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Sunday, August 29, 2010

Lights Out For James Toney at UFC 118 and Penn vs Edgar Final Seconds highlights

The only proof that boxer James Toney trained with any reasonable effort for his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut is anecdotal – supposedly he dropped 40 pounds just to enter the Octagon at a bloated, bubbly 237.



Penn vs Edgar Final Seconds
The deck is stacked against any boxer trying to compete in mixed martial arts – just as it would be for an MMA fighter in a boxing match. It’s why almost no one even tries.


UFC 118 Randy Couture Affliction Walkout T-shirt - Black, XXL
More From Dan WetzelCouture makes short work of boxer Toney Aug 29, 2010 Boxer Toney likes money, violence and MMA Aug 27, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT



But Toney agreed to match up with UFC legend Randy Couture anyway, then he embarrassed himself and his sport by hardly looking like he prepared for a fight that was billed as boxing vs. MMA, even if it was never going to prove anything.



Instead of some definitive statement we got a ridiculous result – Couture earning an easy victory by arm triangle submission at 3:31 of the first round. Toney is nicknamed “Lights Out.” On this night, he never bothered to turn them on.



“Toney lasted longer than I thought he would,” UFC president Dana White said, which isn’t saying much.



Toney is the current IBA heavyweight boxing champion, one of 11 belts he’s held in five weight classes in his impressive career. He had only one route to victory on Saturday night: Landing a perfectly timed punch. Couture, a former All-American wrestler, shot in for a takedown. Toney, who didn’t show up for the postfight news conference, never really threw – let alone land – a significant punch. He fought in what appeared to be a boxing stance, leaving himself completely prone to a wrestling takedown, suggesting he had no idea how to defend himself.



Less than 30 seconds into the fight, Couture employed a primitive single-leg takedown, shooting in low and grabbing Toney’s ankle. The boxer fell backward in a clumsy pile, too slow and top-heavy to do anything.



“It’s pretty easy to counter,” Couture said of the single leg, noting that’s why you rarely see it in MMA. “A good grappler or a good wrestler is going to step out of that.”



Toney is neither. Once on his back, he was finished. Couture delivered some punches and elbows and eventually squeezed his neck until Toney quit rather than lose consciousness. Toney threw perhaps just one punch, a harmless, from-his-back effort.



“I didn’t feel like he demonstrated any real solid skills once he hit his back and butt,” Couture said. “He had no idea.”



Indeed he didn’t, which is why this boxing vs. MMA exhibition was mostly a farce. A young, athletic boxer who actually showed up in great condition would likely lose. Toney literally had no chance with his strategy and preparation.


UFC 118: Edgar v. Penn
Couture deemed the experiment “silly,” although he noted it would be the same if he tried to box. “James would probably knock me out in the first round.”



Probably, but it’s also likely a professional such as Couture would at least show up in shape. Toney’s body lacked definition and his stomach hung over his shorts. In MMA, where speed is a must, low body fat is imperative. Toney claimed he trained for eight months for the fight, but it barely showed.



“I’m sure he was prepared as he could’ve been,” White said. “Anyone who knows James Toney the last few years, James isn’t the most physically fit boxer.



“From the day we signed the fight in my office, he lost a lot of weight.”



That’s nice if you’re filming an episode of “The Biggest Loser.” As fights go, it was a joke. Boxing promoter Gary Shaw, a longtime rival of White’s, said Toney looked “like a very old man, slurred his words, and was non-competitive.”



“James Toney had less than a zero percent chance unless Randy had a heart attack from hearing the bell ring,” Shaw said Saturday night.



Shaw went on to call the pay-per-view a “sham,” which isn’t really true. This fight may have been, but White went to great lengths to build a fairly stacked card around it (not all the fights delivered, but on paper they looked good). Toney-Couture wasn’t the main event of the five-fight pay-per-view; Frankie Edgar defended his lightweight title against B.J. Penn in the headliner.



“I didn’t try to sell this as, ‘Tune in, you’ll see the most spectacular war,’ ” White said. “Anything can happen in a fight. … We’re not after boxing.”



And while such a sideshow didn’t speak well for MMA, what does it say for the state of boxing, that a 42-year-old James Toney is someone’s heavyweight champion?



Arguing boxing vs. mixed martial arts is a waste of time anyway. The UFC was founded, in part, to solve the age-old debate of which fighting discipline was best. UFC 1 featured a tournament won by Royce Gracie, a master of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. That was 1993. By 2010, a fighter with a command of just one discipline – no matter what it is – rarely lasts. It’s about being well-rounded and dangerous against a number of styles.



