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MMA

UFC 110 Main Card Predictions!

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (32-5-1; #3 Heavyweight) vs. Cain Velasquez (7-0; #6 Heavyweight)

The Fighters: Nogueira is one of the few PRIDE vets who was able to successfully transition to the UFC. He won his first two UFC fights, including a win over Tim Sylvia for the UFC title. Since he’s gone 1-1 losing to Frank Mir and beating Randy Couture.

In his UFC stint ‘Nog has been oft-injured. More particularly he’s battled staph infections during his entire UFC tenure. ‘Nog is never one to make excuses but, after the Mir loss it was revealed that he had spent a ton of time in the hospital battling a bad staph infection. It’s hard to argue that the staph didn’t affect his performance in that fight. Not only was he finished for the first time in his illustrious career but he looked old and more then a step slow. Many, myself included, wondered if wear and tear had finally caught up to ‘Nog. However, in his win against Couture he proved that he still has a ton left in the tank. His boxing was as crisp as ever and he showcased his world class ground skills.

Cain Velasquez may be the fastest rising heavyweight prospect the sport has ever seen. He’s 5-0 in the UFC, but more importantly he’s looked better every fight. He proved against Cheick Kongo that he could win a three round war as well as take a punch. As Jordan Breen would say “the man has a great beard.” Ben Rothwell was suppose to be another step up in competition for Velasquez. However, Velasquez took the much bigger and experienced Rothwell down at will and made him look like an amateur. Every test that has been presented to Velasquez he has passed with flying colors.

Breakdown: Odds makers have this fight as a Pick ‘Em and it’s hard to disagree. ‘Nog has great boxing and will have a significant advantage when the fight is standing but, as we saw in the Kongo fight Velasquez isn’t easy to drop. Velasquez will want to shoot early and often and should have no problem getting ‘Nog to the ground. The key question is; will Velasquez be able to control the action on the ground? Velasquez is relentless and can push the pace like no other heavyweight in the UFC can but he’s also never fought a fighter of ‘Nog’s caliber on the ground. ‘Nog has a knack for taking a pounding, but still finding the perfect opportunity to sweep or submit. Even when it looks like he’s on the brink of defeat he’s not, just ask Bob Sapp.

Velasquez is so hyper active on the ground it could end up being reckless. Look for a classic ‘Nog performance as he catches the wrestler off guard with a sweep followed by a textbook submission.

Prediction: Nogueira via Arm-Bar Round 3

Wanderlei Silva (32-10-1) vs. Michael Bisping (18-2)

The Fighters:  Annnnnd cue “Sandstorm!”

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Ok, you can put the glow sticks away now.

Unlike his PRIDE counterpart, Nogueira, Silva did not find immediate success upon entering the UFC.  In fact The Axe Murderer is only 1-3 in the UFC (though you can make a sound argument that he beat Rich Franklin.)  His UFC run has certainly been a disappointment but there’s a lot of reasons to think that he can still turn his career around.  Silva is making his debut at middleweight, dropping from light heavyweight. Silva was always on the small side for a 205 pounder and has said he feels much quicker since dropping the weight.  Silva also underwent facial surgery.  He got his mangled nose repaired and a ton of scar tissue removed.  While the gains of such surgery appear superficial on the surface they are not.  The scar tissue left Silva’s face much more susceptible to cuts, also Silva said the surgery on his nose has helped his breathing tremendously.

Silva certainly earned the nickname The Axe Murderer.  His style is to come straight at you at overwhelm you with strikes and knees from the clinch.  The underrated aspects of Silvas game are his wresting, more then adequate, and his jiu-jitsu.  He never uses either offensively but he’s shown skill in both areas when he’s been forced to.

Bisping is the brash winner of The Ultimate Fighter. I’ve long considered Bisping an overrated fighter whose record was inflated by fighting low level talent. After his decisive loss to Dan Handerson I found myself vindicated. However, in his win over Dennis Kang, Bisping proved the doubters wrong and showed he still has a lot of talent. What impressed me most about Bisping in the Kang fight was his jiu-jitsu. Kang has a tight ground game and Bisping did a great job using his hips to keep Kang off balance. In the later rounds he showed improved wrestling as he dropped Kang with ease.

With an 8-2 UFC record a win over Silva would put Bisping in or around the top 10 and potentially only one or two fights away from a title shot.

Breakdown: Bisping in a lot of ways is similar to Forrest Griffin. He’s tough and he’s well rounded but he doesn’t have one particular skill that’s exceptional, and at the end of the day that can only get you so far. Bisping should look to keep Silva at a distance with his jab and leg kicks, Silva on the other is going to try to showcase his trademark combination of explosiveness and violence and bum rush Bisping with strikes.

