Demetrious Johnson has a tight grip on the flyweight division. |
Photo: Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com
The first
Ultimate Fighting Championship pay-per-view event headlined by
flyweights touches down on Saturday in Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada. A band of local Canadian fighters plays host to a
UFC 174 card with plenty of international flavor, though there
is nothing like an American champion defending his title against a
Russian in Canada on Flag Day.
Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com
MacDonald seeks a title shot.
HOW WE GOT HERE: Flyweight champion
Demetrious
Johnson and
Team Alpha Male’s
Joseph
Benavidez were supposed to give us a highly technical and
action-packed five round fight at UFC on Fox 9 in December.
Instead, “Mighty Mouse” blasted Benavidez with a right hand two
minutes into the opening frame, cementing his status as the sport’s
top flyweight. Johnson’s latest challenger,
Ali
Bagautinov, has quietly put together a 3-0 run since joining
the promotion, emerging as the default No. 1 contender ...
Welterweights
Rory
MacDonald and
Tyron
Woodley enter their potential title eliminator with only two
career losses each.
Georges St.
Pierre shuffled the deck when he took a leave of absence and
vacated the welterweight throne in November, resulting in a
division that was wide open for fighters who could string together
a few good wins. The MacDonald-Woodley winner should be no more
than one victory away from a title shot ... Three of
Ryan Bader’s
four losses have come against current or former UFC champions:
Lyoto
Machida,
Tito Ortiz and
Jon
Jones. He is the best fighter at 205 pounds in terms of
separating real contenders from non-contenders, so it made sense to
book the two-time NCAA All-American wrestler against former
Strikeforce
titleholder
Rafael
Cavalcante. “Feijao” has shown glimpses of greatness in
dispatching
Muhammed
Lawal and
Yoel Romero,
but he has also failed a drug test and stumbled against
Thiago
Silva and
Dan
Henderson.
PSA: Remember the FX network? The UFC 174 prelims
will be televised there. Apparently, NASCAR on Fox Sports 1 and
coverage of the 24 Hours of Le Mans on Fox Sports 2 trump the UFC’s
warm-up fights. For those of you who do not have Fox Sports 2
(there are many) or do not have Fox Sports 2 in high-definition
(me), this is not a bad development. However, UFC Fight Nights are
consistently some of the highest-rated programs on Fox Sports 1. It
is a shame that audiences have to go on an Easter egg hunt to find
regular UFC programming.
Photo:
Mike Fridley/Sherdog.com
Can Brown complete his climb?
ON DECK: The winner of the
Robbie
Lawler-
Matt Brown
battle at
UFC on Fox 12 on July 26 will be next in line for reigning
welterweight champion
Johny
Hendricks, according to UFC President Dana White. Lawler’s
fantastic five-round knucklefest with Hendricks in a UFC 171 phone
booth was close and engaging, and it left everyone yearning for
rounds six through 10. It is no wonder then that the Lawler-Brown
winner gets first dibs, once the champion returns from biceps
surgery. However, guaranteed title shots are anything but
guaranteed in the UFC. Woodley’s vocal jihad has racked up text
message surcharges on White’s phone. He wants a title shot, but one
has to wonder whether or not there is anything he or MacDonald can
do inside the Octagon in Vancouver to trump Lawler or Brown. Still,
it should be fun to watch them try.
OLD FANGS: When the UFC announced on April 24 that
it had re-signed
Andrei
Arlovski following his World Series of Fighting release, the
news was greeted with mixed responses. The former heavyweight
champion went 8-5 after exiting the Ultimate Fighting Championship
six years ago, leaving many to wonder why the UFC would move to
acquire his services again. Arlovski, 35, is far removed from his
heyday, as his last significant win came against
Roy Nelson in
2008. The Belarusian will likely never wear UFC gold again, so why
sign him? In the heavyweight division, well-rounded talents fans
know do not grow on trees. Arlovski holds victories over the
aforementioned Nelson and
Fabricio
Werdum. With still-anonymous heavyweights like
Carlos
Augusto Filho,
Derrick
Lewis and
Ruan Potts on
the roster, why not add the man with vampire fang mouthpiece?
Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com
Dodson deserves a second chance.
TAKE TWO: Johnson has fought six
times against four different opponents since dropping to 125
pounds. He faced a rematch with
Ian McCall
after a judging scandal in Australia and fought Benavidez again
after a close decision for the inaugural flyweight championship. In
both rematches, the champion was decidedly more dominant than he
was in the previous meeting. Another rematch is likely in store for
Johnson should he defeat Bagautinov.
John Dodson
ended
John
Moraga’s night in violent fashion with a knee to the nose on
June 7 in Albuquerque, N.M., solidifying himself as the No. 1
contender. Out of all of Johnson’s flyweight bouts, that is the
rematch I want to see most. Dodson hurt and hunted “Mighty Mouse”
for two rounds at UFC on Fox 6 before Johnson made his ingenious
mid-fight adjustments and retained his title. While the young
flyweight division fills out, rematches will remain common
occurrences. We can all look forward to Johnson-Dodson 2.
RACE TO THE FINISH: “Mighty Mouse” had already
made his mark as an incredibly talented flyweight, and he had also
started to gain the reputation as a champion with a knack for
hearing the final bell. The 27-year-old started his UFC career with
seven consecutive decisions, including three of the five-round
variety. A fifth-round submission win over Moraga in July was a
pleasant change but was written off as an outlier against a rushed
prospect. Johnson’s knockout of Benavidez five months later made
the trend seem less fluky. The champion will enter the cage against
Bagautinov as a 6-to-1 favorite. If he can continue to knock off
and finish top contenders, we are looking a real potential increase
in star power.
AWARDS WATCH: Johnson wrapped up the Triple Crown
of Post-Fight Bonuses in his last three fights, winning “Fight of
the Night,” “Submission of the Night” and “Knockout of the Night”
honors. That pattern should continue against Bagautinov. Check off
the flyweight championship as “Fight of the Night” at UFC 147 …
Cavalcante is a boom-or-bust fighter. The Brazilian’s power makes
him capable of fantastic finishes, but his recklessness often
leaves him open to equally brutal counters. Bader should be smart
enough to navigate his power and deliver a bonus-level performance
...
Daniel
Sarafian is a better fighter than his 1-2 UFC record indicates,
while
Kiichi
Kunimoto is not as good as his five-fight winning streak
suggests. The UFC is bringing in a Japanese fighter with no Western
Hemisphere fighting experience to give Sarafian the chance to look
good -- and he will.