“Ninety-nine times out of 100 or 100 out of a 100, the MMA guy is going to win,” White said.



It’s why fights like these never need to be made, a problem compounded when the boxer shows up out of shape, unprepared and with no discernable strategy to do anything other than pray for a miracle punch to land.

yahoomma.com

Saturday, August 28, 2010

official weigh-in results for Saturday night’s UFC 118 event. UFC 118, which is headlined by the lightweight championship bout between Frankie Edgar and BJ Penn and the heavyweight battle between Randy Couture and James Toney,


Main Event – UFC Lightweight Championship


BJ Penn (154) VS Frank Edgar (154)

RVCA BJ Penn Hana Hou 118 Tee (Small, White)

PPV

James Toney (237) VS Randy Couture (220)

Gray Maynard (156) VS Kenny Florian (156)

Marcus Davis (170) VS Nate Diaz (171)

Demian Maia (184) vs Mario Miranda (185)



SPIKE PRELIMS

Gabe Ruediger (155) VS Joe Lauzon (156)

Nik Lentz (155) VS Andre Winner (154)

UFC 118: Edgar v. Penn

PRELIMS

John Salter (185) VS Dan Miller (185)

Greg Soto (170) VS Nick Osipczak (171)

Amilcar Alves (171) VS Mike Pierce (171)

Sunday, August 22, 2010

UFC 118: Boston Showdown, Nate Diaz Vs. Marcus Davis Prediction

Since the days of colonial history, when "Baked Beans 'n Molasses" was a favorite food of the predominantly Irish descendants of Boston, the city has been known as "Beantown."RVCA BJ Penn Team Aloha 118 Tee (Large, Black)




Being from Nova Scotia, Canada—which is also situated on the East Coast, and also only a relatively short distance, by boat, from Boston—we "Maritimers" are also predominantly Celtic descendants, and so quite naturally, we also share the Bostonian love affair with "home cooked" beans, flooded in a molasses based sauce.



On August 28, "Beantown" will makes its premier voyage into the sport of Mixed Martial Arts when the city hosts the 118th showing of the Ultimate Fighting Championships, the worlds biggest, and arguably best, MMA/cagefighting exhibition.
UFC 118: Edgar v. Penn


UFC 118 will also feature Nate Diaz, who is one half of the notorious fighting Diaz brothers.



In what is sure to become a stand-up, gun-slinging affair, Nate—who is the younger, and UFC employed brother of Strikeforce fight promotions elite 170 champion fighter Nick Diaz—will be mixing it up on the under-card with former pro boxer Marcus Davis.



Davis is coming off a UFC 113 win over recently exiled french Canadian sub par fighter Jonathan Goulet; however, it is worth mentioning that before the win, Davis was on a catastrophic down hill slide. He had lost 3 of his last five to Mike Swick, Dan Hardy, and was literally clobbered by reality show fighter Ben Saunders, resulting in a broken nose and a six month medical suspension.



Diaz, on the other hand—although coming off a narrow decision loss to top 155 contender Gray Maynard—has packed up his arsenal of weapons from the UFC lightweight division and shifted to "higher ground" so to speak.RVCA BJ Penn Hana Hou 118 Tee (Small, White)



Now fighting at the contentious UFC welterweight division, the 25 yr. old Diaz last fought at an even higher "catch-weight" of 177 pounds and knocked out the much heavier Rory Markman—who would have been close to the 185 middleweight limit on fight night——in the very first round.



Generally, when holding an event in a new city, the UFC are frequently prone to "loading-up" their event cards with as many locally born fighters as possible, this card will be no different, as Davis, who goes by the nickname of "The Irish Hand Grenade" is a native of the neighboring state of Maine.



My opinion here, for what it's worth, is that even though Davis is a former pro boxer, and certainly a powerful slugger, the guy has very poor defense ability, and therefore, he takes a tremendous amount of unnecessary punishment.



My prediction is that Diaz, with his mixture of long accurate jabs from the outside, unorthodox southpaw stance, and great boxing defense, will be too potent a cocktail for "The Irish Hand-Grenade" Davis.



The end result, in my view, will either be a Diaz win by early referee stoppage, or a hard fought third round UD, also in favor of Diaz.