Bisping will find himself overwhelmed in the striking game just like he did against Dan Henderson, who really is just a one trick pony. Bisping could work for take-downs but Rich Franklin struggled to take Silva down and Silva’s take down defense should only be better at a lighter weight class.

Prediction: Silva via TKO Round 2

Joe Stevenson (31-10) vs. George Sotiropoulos (11-2)

The Fighters: The hometown hero Sotiropoulos, is a very well rounded fighter. He’s a BJJ Black Belt but he also has an amateur boxing background, in fact in 2004 he won a Victoran State Amateur boxing tournament. Sotiropoulos is 11-2 overall and 4-0 in the UFC. His only two losses are a DQ loss to Shinya Aoki and a split decision loss very early in his career. Sotiropoulos competed on the Ultimate Fighter and made it to the semi-finals before losing in controversial fashion. Sotiropoulos has never been finished in his professional career. As a former welterweight Sotiropoulos is a very large lightweight and is a handful to try to take down. Sotiropoulos is similar stylistically to Paulo Filho. He’s incredibly methodical as he tightly transitions from position to position.

To say Stevenson is veteran would be an understatement. Stevenson fought Jens Pulver when he was only 17 years old! Stevenson is only 27 years old but already has 41 pro bouts on his record. Like Sotiropoulos, Stevenson moved from welterweight to lightweight. Stevenson won his first four fights as a lightweight before getting a shot at the UFC title against B.J Penn. Since losing to Penn it’s been a mixed bag for Stevenson. He looked good against Diaz and Fisher but not so good against Florian and Sanchez.

Stevenson recently teamed up with Greg Jackson and it’s done wonders for his career. Stevenson has gone back to his roots, his wrestling and top game, and is riding a two fight win streak.

Breakdown: Much like ‘Nog vs. Velasquez the question in this fight is; what happens when Stevenson gets Sotiropoulos down. Sotiropoulos has the skills to sweep or submit Joe Daddy. However, what I see being the underrated aspect of this fight is Sotiropoulos boxing. He hasn’t showcased it a ton in his UFC career but you can tell he has actual boxing technique, something we don’t get to see in the UFC often. Joe Daddy might be able to take Sotiropoulos down but I don’t think he’ll be able to keep him down.

Prediction: Sotiropoulos Via Split Decision

Keith Jardine (15-6-1) vs. Ryan Bader (10-0)

The Fighters: Expect the word “unorthodox” to be used to describe Keith Jardine roughly 8,000 times this fight. The former Ultimate Fighter contestant began his career at heavyweight before settling in at 205. Jardine is 6-5 in the UFC but has faced top competition for most of the past three years. Jardine holds wins over contenders Brandon Vera, Forrest Griffin and Chuck Liddell. Jardine is well rounded, trains at a great camp (Greg Jackson) and has a unorthodox (Ding!) striking style that keeps opponents off guard. He likes to use his leg kicks, some of the best in the sport, and his jab to keep distance from opponents.

Ryan “Darth” Bader won his season of The Ultimate Fighter. When watching him on TUF you got the sense that not only did he have the raw skills to be a TUF champ but a UFC champ one day. A two time All-American wrestler at Arizona State University and a three-time PAC 10 Champion, Baders 120 wins ranks him 8th on the all-time wins list for ASU. Bader was college teammates with current UFC competitors Cain Velasquez and C.B. Dollaway. Bader is 3-0 in the UFC.

Breakdown: Where Bader struggles is on his feet. He has tremendous power but his striking arsenal is limited to a single Dan Henderson style overhand right. The UFC has protected him in the stand up game by feeding him grapplers and weaker wrestlers early in his career (Magalhaes, Marerro, Schafer.) That’s why Jardine is a bigger test then people realize. How’s Bader going to react to leg kicks? Will he check them properly or are we heading for Robbie Lawler territory (if you underestimate the importance of leg kicks look no further then Griffin/Rampage where Forrest essentially won a title because of them.) How will Bader react if he gets tagged? These things are unknowns with Bader. As for Jardine we’ve seen that he’s most vulnerable when facing a striker with K.O power. Of his five losses three came within the first minutes of the fight (W. Silva, T. Silva, Alexander.) Where Jardine excels is when he’s forced to wrestle and scramble.

Bader is a great wrestler and should be able to take Jardine down at will but even Rampage Jackson had trouble holding Jardine down for three rounds.

