Tag Archive for 'Antoni Hardonk'

UFC Fight Night 9 Afterthoughts

UFC Fight Night - Melvin Guillard Joe Stevenson

Quick recap of the results from the UFC Fight Night, then some thoughts.

  • Joe Stevenson def. Melvin Guillard by Guillotine Choke at 0:27, Round 1
  • Justin McCully def. Antoni Hardonk by Unanimous Decision
  • Kenny Florian def. Dokonjonosuke Mishima by Rear Naked Choke at 3:57, Round 3
  • Wilson Gouveia def. Seth Petruzelli by Guillotine Choke at 0:39, Round 2
  • Drew Fickett def. Keita Nakamura by Unanimous Decision
  • Kurt Pellegrino def. Nate Mohr by Ankle Lock at 2:58, Round 1
  • Kuniyoshi Hironaka def. Forrest Petz by Unanimous Decision
  • Roan Carneiro def. Rich Clementi by Unanimous Decision
  • Thiago Tavares def. Naoyuki Kotani by Unanimous Decision

The “main event” was anything but; Guillard came out careless and walked right into a guillotine choke. Maybe all those comparisons of Guillard to Kevin Randleman were more appropriate than we thought. This fight was eerily reminiscent of a couple of Kevin’s fights; the most recent when he stormed up to Shogun at PRIDE 32 and got caught in a leg lock a minute into the fight. Stevenson on the other hand has set himself up as one of the top contenders in the lightweight division. There are lots of great fights to be had for him, including Tyson Griffin and the loser of the Sherk/Franca title fight coming up soon.

Ken-Flo, as he’s so affectionately been dubbed, started off the night by showing us that his loss to Sean Sherk has only reinvigorated his training and will to fight. He pretty much dominated Mishima for all three rounds, up to his choke-out-by-way-of-pounding. I think he showed some improved striking skills and that will serve him well in the stacked 155 lbs. division. That was a sick knee-bar Mishima had Florian in though; he came very close to tapping. I think Florian might be limping a bit for the next couple of days.

In his post-fight interview, Ken-Flo decided he’d show us his improved acting chops. He raised a sealed-shut can of Xyience energy drink to his mouth many times while talking to Joe Rogan. I don’t know why he would do something like that; how stupid does he think the people watching are? And how nasty is that Xyience drink that he needs to pretend to drink it rather than just sucking it down for a minute, if that’s what he’s being paid to do. I guess there is no stopping the rampant commercialization of our quickly-growing sport.

On another note, I am getting pretty tired of the ridiculous exaggeration that comes out of the mouths of the UFC’s announcing duo of Joe Rogan and Mike Goldberg at every UFC event.

“Hardonk… you wanna talk about, like, strikes. This guy’s got some of the best leg kicks in all of MMA.” — Joe Rogan

Really Joe? Antoni Hardonk, who has no wins over anybody significant in his weight division in six years of professional fighting, is a man with some of the best leg kicks in MMA? He’s in the same category as, say, a Cro-Cop? Sensationalizing every man who steps in the octagon as the greatest thing since sliced bread only serves to cheapen the UFC and their presentation of the sport. This is just more of the same from these guys after Goldberg called Travis Lutter “the Michael Jordan of Jiu-Jitsu” at UFC 67. I hope these guys will start reeling in the hyperbole sometime soon; pushing interest in a fight and gross misrepresentation of fighter skill are very different things.

UFC Fight Night 9 Preview

Wow, so much has been going on in the world of MMA this week and last that my head is still spinning. It is a good thing that we have so much to talk about and so many fights to watch.

UFC Fight Night 9 is airing this Thursday the 5th of April at 8PM on Spike TV and it’s one of the numerous MMA events happening this week. The free UFC fight cards are always a mixed bag. Let’s see what we got this time…

UFC Fight Night 9 - Fight Card and Thoughts:

Main Event, Lightweight: Joe Stevenson (26-7) vs. Melvin Guillard (20-5-2)
On paper the main event has all the ingredients to be an interesting and exciting fight. Melvin Guillard is very explosive in the cage and has knockout power in his hands; many people think of him as a smaller Kevin Randleman. Joe Stevenson has proven himself to be a skilled fighter who has plenty of fights under his belt and wins over a couple of solid guys at 155 lbs.

Guillard will most likely have the edge while they are standing; on the ground it is the other way around. Like any fight, the outcome of this one will come down to which fighter can impose their will and game plan on the other. This is a tough fight to call because we haven’t seen enough of Guillard’s quickly expanding game to know if his takedown defense and standup ability are up to the task against Joe Daddy. If they are, Guillard has the definite edge and this fight should end in a nice ratings-boosting knockout.

The winner of this fight is poised to move into the short list of title fight contenders in the lightweight division. They would probably have one more fight after this before they got a title shot. With those 2+ wins in a row, they would be favored to get a shot at the winner of the Sean Sherk / Hermes Franca match.

I’d love to see Guillard score a brutal knockout and go on to participate in the PRIDE Lightweight GP this year. Pipe dream, I know (probably).

To be broadcast:
Heavyweight: Antoni Hardonk (5-2) vs. Justin McCully (7-3-2)
Unfortunately Frank Mir dropped out of this match due to injury. This fight might help us figure out if Antoni’s last win in the UFC was beginner’s luck or if we may just possibly have another decent addition to the short list of UFC heavyweights.

Lightweight: Kenny Florian (4-3) vs. Dokonjonosuke Mishima (17-5-2)
This is Kenny’s first fight back after being manhandled for five rounds by Sean “The Muscle Shark” Sherk. It will be interesting to see how he does in his comeback against a solid opponent in Mishima. This fight in conjunction with the main event should shine some light on where the fighters near the upper echelons of the UFC Lightweight division stand relative to one another.

May not be broadcast:
Welterweight: Drew Fickett (27-5) vs. Keita Nakamura (13-1-2)
Welterweight: Kuniyoshi Hironaka (10-3) vs. Forrest Petz (12-3)
Lightweight: Kurt Pellegrino (9-2) vs. Nathan Moore (1-1)
Lightweight: Naoyuki Kotani (16-5-5) vs. Thiago Tavares (10-0)
Light Heavyweight: Wilson Gouveia (7-4) vs. Seth Petruzelli (6-3)
Middleweight: Roan Carneiro (10-5) vs. Rich Clementi (24-11-1)

There are a lot of new and relatively unknown fighters on this card. Many folks will look at this as a negative, but not me. MMA, and the UFC specifically, can always use a deeper roster of talented fighters. I am hoping some of these fighters will make this event their coming out party.

Don’t forget that this event is just the lead-in to the season opener of what we’re constantly being told is the most exciting season of The Ultimate Fighter reality show yet. Of course, they would tell us that wouldn’t they? Guess the only way to know for sure is to tune in on Thursday night as BJ Penn, Jens Pulver, and Dana White go at each other with 16 lightweight fighters as their playing chips.