Watch Strikeforce Houston: Bobby Lashley vs Chad Griggs replay video Bobby Lashley Lost ?

Watch Strikeforce Houston: Bobby Lashley vs Chad Griggs replay video.


Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal vs. Rafael

Tim Kennedy vs. Ronaldo "Jacare" Souza

DANIEL CORMIER VS. JASON RILEY

ANDRE GALVAO VS. JORGE PATINO

Jorge Gurgel vs. K.J. Noons
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Watch Strikeforce Houston live stream free online now ! Live results and play-by-play are below, Watch Strikeforce Houston Lawal vs Feijao Highlights PlaybyPlay Replay Online Free

Watch live video from FISTSLIKEBULLETS on Justin.tv

Press Play Above and watch free stream here on UFCMMAEXTREME.blogspot.com/ Please sign up free
watch live strike force ( Houston ) Live results and play-by-play are below, Watch Strikeforce Houston Lawal vs Feijao Highlights PlaybyPlay Replay Online Free

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Strikeforce Houston Weigh-ins / King Mo" Lawal, Rafael "Feijao" Ronaldo "Jacare" de Souza, Tim Kennedy, Jorge Gurgel, K.J. Noons, Bobby Lashley, and Chad Griggs are set and ready for tomorrow night's fights!




King Mo" Lawal, Rafael "Feijao" Ronaldo "Jacare" de Souza, Tim Kennedy, Jorge Gurgel, K.J. Noons, Bobby Lashley, and Chad Griggs are set and ready for tomorrow night's fights!

Tomorrow night on Showtime, StrikeForce “Houston” will air live from the Toyota Center in Texas. Former WWE wrestler Bobby Lashley will face off against Chad Griggs in the opening televised bout. Lashley will attempt to keep his undefeated streak alive and Griggs will attempt to derail the popular fighter’s hype train.
Enjoy the fights everyone.






* * * *





CHAD COOK VS. ARTENAS YOUNG



Round 1 -



HUMBERTO DELEON VS. CHAD ROBICHAUX



Round 1 -



JOSE SANTIBANEZ VS. REYNALDO TRUJILLO



Round 1 -



KIER GOOCH VS. ADAM SCHINDLER



Round 1 -



RICKY LONG VS. VINICIUS MAGALHAES



Round 1 -



ANDRE GALVAO VS. JORGE PATINO



Round 1 -



DANIEL CORMIER VS. JASON RILEY



Round 1 -



BOBBY LASHLEY VS. CHAD GRIGGS



Round 1 -



JORGE GURGEL VS. K.J. NOONS



Round 1 -



TIM KENNEDY VS. RONALDO "JACARE" SOUZA



Round 1 -



MUHAMMED "KING MO" LAWAL VS. RAFAEL "FEIJAO" CAVALCANTE

Tonight's event features two title fights. In the co-headliner, Tim Kennedy and Ronaldo "Jacare" Souza meet for the vacant Strikeforce middleweight title, and in the night's main event, Strikeforce light-heavyweight champion Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal takes on Rafael "Feijao" Cavalcante in his first title defense. Lightweights K.J. Noons vs. Jorge Gurgel and heavyweight Bobby Lashley vs. Chad Griggs also compete on the main card.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Top 10 pound for pound MMA fighters

Scoring: 10 points for a first-place vote, nine points for second, etc., down to 1 point for a 10th-place vote. Fighters who are under suspension for usage of performance-enhancing substances or drugs of abuse are ineligible to be considered for the duration of their suspensions; fighters who have been inactive for more than 12 months are ineligible for consideration until after the completion of their next fight.

Discount Martial Arts Supplies & Accessories


Cruz

10. Dominick Cruz

Points: 46

Affiliation: UFC

Weight class: WEC (WEC bantamweight champion)

Hometown: San Diego

Record: 15-1 (has won past six)

Last month’s ranking: unranked

Most recent result: def. Brian Bowles, R2 TKO, March 6

Analysis:No one has been able to solve Cruz since he dropped to 135 pounds.









Shields



9. Jake Shields

Points: 46

Affiliation: Free agent

Weight class: Welterweight (never lost Strikeforce middleweight title)

Hometown: San Francisco

Record: 25-4-1 (has won past 14)

Last month’s ranking: 9

Most recent result: def. Dan Henderson, unanimous decision, April 17

Analysis:An intriguing UFC debut against Martin Kampmann should determine his spot in the UFC welterweight pecking order.









