Can
Renan Barao reclaim the 135-pound championship? | Photo:
Sherdog.com
After stepping over the carcass of UFC 176, the Smartest Guy at the
Bar could not wait to pull up a stool to the next stacked
pay-per-view. The
Ultimate Fighting Championship bartender promised a double-shot
of championship fights at
UFC
177 on Saturday at the Sleep Train Arena in Sacramento, Calif.,
but the injury vultures changed the entire order. Still, the event
includes a title fight rematch and the promotional debut of an
Olympic gold medalist, and it did not get cancelled. Those are all
positives.
Photo:
Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com
Johnson moved to UFC 178.
HOW WE GOT HERE: Walk with me. Talk with me. After
all UFC 177 has been through, the biggest grudge match of 2014
between
Jon Jones and
Daniel
Cormier was its original main event. Then it moved atop UFC
178. The UFC made up for the move in volume by booking two title
fights:
T.J.
Dillashaw-
Renan Barao
and Demetrius Johnson-
Chris
Cariaso. Now, thanks to a knee injury suffered by the light
heavyweight champion, the Jones-Cormier showdown has been set to
simmer mode and pushed back to UFC 182 in January. With UFC 178 in
dire need of a main event, Zuffa brass ripped away Johnson-Cariaso
and left the bantamweight rematch between Dillashaw and Barao to
stand by itself. UFC 177 also inherited
Danny
Castillo-
Tony
Ferguson,
Lorenz
Larkin-
Derek
Brunson and
Bethe
Correia-
Shayna
Baszler. MMA just cannot have nice things.
UNPOPULAR OPINION: You could almost hear the
collective groan. The UFC announced newly minted bantamweight
champion Dillashaw would immediately rematch Barao just a few weeks
after their first scrap. People were not happy.
Team Alpha Male’s first UFC champion manhandled the former
pound-for-pound ace before finishing with strikes in the fifth
round back at UFC 173 in May. For a fan base already saddled with
rematches, one more may seem like overkill -- to some. Allow me to
retort with a series of questions: (1) A win is a win is a win.
There is no denying it. Dillashaw defeated Barao fair and square at
UFC 173 and is the rightful champion. However, word of a possible
Barao illness leading up to their fight appeared to be confirmed by
his performance. The usually explosive and aggressive Brazilian
seemed tentative and slow. Plus, the 27-year-old is a notorious
slow starter and usually finds his stride after a couple rounds.
Dillashaw dropped Barao early and never let him recover. Is
everyone really 100-percent confident a second matchup will look
exactly the same as the first? (2) Immediate rematches for
longstanding titleholders are nothing new for UFC matchmakers.
Former champions like
Anderson
Silva and B.J Penn were all granted immediate rematches. Is it
so out of place to grant a pound-for-pound standout a quick shot at
redemption? (3) Does Dillashaw-Rafael Assuncao really get your
blood boiling?
Photo:
Jose de Orta/Sherdog.com
Expectations are high for Cejudo.
USELESS FACT: UFC 177 might be the closest
pay-per-view in terms of fight-to-fight odds in history.
Tony
Ferguson (-235) is the biggest favorite on the 10-fight lineup.
For perspective, six out of the next seven UFC offerings all have
main events -- let alone the entire card -- with more substantial
favorites. What UFC 177 may lack in name value, it makes up for in
competitive bouts.
ROLLING DICE: The lighter divisions always
struggle with their bigger brethren in the weight class-popularity
contest. Outside of
Urijah
Faber, no fighter under Penn has really drawn for the UFC in
any meaningful way. While the skills of Johnson, Dillashaw and
Jose
Aldo are unquestionable, getting the public to part with its
hard-earned money to see them remains a tall task.
Henry
Cejudo could be the flyweight savior. A 2008 Olympic gold
medalist in freestyle wrestling, he intrigued the American masses
after his showing in Beijing. As the son of poverty-stricken
Mexican immigrants with no college wrestling background, Cejudo
made for a gripping story. Once he traded in the singlet for
five-ounce gloves, MMA fans drooled at the possibilities. Now 6-0
as a professional, he surely must be the crossover star the
flyweight division needs. Cejudo signed with the UFC in July,
joining fellow Olympic medalists
Ronda
Rousey,
Sara McMann
and
Yoel
Romero on the roster. Cejudo comes with some stipulations,
however. The 27-year-old struggles to make the 125-pound limit, as
he missed weight for his most recent contest. He has also pulled
out of fights for no apparent reason. Some point to inexperienced
management, others to a possible lack of motivation. We have seen
little in the way of marketing from the UFC for its newly acquired
talent. Perhaps the UFC is not quite ready to commit to a fighter
who might blow up in its face. After all, he is fighting
Scott
Jorgensen, who is 2-5 in his last seven appearances, and finds
himself buried on the undercard. Let us hope the big show is enough
to motivate the potential star.
SAY WHAT: I made the case earlier as to why a
Dillashaw-Barao rematch is not as outrageous as many think. The new
bantamweight champion appeared on AXS TV’s “Inside MMA” and shot
down a chunk of my argument in one fell swoop: “Obviously he has to
create some sort of excuse why he lost. It ultimately comes down to
his hand wasn’t up. He got hit by a right hand. The point of the
game is to hit your opponent and not get hit. His hand should’ve
been up, and if his hand would’ve been up, my hand wouldn’t have
been on his face, so it’s an excuse, but I wouldn’t call it a good
one.”
Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com
Correia made a hit list.
AWARDS WATCH: Correia stumbled upon the most
profitable gimmick in the women’s 135-pound weight class: fighting
Rousey’s teammates. After defeating
Jessamyn
Duke at UFC 172, “Pitbull” held up four fingers and pulled down
one. It was her way of saying she was coming for the “Four
Horsewomen,” which I am told is a thing involving Rousey, Duke,
Shayna
Baszler and
Marina
Shafir. Number two on Correia’s list is Bazler. Correia’s
brawling standup game is pleasing to the eye. If she stays out of
submission trouble, she is looking at a bonus check … Ferguson has
impressively and quietly gone 5-1 in the UFC. He has won in a
variety of ways, mixing his boxing with counter wrestling and
sneaky submissions. Castillo is a wonderfully violent counterpart
to “El Cucuy.” It will be fun -- and one-sided enough to earn
Ferguson an extra $50,000 … The Dillashaw-Barao headliner cannot
possibly be as one-sided as their first meeting, can it?
Dillashaw’s mobile and effective striking makes him one of the more
enjoyable champions to watch these days. Barao is still Barao: a
powerful bantamweight with great takedown defense who is willing to
exchange. Hopefully, we see some grappling exchanges between the
two. Scrambles would add an excellent second dimension to their
first scrap. With or without some canvas action, sign up the
sport’s top two bantamweights for a “Fight of the Night” bonus.