Prediction: Jardine via TKO Round 3

Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic (25-7-2) vs. Ben Rothwell (30-7)

The Fighters: Wild Boys…Wild Boys….Wild Boys!

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It’s been a quick and sudden fall for Cro-Cop who was once unanimously considered the third best heavyweight in the world. The one time PRIDE star has found almost no success in the Octagon. He’s 2-3 in the cage but his wins have been over meek competition (Eddie Sanchez and Mastapha-Al-Turk.) I’ve written about Mirko’s struggles at length. Mirko would blame his struggles on the lack of a proper training regimen and a mental block in the Octagon, I would simply blame them on age. PRIDE fighters tend to age in dog years and all those years of tournament fighting seem to have caught up to him.

Ben Rothwell came into the UFC with a fair amount of hype. The 28 year old was considered a borderline top 10 heavyweight and he racked up an impressive record fighting in the now defunct IFL. Somehow the UFC had always eluded him. Rothwell’s UFC debut didn’t go as planned as he was manhandled by Cain Velasquez.

Breakdown: Cro-Cop is on the small side for a heavyweight and relies on his kickboxing. In fact, Cro-Cop has basically made a career off of jab-head kick. Rothwell is a monster of a man, tipping the scales at 260 plus. Rothwell also relies on his kick boxing but he doesn’t have the same technical acumen as Cro-Cop. Rothwell is a mauler and brawler, not a counter puncher. That fact should bode well for Mirko.

Prediction: Cro Cop via KO, Head Kick, Round 1

…Hey we all can dream.

    For More UFC 110 Coverage:

UFC 110 Undercard Predictions

UFC 110 Walkout Shirts from the 3rd String Store!

NBA

NBA Trade Talk: Okafor Already On The Way Out?

After Byron Scott was rightfully fired, the New Orleans Hornets appear to be making their second major move of what is a very early NBA season. According to Rotoworld, the Hornets are discussing a deal that would send Emeka Okafor to the Kings for Kenny Thomas.

“The Kings are discussing a trade that would send Kenny Thomas to New Orleans in exchange for center Emeka Okafor. The move would be a salary dump for New Orleans, as Thomas’ $8.7 million is expiring this season. Okafor, on the other hand, is due about $62 million over the next five seasons.”

Even if this trade does not happen and the teams only reach the discussion phase, it is painfully obvious that now head coach Jeff Bower has given up on the year. At 3-7, the Hornets are a team in total transition. They have no bench to speak of, every single free agent pick (Peja, Mo Peterson, and James Posey) has been a huge disappointment, and now Chris Paul could be out several weeks with an ankle injury. Not only are they losing, but the games haven’t been close. Three out of their last four losses have been by 17, 16, and 20 points respectively. But with all that being said, does this trade make sense?

Even at 3-7, the Hornets do have a chance of making the playoffs. Right now the Kings and Rockets are pegged in as the 7th and 8th seeds. Do we really think they can last for the next 70 games? A healthy Chris Paul and David West along with Emeka Okafor could buy you an 8th seed in the West, but that shouldn’t be the answer. With little chance of making noise in May, maybe the Hornets should dump Okafor, land themselves in the lottery and pick amongst what is expected to be one of the deepest draft classes in years.

Now if I am the Kings, I do not touch Okafor with a ten foot pole. With the amount he is owed in the future, his production just does not equate that much money. Sacramento’s problem is not in the front court. Spencer Hawes and more specifically Jason Thompson have been on the rise and are seemingly reaching their potential. Okafor would detract from that progression. What the Kings need is another swingman that can play alongside Kevin Martin and Tyreke Evans, not a center.

Jason’s take:

Was about to write about this so here’s my take.  The Hornets best bet is to tank this year, get a really high lottery pick and shed as many bad contracts as possible in the process.  Are they winning a title, or even a playoff series, with a core of Paul, West and Oakfor? No.  Paul will get pissed, turn down his 2012/13 option and flee the Big Easy as fast as he can  (effectively killing basketball in New Orleans.)  The Hornets have made the same mistake the Cavs did with LeBron.  They kept trying to put a band aid on their problems instead of surrounding their superstar, Paul, with young athletic talent he can grow with.  Look at what the Thunder have done.  Durant loves, and that’s an understatement, his teammates. Do you think he’s going anywhere when they are set up to have a dominant run?  Paul would be unhappy in the short term but cap space and throwing alley-oops to Derrick Favors would make him smile.