Machida

8. Lyoto Machida

Points: 50

Affiliation: UFC

Weight class: Light heavyweight

Hometown: Belem, Brazil

Record: 16-1 (lost previous fight)

Last month’s ranking: 7

Most recent result: lost to Mauricio Rua, R1 TKO, May 8

Analysis: A November matchup against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson will go a long way toward determining the light heavyweight title scene in 2011.











Penn

7. B.J. Penn

Points: 62

Affiliation: UFC

Weight class: Lightweight

Hometown: Hilo, Hawaii

Record: 15-6-1 (lost previous fight)

Last month’s ranking: 6

Most recent result: lost to Frank Edgar, unanimous decision, April 10

Analysis:Has his chance to prove razor-thin loss to Edgar was a fluke.









Edgar



6. Frank Edgar

Points: 65

Affiliation: UFC (UFC lightweight champion)

Weight class: Lightweight

Hometown: Toms River, N.J.

Record: 12-1 (has won past four)

Last month’s ranking: 5

Most recent result: def. B.J. Penn, unanimous decision, April 10

Analysis:Has his loss to prove razor-thin win over Penn wasn’t a fluke.









Emelianenko

5. Fedor Emelianenko

Points: 67

Affiliation: Strikeforce/M-1

Weight class: Heavyweight

Hometown: Stary Oskol, Russia

Record: 31-2, one no-contest (lost past 1)

Last month’s ranking: 8

Most recent result: lost to Fabricio Werdum, R1 submission, June 26

Analysis:Dropped to eighth last month after just one loss. Clearly some voters re-evaluated and felt the greatest heavyweight of all time fell too far.









Rua



4. Mauricio Rua

Points: 117

Affiliation: UFC

Weight class: Light heavyweight (UFC light heavyweight champion)

Hometown: Curitiba, Brazil

Record: 19-4 (won previous fight)

Last month’s ranking: 4

Most recent result: def. Lyoto Machida, R1 TKO, May 8

Analysis: Knee surgery is expected to keep the new champ out until at least March.

Save Big on GI & Kimonos









Aldo



3. Jose Aldo

Points: 145

Affiliation: WEC

Weight class: Featherweight (WEC featherweight champion)

Hometown: Rio de Janeiro

Record: 17-1 (has won past 10)

Last month’s ranking: 4

Most recent result: def. Urijah Faber, unanimous decision, April 24

Analysis:With Silva’s narrow escape, one could argue Aldo has the most definitive unbeatable aura of any weight-class champ.









Silva



2. Anderson Silva

Points: 192 (12 first-place votes)

Affiliation: UFC

Weight class: Middleweight (UFC middleweight champion)

Hometown: Curitiba, Brazil

Record: 27-4 (has won past 12)

Last month’s ranking: 1

Most recent result: def. Chael Sonnen, R5 submission, Aug. 7

Analysis: Was Silva’s struggle against Sonnen the product of a rib injury, or is he finally slowing down at 35? Time will tell.









St. Pierre



1. Georges St. Pierre

Points: 182 (11 first-place votes)

Affiliation: UFC

Weight class: Welterweight (UFC welterweight champion)

Hometown: Saint-Isidore, Quebec

Record: 20-2 (has won past seven)

Last month’s ranking: 2

Most recent result: def. Dan Hardy, unanimous decision, March 27

Analysis:On hold until “The Ultimate Fighter” runs its course.



More



• Votes for others: Brock Lesnar 28, Jon Fitch 26, Rashad Evans 12, Gilbert Melendez 8, Chael Sonnen 7, Jon Jones 4, Cain Velasquez 3; Joe Benavidez, Kenny Florian, Nick Diaz 2.



• Upcoming matches for Top 10 fighters: No. 10 Dominick Cruz vs. Joe Benavidez, Aug. 18, Las Vegas; No. 6 Frank Edgar vs. No. 7 B.J. Penn, Aug. 28, Boston.

Monday, August 9, 2010

UFC fighter Roger Huerta fights Rashad Bobino in a street fight after Rashad cowardly hits a girl . watch video here .


Roger Huerta Street Fight - Watch more Funny Videos

Last weekend, former UFC fighter Roger Huerta was involved in a street fight outside an Austin bar. TMZ obtained video of Huerta confronting a man who had sucker-punched a woman. Unsurprisingly, the 155-pound Huerta knocked the guy out cold. Well, we now know who the woman-hitting jerk is. According to SPORTSbyBROOKS the guy that tried to take on the Bellator fighter was former Texas Longhorn, Rashad Bobino.




