News Archive for Jorge Masvidal

MMA Awards – Best of 2009

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Another year has come and gone with MMA broadening it fan base while moving closer to mainstream acceptance in the sports marketplace.  UFC hosted it 100th major event, Strikeforce brought Fedor to CBS and Bellator came out of nowhere to deliver some of the best fights all year. It was a year of milestone and big fights.

Here are this year’s awards winners:

Fighter of The Year

Fighter Of The Year

Fighter Of The Year

Lyoto Machida (UFC)

2009 was the Year of The Dragon, as Machida laid claim to the title of best light heavyweight in the world.  All he did was dispatch two previously undefeated fighters in Thiago Silva to earn a title and Rashad Evans to win the UFC championship belt.  He then fought a tightly contested matchup versus former Pride champion Mauricio Rua and earned a controversial unanimous decision.   Machida recently underwent surgery on his hand, but a rematch versus Rua is on the schedule for early 2010

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Fight Of The Year

Donald Cerrone vs. Benson Henderson (WEC 43)

Unquestionably the best display of mixed martial arts skills in any fight this year amongst top-tier fighters.   While other may point to Sanchez vs Guida or Melendez vs Thomson as their pick, those bouts were merely street fights in a cage.  Albeit entertaining, they are not representative of true MMA skill sets.  The Cerrone/Henderson was a back and forth war between the athlete (Henderson) and the technician (Cerrone).  Henderson would be the aggressor and land his shots and get his takedown, then Cerrone would turn the tied with his great defense and submission moves.  It was every MMA fans true delight to watch this match and most cannot wait for the rematch of this tightly contested fight.

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Knockout of the Year – Dan Horbuckle vs Akihiro Gone (Sengoku)

This was a tough decision, as there were some fantastic knockouts in 2009.  UFC’s Dan Henderson’s drilling of Michael Bisping was one of the best punches delivered in a long-time.  Bellator’s Yahir Reyes’ spinning backfist of Estevan Payan rates high purely based on the sound of the crack of that hit.  In the end, you gotta give the kudos to Dan Hornbuckle for his leg kick to the head of Akhiro Gono.  Rarely do you see a guy knocked cold from a leg kick like the one delivered by Hornbuckle.  When you watch the super slow motion replay of the kick, you really feel Gono’s pain.

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Submission of The Year – Toby Imada vs. Jorge Masvidal (Bellator)

The was the easiest to pick, simply because MMA has never seen such a move applied in its history.  Imada had everything thrown at him but the kitchen sink by Jorge Masvidal.  Imada never quit and Masvidal let his cockiness supercede sensibility.  Masvidal lifted Imada off the ground for a slam, and in the process got himself choked unconscious while standing on his feet.  It wasn’t just the submission of the year, it was the greatness submission of all time.

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Breakthrough Fighter Of The Year

Breakthrough Fighter

Breakthrough Fighter

Jose Aldo (WEC)

Jose Aldo was a relative unknown to most MMA fans to start the year, just another featherweight in the stacked WEC.  His body of work was questionable as well, having fought mostly guys that had many losses on their records.  He caught the attention of fans with his highlight reel flying double-knee knockout of top contender Cub Swanson and followed that up with a dominant victory over WEC champion Mike Brown.  While’s Aldo longevity at the top is still questioned by many industry observers, his rise in 2009 from a preliminary bout fighter to close out 2008 to champion.

Does BJ Penn Need To Leave UFC To Get Real Competition?

Sunday, December 13th, 2009
BJ Penn Dominates at UFC 107

BJ Penn Dominates at UFC 107

UFC 107 has come and gone, finalizing a less than exciting year for the leading mixed martial arts promotion.  Racked with injuries, fighter defections, controversial results and upstart promotional competition from Strikeforce and Bellator, the year couldn’t have ended sooner for Zuffa and its President Dana White.  UFC enters 2010 in a very weird position and last night’s awful mismatch between BJ Penn and Diego Sanchez personifies the problem.

The UFC, outside of its Light Heavyweight division really doesn’t have one marketable championship fight any time in the near future.  Its champions BJ Penn, George St. Pierre, Anderson Silva and Brock Lesnar really don’t have any competitive fights on the horizon.  These are the headline fighters of the organization and the UFC basically has nobody of quality for them to fight.

BJ Penn’s destruction of Diego Sanchez last night was the prime example.  Dana White gave us the Vince McMahon sale that Diego Sanchez was the unquestioned second best lightweight fighter in the world and that Penn was going to get his first real test.  Sanchez told us he was going to storm across the cage, attack Penn like nobody has before and take him down to the mat for a beating.

None of this transpired.

Instead, Penn manhandled Sanchez like a rag doll and displayed just how weak the talent level is in the UFC at lightweight.  Sanchez, the former TUF 1 Champion, displayed no real martial arts skills.  His fighting approach that got his the championhsip fight invite was to bullrush, takedown and pound.  Last night, the talented Penn nullified these basic skills, fended off every weak takedown attempt and handed out one of the most brutal beatings ever seen in the cage.   So if Sanchez really was #2 as Dana White told us, Penn is out of competitors to fight under the UFC banner.

This leads us to the problem with the UFC…its refusal to cross promote.  What killed boxing were promoters that overprotected their fighters, controlled the matchups and didn’t deliver the fights people demanded to see.   Multiple title holders from different organizations that were not making the fights to protect and hold their crowns.  Dana White is displaying his Napoleanistic complex and is dooming the sport in front of our eyes.

Fans are calling for the UFC to sign new top lightweight fighters.  The bloom is off the rose.  The fans will only drink so much kool-aid.  People have figured out that they are not being served shinola now.

Every forum board last night online had discussion threads discussing what fight matchups would look like for Penn with all the great lightweights that are not fighting at UFC.   Even commentator Joe Rogan called for it during the broadcast, something I am sure he will get admonished for by Zuffa.    The UFC can make these matchups and they don’t have to sign anybody.

Penn is in the driver seat now to help take MMA mainstream.   He can push UFC to start cross-promoting to make the biggest fights for him or threaten to bolt to another promotion that will do so.  He has reached the point in his career where he controls his destiny, not the UFC.

The fights that matter for Penn which hold the greatest monetary take for him reside with fighters in other organizations.  The fans don’t want to see him maul another second-rate UFC fighter.  They want to see him fight Dream’s Shinya Aoki, Tatsuya Kawajiri or Joachim Hansen.  They want to see him square off against Bellator’s Eddie Alvarez or Jorge Masvidal.  Or perhaps throw him in the cage with Sengoku’s Mizuto Hirota.  These are the fights that fans want to see, not matchups against an overrated 10 loss fighter like Joe Stevenson or a wrestler with no martial arts skills like Gray Maynard.

As this year comes to end, UFC needs to make some big decisions on how it runs its business and its impact on the sport as a whole.  The WWE coattails that have been ridden thus far need to be cut and the UFC needs to recognize it is a promotion, not a league or “sports entertainment”.  The sooner this happens the better.