For the Kings…in a word yuck?  Have the Maloof’s really fooled themselves into thinking they have a good enough team to make a run now?  They have a nice young core (Evans, Thompson and Hawes) why would you take away playing time from them by trading for a mediocre injury prone defensive forward with a killer, understatement, contract.  Maybe, and that’s a giant maybe, you can make the 8 seed in the West with a starting 5 of Evans, Martin, Nocioni, Hawes/Thompson, Oakfor but isn’t that your ceiling?  Trading for Oakfor kills your cap space for the rest of eternity and essentially locks you into that group.

The NBA where stupidity happens.

MMA

The Ultimate Fighter 10: Episode 3 – The Ultimate Disappointment

Did the biggest fight in the history of the Ultimate Fighter live up to the hype? In a word, no.

Kimbo vs Roy Nelson was a disappointment. A major disappointment. Either Kimbo was suppose to pull off the underdog win or Roy Nelson was suppose to dominate and show why, despite his…um…shape, he’s considered a top 25 heavyweight in the world. Somehow, neither happened.

This is not what anyone hoped for.

Early in Round 1 Nelson did a good job of keeping Kimbo at bay with his jab. Kimbo couldn’t get off any flurries and the first minute and a half of the round saw both fighters circling not doing a whole lot. Kimbo did land a solid combo but in the process got pushed up against the cage and far, far out of his element. Kimbo did a solid job of defending Nelsons first take-down attempt but Nelson persisted and eventually landed a trip take-down that put Kimbo on his back. From there Nelson seamlessly moved into mount. However, instead of posturing up and landing solid shots Nelson played it safe. Nelson moved to sidemount and eventually into the crucifix position, commonly known as “Hughes/Newton.”

From this position, where the top guy isolates one of his opponents arms with his legs, it’s difficult to land solid punches. However, it’s a hard position to escape…especially when you have a skilled ju-jitsu fighter with a 25 pound weight advantage on top of a guy who can’t spell ju-jitsu (his quote, not mine.) So for a solid 35 seconds Roy landed baby punches and hammer fists t the top of Kimbos head. Kimbo made a valiant attempt to escape but it was to no avail.

Now this brings up a point of contention that will probably be greatly debated this week, did the fight deserved to be stopped at the end of round 1?

My initial reaction was absolutely. Nelson had Slice pinned and was landing unanswered shots…no matter how hard they may or may not have been. By the book the rule is “intelligently defending yourself” and Slice wasn’t intelligently defending himself. His legs weren’t bucking, his hips were flat, he wasn’t making an attempt to reverse position. While Dana White would disagree, it was too difficult from our angle, or really any angle, to see how hurt Slice was. Herb Dean said “Kimbo you have to fight back” and then let 20 seconds go by without any defense from Slice. Like it or not, the fight should have been stopped at the tail end of Round 1.

The fight wasn’t stopped and Kimbo almost mounted a great comeback. In Round 2 Kimbo came out swinging and landed some serious shots right out of the gate. He had Nelson rocked but made a rookie mistake. While his momentum was taking him backward Slice attempted a knee. Unfortunately gravity dictates that type of move will result with you on your back. It reminded me of Mir/Lesnar II when Mir started to land some solid shots standing and then went for a jumping knee. Why are you attempting a jumping knee when you want to stay on your feet?!?

The rest of Round 2 was a carbon copy of Round 1. Nelson move to side-mount, crucifix position and landed 20 unanswered shots (as his teammates counted along) before Herb Dean had seen enough. After the fight, Nelson was incredibly cocky and Dana White was incredibly angry.

This is not what anyone hoped for.

In victory Nelson looked like crap. He needed an impressive win to shed both Whites, and the public’s impression, that he’s more then just a tub of goo. Instead of punishing Kimbo from mount, or submitting him (Kimbo basically gave him his arm and said “arm bar me, please”) he played it safe. Yes, a win is a win but the problem is (outside of the MMA hardcore) no one knows who he is. His physical appearance is going to prevent people from taking him seriously.

When I heard Kimbo was going to be on TUF I thought “Ok, he’ll win one fight…fight a grappler and lose. He’ll get a few UFC fights, and then never be heard from again.” I tuned in for the Kimbo spectacle, while most people tuned in because “dude, that guys a street-fighter…he’s going to beat everyone!” Yet isn’t it bizzare that in defeat I gained more respect for Kimbo the MMA fighter then the public will. While it’s “Kimbo put up a solid fight against a former IFL Champion” to me to most it’s “why did that fat-ass just lay on Kimbo?”

This is not what anyone hoped for.