Listed at 230-pounds during his days at Texas, Bobino spent some time with the Falcons last year before being cut. You have to appreciate the fact that Huerta took down a former Texas athlete in Austin. Most big time college athletes can get away with murder in the city they play in so you have to wonder what past transgretions this guy has gotten away with to make him think he could punch a woman. Let alone the fact that he was in public. Huerta says Bobino responded to him by saying:



“F*ck you, f*ck these bitches, I’ll knock out any f*ckin’ bitch that I wanna f*ckin’ knock out, I’ll knock your f*cking bitch ass out.”Cage Fighter Roger Huerta Mini Blast Tee



Maybe next time he won’t pick on people smaller than him. Especially women and professional fighters.
ROGER HUERTA CAGE FIGHTER "UFC 87 WALKOUT" T-SHIRT SIZE XX-LARGE


thoughts ???  I feel he did the right thing and kicked his ass !

Sunday, August 8, 2010

ufc 117 highlights

For the better part of five rounds, Chael Sonnen did exactly what he said he was going to do to Anderson Silva, but in a split second, the middleweight king turned the tables.








Stuck underneath the gritty Sonnen, Silva secured a textbook triangle choke and submitted the challenger 3 minutes, 10 seconds into the fifth round of their UFC 117 main event Saturday at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif. Sonnen tapped only once, but it was enough to get the attention of referee Josh Rosenthal, who moved in and halted the bout.











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THIAGO SILVA - UFC DELUXE 3 JAKKS UFC TOY MMA ACTION FIGURE

"I don't have any excuses. Chael had a hell of a fight tonight," said Silva, who improved to 12-0 inside the UFC. "I knew that I was losing the first four rounds, but, you know, not to make any excuses, about a week and a half ago, I hurt my ribs. The doctor asked me not to come in and fight, but for you guys and for the UFC, I came in here and put it all out on the line."



Sonnen clearly won the first four rounds and started with a bang, as he rattled Silva with a straight left hand mere minutes into the match. From there, he controlled the embattled champion with stifling top control and wide-ranging strikes on the ground: punches, hammerfists, elbows and slaps to the ears.







An All-American wrestler at the University of Oregon, Sonnen secured takedowns in three of the five rounds and wound up in top position in all five. He absorbed his share of damage, as Silva picked his spots with elbows from the bottom, one of which cut Sonnen badly above the left eye. As the two middleweights entered Round 5, the heavily favored champion found himself in an unfamiliar state of desperation, needing a stoppage to retain his title.







With his foe grinding away on top, Silva deftly slid the choke into place. Sonnen tried unsuccessfully to counter the hold but, with no means of escape, surrendered with less than half a round remaining in the fight.







"It was a tough fight," Sonnen said. "He's a tough guy. I came in second. There's nothing I can say. They gave me my opportunity, and I came up short."







Fitch takes out Alves







Mark J. Rebilas for ESPN.com

Jon Fitch kept Thiago Alves off balance to earn a unanimous decision.





Thiago Alves wanted revenge. Jon Fitch had other plans.







Fitch cemented his place as the world's No. 2 welterweight behind champion Georges St. Pierre, as he took down Alves eight times en route to a unanimous decision in the UFC 117 co-main event. All three judges sided with Fitch by 30-27 counts, as the 32-year-old American Kickboxing Academy standout won for the 21st time in 22 appearances and improved to 13-1 inside the UFC.





Perhaps depleted by another failed weight cut, Alves was never in the fight. Fitch delivered three takedowns in the first round, four more in the second and another in the third. In his first appearance in more than a year, Alves failed in his attempt to avenge a 2006 defeat to the Fort Wayne, Ind., native, who smothered him with his oppressive top game.



Overheard in the corner telling his trainers Alves was "weak in the clinch," Fitch absorbed almost no damage, as he went the distance for the eighth consecutive time and secured a second crack at the UFO welterweight crown.







Dos Anjos taps to Guida, injury







Mark J. Rebilas for ESPN.com

Rafael Dos Anjos, left, got his chin checked and eventually broken by Clay Guida.





Former Strikeforce lightweight champion Clay Guida dragged Rafael dos Anjos into the third round, where the Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt submitted to an apparent jaw injury. Dos Anjos, cringing in visible pain, waved the white flag 1:51 into the third round.







