Smartest Guy at the Bar: UFC 169 Edition
Jose
Aldo sports a gaudy 23-1 record. | Gleidson
Venga/Sherdog.com
For the first time since 2003, the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s traditional Super Bowl Saturday pay-per-view leaves the Las Vegas desert and instead stops off in Tony Soprano’s backyard at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.
While only one title will be on the line the following day in Super Bowl XLVIII at Metlife Stadium just 10 miles north on I-95, two divisional belts are up for grabs at UFC 169. There, Renan Barao defends his 135-pound title against Urijah Faber while 145-pound champion Jose Aldo faces off against Ricardo Lamas. In your face, Roger Goodell.
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Little has gone right for Cruz.
Lamas played the waiting the game and watched Aldo dispatch Jung before the UFC finally awarded him the title shot ... Luckily for onetime Strikeforce champion Overeem and former UFC titleholder Mir, someone has to win when they face one another. The highly paid heavyweights are slumping and need a win to avoid running the risk of no longer receiving paychecks with “Zuffa” at the top.
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Jeff Sherwood
Can Faber end his title fight hex?
Last Laugh: Faber is 0-5 in his last five championship fights and 30-1 everywhere else, including a Gladiator Challenge title bout loss in 2005. From 2008-2012, Faber fought 11 times and earned five title shots, falling short in each one of them.
Some fans wonder why a fighter who cannot seem to find gold keeps being handed keys to the gold mine. Faber responded with a “Fighter of the Year”-worthy campaign in 2013 and was unquestionably the man to fill in when Cruz bowed out. Of the 10 fighters on the main card, six are current or former champions from Zuffa-owned promotions. Faber may be the one with the most to prove.
Nova Un-Wow: Team Alpha Male normally gets credit as the premiere training facility for fighters below the 155-pound division. However, a pair of Nova Uniao fighters, Barao and Aldo, sits atop two of those weight classes. The Andre Pederneiras-trained duo represents the perfect example of the iron-sharpens-iron belief since Aldo and Barao are only separated by one weight class and constantly force each other to improve in training. These are not your average, ordinary champions. Barao and Aldo have combined to win 37 consecutive fights, with 21 of those coming in the UFC or World Extreme Cagefighting. I cannot think of anything I can do perfectly 37 times in a row.
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Peter Lockley/Sherdog.com
Rutten is an exception to the UFC rule.
Awards Watch: Lamas is resilient, skilled and well-deserving of a shot at UFC gold, but Aldo is an altogether different beast. He has handled all styles of challenger with his stifling takedown defense, game-changing striking power and invaluable big-fight experience amassed over a 10-year career. Lamas is built to last against Aldo, even if winning sounds farfetched. Mark down “Fight of the Night” for these two … Overeem is coming off back-to-back knockout losses, but he was winning handily before his incredibly tough opposition rallied and snatched away victory. Mir has come back from bad striking exchanges before but never from a beating like Overeem delivered to Antonio Silva and Travis Browne. The Dutchman bludgeons Mir and gets a “Knockout of the Night” bonus … Keep an eye on the undercard when Minnesotan Tony Martin pits his undefeated record against former M-1 Global champion Rashid Magomedov. Martin has racked up six submission wins on the regional circuit and is my favorite to take “Submission of the Night.”
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