WEC Post-Mortem: Cruz Control, Pulver’s Farewell, and More
Jake Rossen Mar 8, 2010
Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com
Great fights tell stories, and great fight cards are able to tell multiple stories at a time. Saturday’s WEC event in Columbus, Ohio, presented three, each one working a dramatically different stage of the structure.
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The man Bowles beat to briefly hold the title was Miguel Torres, and his second act might be rapidly approaching what students of storytelling refer to as the ordeal: the moment when all seems lost, and the protagonist is at his lowest point. Torres needed a convincing win over Joe Benavidez to propel himself right back into contention: instead, he was taken down, split open, and choked out. There’s no ambiguity here. Torres, once the division’s biggest star, is 0-2 in recent outings, both convincing stoppages. Competing at 135 pounds does not give him much opportunity for reinvention. He’s not about to drop to 125, and 145 presents even bigger dangers for him. Any corrections need to be made without the gimmicks.
It’s obvious that the star of his last act is Jens Pulver,
who now has seven losses in his last eight fights. The 35-year-old
was the UFC’s first lightweight champion and remains the only man
to defeat B.J. Penn at
155 pounds. But potent hands are not enough when athletes are
faster and fresher, and so Pulver has been forced to make a series
of tearful speeches. After being submitted by Javier
Vazquez, he may have finally and inevitably dried up.
One road might lead him to a livable wage as a commentator; another might see him taking headline fights in Midwest states against jokers in gloves. The fighter is wired to take the latter; here’s hoping Pulver has the sense to choose the former.
Next for Cruz: He and Benavidez both want a rematch of their WEC 42 fight, which Cruz won via decision. Why not?
Next for Torres: A rematch with Bowles to determine who rematches the winner of the rematch between Cruz and Benavidez. Perhaps 135 isn’t as deep as previously believed.
Next for Pulver: Commentating. He’s good at it. Most fighters aren’t.
The 1,000-Yard Stare Award Fill-in commentator Stephan Bonnar, who stared into the camera like he was under hypnotic suggestion.
The Bring-in-the-Troops Award Zuffa, for plunking in familiar talking heads Dana White and Joe Rogan to hype up the WEC’s pay-per-view debut on April 24.
Comeback Kid Award Bart Palaszewski, for getting roughed up against Karen Darabedyan in the first round and then pulling out a slick armbar submission in the second -- like the hail-mary punch in boxing, only without the scrambled brains.
Reality in Combat Award Jens Pulver, for knowing he’s probably done in the sport but not explicitly promising to step down: Pulver had the awareness to realize the moments immediately after a fight are a poor time to plan for the future.
The Oxymoron Award “Classy MMA crowd” is not a phrase you’ll find myself using often, but the Ohio chant for Pulver following his loss was spectator sportsmanship at its best. Arenas are quick to harass athletes and slow to show affection. It was nice to see them put Pulver on their shoulders, if only figuratively.
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