Guida fell behind early, as dos Anjos peppered him with punches and inside leg kicks. However, Guida did connect to dos Anjos' jaw during an exchange, which likely led to his eventual submission.







Guida turned the tide in Round 2, as he secured his first takedown, controlled the last half of the round from top position and neutralized dos Anjos with ground-and-pound. In between rounds, concern over the injury became evident in dos Anjos' corner.







Backed by the Jackson's Mixed Martial Arts team in Albuquerque, N.M., Guida again took down dos Anjos in the third round. He moved to half guard and applied pressure to the Brazilian's neck and head, forcing the tapout.







"It took me a while to realize I'm my biggest distraction," said Guida, who has won back-to-back fights. "Coach [Greg Jackson] is going to make me a champion. Champions aren't born; they're made. They're trained."







Hughes chokes out Almeida







Mark J. Rebilas for ESPN.com

Matt Hughes, left, proved he's still a force to be reckoned with at welterweight.





UFC hall of famer Matt Hughes might not be finished as an elite welterweight.







Hughes knocked down former middleweight King of Pancrase Ricardo Almeida with a ringing left hook and then rendered him unconscious with a modified anaconda choke. The end came 3 minutes, 15 seconds into Round 1, as Hughes became the first man to submit the Renzo Gracie-trained Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt.







"It's an old wrestling move," said Hughes, who posted his record 17th win inside the Octagon. "I've been good at it. I'm happy to beat a good Brazilian with a wrestling move."









Dos Santos outpoints Nelson







Mark J. Rebilas for ESPN.com

From the moment the first bell rang, Junior Dos Santos, right, teed off on Roy Nelson.





Roy Nelson stood in front of Junior dos Santos for three rounds and lived to tell the tale, but his dogged determination and toughness were not enough to unseat the talented Brazilian.







Dos Santos scored repeatedly with uppercuts, knees to the head, punches to the body and even a third-round takedown in winning a unanimous decision from the former International Fight League heavyweight champion. Scores were 30-26, 30-27 and 30-27 for dos Santos, who secured a title shot with his seventh consecutive victory.







Nelson needed every ounce of his fortitude to survive the first five minutes. "The Ultimate Fighter" Season 10 winner went down twice to uppercuts from dos Santos and appeared close to being finished more than once. He did not go away, however, and pressed the Brazilian deeper into the fight. Dos Santos turned his attention to Nelson's body late in the match and gradually wore down the portly heavyweight with strikes. Even so, Nelson won the admiration of dos Santos in defeat, his first inside the Octagon.



"This guy is tough, man," dos Santos said. "Incredible."



B. Knap

Saturday, August 7, 2010

UFC 117 weigh in Anderson Silva Chael Sonnen




UFC 117 Silva vs Sonnen Weigh In Highlights

Sunday, August 1, 2010

UFC on Versus 2 betting odds (Courtesy Venetian and Lagasse Stadium)

Sunday night presents the next step for light heavyweight dynamo Jon Jones. He's a huge favorite over veteran Vladimir Matyushenko. He's hearing how great he is from all corners. He's working with the famed Jackson's Submission Fighting Camp against some of the best in the world. Can Jones keep his head on straight? We find out at UFC on Versus 2.




UFC on Versus 2 betting odds (Courtesy Venetian and Lagasse Stadium)

Official betting plays posted after the weigh-in



Vladimir Matyushenko (+500) vs. Jon Jones (-800) - Light heavyweight

Mark Munoz (+170) vs. Yushin Okami (-200) - Middleweight

John Howard (+140) vs. Jake Ellenberger (-170) - Welterweight

Takanori Gomi (+240) vs. Tyson Griffin (-320) - Lightweight

Jacob Volkmann (+115) vs. Paul Kelly (-145) - Lightweight

DaMarques Johnson (+160) vs. Matthew Riddle (-190) - Welterweight

Igor Pokrajac (+110) vs. James Irvin (-140) - Light heavyweight

Brian Stann (+130) vs. Mike Massenzio (-160) - Middleweight

Darren Elkins (+170) vs. Charles Oliveira (-200) - Lightweight

Steve Steinbeiss (+180) vs. Rob Kimmons (-220) - Middleweight

UFC on Versus Edition / Jon Jones vs. Vladimir Matyushenko results and highlights to follow ..

