Ben
Duffy/Sherdog.com illustration
In some ways, a win is a win and a loss is a loss. But while it is true that every fight matters, some feel more important, for any number of reasons. In some cases, the elevated stakes are easy to define. Picture the fighter on a losing streak who knows he or she is likely fighting for their job; or conversely, any matchup on Dana White's Contender Series, where two hopefuls know that the brass ring is within their reach if they can win impressively. In other cases, a fight feels especially important for reasons that are harder to quantify, but no less real. Whether it’s the symbolic heft of being a pioneer in MMA from one’s country, or the simple added spice of two fighters who really hate each other’s guts, that fight means just a little more.
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Scare Us Again, Tony Ferguson
It is one of the immutable laws of the universe: any horror franchise, given sufficient time, will eventually devolve into either G-rated kiddie fare or insipid self-parody. Look no further than Bunnicula, the vampire rabbit of the eponymous book series; or hockey-masked Jason Voorhees hacking his way through a spaceship full of horny teenagers in Jason X. For most of his Ultimate Fighting Championship career since winning Season 13 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” Ferguson has been one of the very best fighters in the lightweight division, and absolutely the most frightening. “El Cucuy” was the perfect nickname for the man who overwhelmed opponent after opponent with sheer violence, a storm of unorthodox but effective striking, top notch wrestling and a venomous submission game he termed “snap-jitsu.” The eternally cursed title clash between Ferguson and Khabib Nurmagomedov might be the greatest lost fight in MMA history.
However, 2020 was a rough year for Ferguson, as he suffered the
first back-to-back losses of his career against Justin
Gaethje and Charles
Oliveira. Against Gaethje, Ferguson withstood a hellacious
beating for four and a half rounds before being saved from his own
toughness by a merciful Herb Dean.
Against “do Bronx,” he found himself dominated and controlled on
the ground. While both losses were against the elite of the elite,
by the eye test, Ferguson did not look the same. The man who once
buried and broke other fighters with relentless volume was now the
one who struggled to keep up. If Ferguson doesn’t want to lose his
third fight in a row — and with it, much of his remaining mystique
— he will need to turn it around against Beneil
Dariush, which is a tall order. Dariush is an appropriate
matchup, a step down to a Top 10 fighter where Gaethje and Oliveira
were Top 5 at worst, but he’s also been on a tear recently and
appears to be in his absolute prime. Notably, Ferguson is the
underdog for only the second time in his 19-fight UFC career. “El
Cucuy” is 37, with a history of injuries and the wear and tear of
30 fights and his own famously hardcore training regimen. This
Saturday will tell us a lot about just how much tread is left on
the tires of this all-time great.
Pink Slip Watch: Andrea Lee
Less than two years ago, Lee was 11-2, on a three-fight win streak to open her UFC career and looked very much like a budding star in the still-newish flyweight division. She met fellow kickboxer and rising contender Joanne Calderwood in a title eliminator at UFC 242 and lost via split decision, kicking off a three-fight slide to even out her Octagon record.
Even in the COVID-19 era, four straight losses almost always mean walking papers for UFC fighters below the B.J. Penn – Donald Cerrone level of prestige and accomplishment, and there is a decent chance that “KGB” is fighting for her job against Antonina Shevchenko on this weekend’s undercard. It might not be fair — all three of her recent losses have been ultra-close, and at least one, the Lauren Murphy fight, really should have gone the other way — but there it is. However, even if her roster spot is safe with a loss at UFC 262, Lee needs to start digging back out of this hole if she has any plan to deliver on the promise of her early UFC run. Like Ferguson, Lee is an underdog this weekend after dropping a couple of fights as a comfortable favorite. This fight has “prove it” written all over it.
Pink Slip Watch: Ronaldo Souza
It wasn’t long ago that it felt as though “Jacare” would never grow old. Yes, the former Strikeforce champ had been in a holding pattern for a few years as one of the best fighters not to break through to a UFC title shot, but even as he neared his 40th birthday, he remained a tough out for anyone. His world-class Brazilian jiu-jitsu was bolstered by his elite athleticism and shocking power on the feet.
Those days appear to be over. Souza has lost three in a row, five of his last seven, and all of a sudden seems like a 41-year-old. It isn’t as though his current skid includes any chumps — he gave current light heavyweight champ Jan Blachowicz a far harder time than any of Blachowicz’s three subsequent opponents — but much like Ferguson, the recent optics have not been good. Souza simply isn’t guaranteed death on the ground in the way he was a few years ago, and his chin is not the same either. Both of those factors collided in his most recent loss, as Kevin Holland laughed and jawed while knocking “Jacare” out from the literal seat of his pants. Souza’s opponent this Saturday, Andre Muniz, is a solid signee from Dana White's Contender Series and a submission artist in his own right, but frankly he’s a fighter that even the 2017 version of Souza would have crumpled into a ball and kicked into the third row. If the 2021 version of Souza can’t handle him, the UFC will have serious difficulty matching him going forward.
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