UFC 122 Postmortem: Okami Wins, Marquardt Frozen
Jake Rossen Nov 15, 2010
Yushin Okami: Jeff Sherwood | Sherdog.com
For his efforts against the dangerous Nate Marquardt Saturday at UFC 122 in Germany, Yushin Okami may have earned himself a nice, warm spot on a bench; the No.1 ranked middleweight -- at least for as long as Chael Sonnen tries to restore his name amid steroid allegations -- in the UFC has been promised a title shot against Anderson Silva. But when and how that happens wasn’t part of the guarantee.
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Does he continue to fight, as Chuck Liddell did when Tito Ortiz ran around in circles years ago? Or does he take a cue from Rashad Evans and find a comfortable chair until he’s delivered what’s been promised? A title shot and especially a title win can be a lucrative achievement. But “inactive fighter” is an oxymoron. If you’re fit to fight, go fight.
Next for Okami: A long vacation: even if Silva is ready
post-Belfort, a title shot would still be six months away.
Next for Marquardt: Tumbling back down the ladder; maybe Yoshihiro Akiyama, in what would likely be an exciting kiss-off for the latter.
Next for Amir Sadollah: Continuing to occupy a strange negative zone of credible striking with relatively little wrestling or explosiveness; the winner of next weekend’s Dennis Hallman/Karo Parisyan bout.
Truth-Stretching Award Mike Goldberg, for declaring Okami “the last man to beat Anderson Silva.” Technically true? Yeah, yeah. But Silva disqualifying himself for throwing an illegal kick is an important detail to leave out.
Tape-Delayed Reaction Award Spike, for using the stuttered broadcast from Germany as an excuse to stretch round breaks from one minute to two. Because Axe commercials get that much funnier the eighth time around.
Commitment Award Bruce Buffer, for addressing the crowd in German. The man will remain the most entertaining microphone presence in fighting until Manny Pacquiao decides to sing his own national anthem.
Bad Omen Award B.J. Penn, for telling Joe Rogan -- and everyone watching -- that he’s returned to a more basic training regimen. Possible translation: I’m my own best coach.
File Photo
Has the UFC mastered the art of the hard sell?
Anderson Silva taking on Yushin Okami might be a necessary fight, but it’s not one that will freeze Ticketmaster’s server. Sometimes sports and entertainment veer off in opposite directions.
Because fights like this present themselves as difficult to sell, there’s often a strange sympathy afforded to promoters, as though they got stuck with a particularly obscure Pictionary clue to decipher. But practice makes a good tutor: in footage leading into the fight with Nate Marquardt Saturday, careful editing make Okami look like a stunt man; a strong co-main can virtually shut down complaints. The criticism over January’s Frankie Edgar/Gray Maynard main event? Muted since WEC/UFC featherweight Jose Aldo was added. Those weight classes might wind up being the promotion’s artificial sweetener.
Is Greg Jackson hurting the cause?
UFC President Dana White blasted Marquardt post-fight for playing too conservative a game, dropping the idea that trainer Greg Jackson was partially to blame. “I mean, Nate Marquardt sat here tonight and said that he thought he won the fight. Where the [expletive] is his corner?” (White was quoted by MMAJunkie.com.) “You go into the last round and you're getting outstruck by a wrestler, and you think you won the fight? And this is consistent with the Greg Jackson camp.”
Jackson’s fighters have the same identifying threads you could apply to certain director trademarks: none fight foolishly, and most value winning over pleasing the crowd. Even Melvin Guillard, who fought like he was shot out of a cannon pre-Jackson, looked sedated in his most recent fight. It’s hard to mount much debate in a win, but when you bore in a losing effort, you have no leverage.
Grabbing your own shorts: bad rule?
Krzysztof Soszynski earned a decision over Goran Reljic, but the door was open for a finish when Soszynski worked a bread-and-butter Kimura on Reljic’s arm in the first round. Obstacle: Reljic kept his arm out of danger by grabbing a fistful of his own shorts.
It’s a legal maneuver. Should it be? Typically, anything artificial that could disrupt the natural course of a bout -- grabbing the fence, holding on to your opponent’s shorts or gloves -- is prohibited. Equipment is necessary, obviously -- the Greeks were far less shy about that sort of thing -- but they shouldn’t become variables in a fight. Reljic should’ve kept his hands off himself.
• The UFC paid Jorge Rivera both his show and win money despite opponent Alessio Sakara dropping out of the fight due to illness, according to MMAJunkie.com. If Rivera still insists on complaining, he was probably lined up for Knockout of the Night, a $60,000 bonus that went to Karlos Vemola for spaz-hammering Seth Petruzelli. It would be surprising to see Petruzelli in the UFC again.
• On the heels of a countrywide blackout on television, the UFC saw a 30% dip in attendance for their second show in Germany.
• Inevitably, far more people will have paid for the Antonio Margarito/Manny Pacquiao fight in Texas Saturday than watched the UFC for free on basic cable. And thanks to Pacquiao’s win -- catharsis for any feeling human loathing Margarito for his loaded gloves and mocking of Parkinson’s sufferers -- boxing’s Last Big Fight with Floyd Mayweather remains viable. The numbers, though, aren’t sport-specific: it’s that Pacquiao is one of the two biggest draws in combat sports at the moment. No other prizefighter in any sport wins a head-to-head ratings battle with him.
• Worth a double take: Joe Rogan calling Amir Sadollah’s muay Thai “some of the very best” in the sport. Sadollah is good, but reserve that comment for strikers who can actually finish.
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