Watch Video ..........................
http://www.versus.com/mma/?gclid=CIbV_qLQmKMCFRofswodHFHZqg


The UFC's second event on Versus is finally right around the corner (Aug. 1, 9 PM ET / 6 PM PT), and that means it's time for another installment of the ever popular Helwani VS Dundas MMA predictions game.






For those keeping score at home, after 22 fights, Chad is currently in first place with a 14-8 record, while I sit at 12-10. 

In other words, it's time for business to pick up.





Let's do this.



Jon Jones vs. Vladimir Matyushenko




AH: I'm convinced fans aren't giving Matyushenko enough credit heading into this fight. Witness the fact that only 8% of fans on UFC.com are picking him to beat Jones. That said, Jones is 16 years younger, quicker and more dangerous in all facets of a fight. I don't think Jones will have as easy a time putting "The Janitor" away as he did against, say, Brandon Vera, but I am envisioning a 2nd round TKO win for "Bones."





Prediction: Jones via 2nd round TKO



CD: Matyushenko seems like one of the nicer guys in all of MMA, but he got a tough draw here. On paper, Jones has him beat in all aspects. I think the only way Matyushenko can win is if he is able to rough Jones up a bit early and it reveals some kind of personality flaw – i.e. Tito Ortiz not liking to get punched in the face – in Jones that we just don’t know about yet. Is it possible? Maybe, but I wouldn’t bet that way.



Prediction: Jones via 1st round KO. 





Mark Munoz vs. Yushin Okami




AH: I'm actually most excited for this fight because I can see it ending in a whole host of ways. At the end of the day, though, I envision Munoz controlling the pace of the fight with his improved striking, but more importantly, with his superior wrestling skills. Okami is always game, and it's nearly impossible to finish him, but Munoz's edge on the ground will prove to be the difference.





Prediction: Munoz via split decision



CD: I can’t disagree. I think Munoz’s size, strength and wrestling ability will negate what Okami likes to do best. I see Munoz controlling an action-packed scramble-fest en route to picking up a win on the scorecards.



Prediction: Munoz via unanimous decision.





John Howard vs. Jake Ellenberger




AH: Both of these guys have really impressed me since making their respective debuts in 2009. Howard is 4-0 in the UFC, while Ellenberger is 1-1. However, don't be fooled by Ellenberger's .500 record, as he stepped in on short notice to fight Carlos Condit in September, and almost beat the former WEC welterweight champion in the first round. The 25-year-old wound up losing via split decision, but he rebounded nicely to defeat tough, veteran Mike Pyle via second-round TKO at UFC 108. I'm leaning towards Ellenberger here, but I wonder whether his eight-month layoff will affect him in a negative way on Sunday night. Regardless, he has looked great thus far in the UFC, and I see him controlling this fight for 15 minutes.





Prediction: Ellenberger via unanimous decision



CD: We’re in agreement again. I think this has all the makings of a fun fight, as both Ellenberger and Howard will come out swinging for the seats. Ellenberger has the heavy hands to do damage and good takedowns to fall back on if he gets in trouble. I say he makes Howard’s 4-0 record look like nothing more than a run of luck, knocking out the Boston native in the first.



Prediction: Ellenberger via 1st round KO.





Tyson Griffin vs. Takanori Gomi




Kudos to Griffin for stepping up on short notice to fight Gomi after his UFC 115 loss to Evan Dunham in June. Some might forget that prior to that loss, Griffin had only lost to former lightweight champion Sean Sherk and current 155-pound king Frankie Edgar. He seemed a bit off against Dunham, and I think he will rebound well against Gomi. As for "The Fireball Kid," Kenny Florian picked him apart before submitting him, which confirmed my suspicion that he might not be as dominant as he once was.





Prediction: Griffin via unanimous decision



CD: You kind of have to feel for Gomi … at least I do. He hasn’t given us any indication that he can recapture the glory of his Pride days and the UFC just keeps shuttling him from tough opponent to tough opponent. Griffin is the kind of guy who can beat anyone in the world if the chips fall his way. I can’t bet against the Xtreme Couture product here.



Preditction: Griffin via unanimous decision





AH's Preliminary fights:


Paul Kelly def. Jacob Volkmann


Matthew Riddle def. DaMarques Johnson


Igor Pokrajac def. James Irvin


Brian Stann def. Mike Massenzio
Dec 2009 *FIGHT!* MMA Magazine: Featuring, JON JONES "Taking the UFC by Storm"

Charles Oliveira def. Darren Elkins


Rob Kimmons def. Steve Steinbeiss