, the Iowa ride, attacking the turtle, and Askren's double leg + body lock takedowns. The biggest takeway when I shifted from competing in Judo and training Muay Thai to fighting MMA was my reliance on the body lock or some form of upper body grip to finish takedowns in my fights. In Judo you can rely on the jacket whereas in MMA you've got underhooks/collarties, gable grips, et cetera. In terms of upper body takedowns in MMA, in my 5 fights I hit uchimata, haraigoshi,bodylock + outside trip, and a takedown in my 5th fight that I don't recall and don't have footage of. I'm interested when I return from ACL rehab to look at and think about this bending at the waist double leg business pointed out from Askren's game.

BJJ Scout's BJJ Digest: Erberth Santos Banned?

I guess you gotta attack random people twice to get banned....just a regular ole attack one person thing won't get you banned from stuff. Weird.