NCAAF

College Football ‘09: Alabama Crimson Tide

For the next few weeks our very own Jordan Lauterbach will be previewing the upcoming 2009 College Football season. Each day, he will be posting a new preview so be sure to check in everyday.

Last Season: 12-2, lost to Utah in Sugar Bowl

Resurrection came a year early for Nick Saben and the Alabama Crimson Tide. A three year plan skyrocketed to the present when Alabama shocked the country and won the SEC West. A SEC title game loss to Florida and a bad bowl game loss to Utah may have dampened the memories for a little bit, but now Alabama is ready to both embrace and build on the season that snuck up on all of us.

But doing so may be easier said than done. The Tide will have to hope that the loss of starting quarterback, John Parker Wilson and running back, Glenn Coffee doesn’t have to much of a negative effect. But if history is any judge, loosing your record breaking quarterback and top rusher never bodes well for building.

To avoid having to start over again, the Alabama offense will rest its hopes on quarterback Greg McElroy and running back Mark Ingram.

One thing that benefits McElroy is his experience. He has sat behind Wilson for two years after being redshirted in his first season. In limited action last season, McElroy completed 8 of 11 passes for 123 yards, one touchdown, and threw one pick. However, if I’m looking for reasons to get excited about McElroy is that he knows the playbook inside and out. That’s a positive. Whether he succeeds or not is anybodies guess. His stat line, although interesting to look at, is too small to make any bold predictions.

McElroy is helped by the return of sophomore receiver Julio Jones. Jones had an outstanding freshman campaign. He caught 58 passes for 924 yards and four touchdowns last season. Unless McElroy is downright dreadful, I would expect Jones’ 2009 stats to, at the very least, stay the same- if not improve a great deal.

But Jones alone does not give the Tide a dangerous passing attack. McElroy will need contributions from Mike McCoy, Earl Alexander, and Marquis Maze to contribute. None of these players saw a tone of action last season. Mike McCoy is the most experienced of the group. McCoy caught 16 balls for 191 yards and one touchdown last season. The offense will certainly need a better year from one of these three to complement Jones.

What may put even more pressure on the passing game is a running game that will not be quite as dangerous as it was last season. The 1000+ yards and 10 touchdowns that Glen Coffee brought are gone. The Tide will now be relying on Mark Ingram. Ingram had a nice season last year, rushing for 728 yards and 12 touchdowns. But the real question is how much of Ingram’s production was because of Coffee’s presence. If Ingram can handle starting running back carries, the running game won’t miss a beat. But if he can’t, the late season rushing game might suffer severely. Also look for big time recruit Trent Richardson to make an impact. Richardson is drawing comparisons to a young Emmit Smith

But as important as Ingram is to the running game, one can make an argument that the rebuilt offensive line is just as much a question mark. The loss of nutcase left tackle Andre Smith and All-American Antoine Caldwell hurts the line tremendously. James Carpenter, a junior college transfer, and William Vlachos will try and fill those large shoes. I would be concerned about the offensive line, particularly how it affects the running game. Yes, Coffee and Ingram had an outstanding season, but how much of that had to do with an outstanding line?

It’s a concern- most likely the biggest that ‘Bama has coming into 2009.

Offense is where the problem areas for Alabama may arise, defense is another story. The Tide only lost two starters off a defense that ranked second in the nation in stoping the run and third in total defense. While loosing Rashad Jones hurts, it certainly could be a lot worse. Assuming that none of the starters get hurt or decline in production, the defense will be just as good- probably better.

The biggest concern is how the offense transitions with a new quarterback and a new starting running back. I could see this Alabama team struggling to score. Expect a lot of 14-7 games, especially early in the year.

After last year, it might be a season filled with disappointment in Tuscaloosa

3 Games To Watch

September 5th- @ Virginia Tech- A brutal way to open the schedule. Coming off a slashing of Cincinnati in the Orange Bowl last year, Virginia Tech looks to again be a top team in the A.C.C. A fantastic opening weekend game could put ‘Bama in a hole early.

October 10th- @Ole Miss- 5-3 in the SEC last year, Ole Miss projects to be one of the nations most improved teams this year. Picked by The Sporting News to finish first, Ole Miss and Jevon Sneed could return Ole Miss to national prominence quickly. If Alabama has any hopes to make it back to SEC championship game, they will need to win this one.

November 7th- LSU- A Les Miles coached team is always a tough play. If ‘Bama is still in the hunt for an SEC west title, this is the game that could decide it… and don’t think LSU has forgotten that overtime loss last year at home.

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