Showing posts with label ufc 185. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ufc 185. Show all posts

Saturday, March 14, 2015

UFC 185 : Hendricks vs Brown

Johnny Hendricks (-320) vs. Matt Brown (+260)


After a few relatively easy fights. Johnny Hendricks has been involved in three straight 5 round wars, two of which he lost. Depending on which end of the cage you were sitting at, one could easily argue he won those two. They were that close. He lost the UFC Welterweight title without a single defense. But Hendricks remains in the elite tier of the world's welterweights. Hendricks is a top-level wrestler. Not just pure wrestler, but MMA wrestler. His single and double set ups from striking are devastating. He is superb at maintaining top-control and punishing his opponent, albeit his ground and pound is not vicious a la Tito Ortiz. Hendricks wrestling is at a level where he could conceivably win every fight via decision. But he made his name with highlight KO's of Jon Fitch and Martin Kampmann from with power from a left hand that forgives no one. Hendricks has good boxing with a decent tie ups and clinch work. He tends to overpower his opponent and use wrestling hand and arm control to win the clinch. He unveiled good kicks in his last few fights, but a kickboxer he is not.


In Matt Brown he faces an iron willed warrior. Brown is not excellent at any one thing, except moving forward and pushing his opponent. He posses above average power but not lights power like Hendricks. He prefers stand up and can stuff some takedowns. His kickboxing is good albeit limited. His strength again, is his will and tenacity. He will take punishment and not let up. He will push his opponent's heart. His fight with Erick Silva is the perfect example. Silva albeit a talented young fighter had no answer for a man willing to die in the cage. Brown also lost a decision to Robbie Lawler because he faced a much better and skilled striker. Lawler chose when to engage and how. Brown needs a dog fight, his opponent to abandon a gameplan and slug. He has been successful in baiting oppnents into his game, but has almost no answers when they don't.

Johnny Hendricks has all the tools to win and control any fight. But he has fallen in love with knocking people out. I will never believe that someone who learns to strike in his later years can become a better striker than a lifelong pugilist. They may know the technique and be able to copy it, but it will not compare to that of a pure striker. Just like someone like Alistair Overeem will never become an elite wrestler. His love for striking is the only way for Hendricks to lose this fight. If he allows himself to be baited into a fire fight with Matt Brown there is a high likely hood he could go to sleep. Matt Brown can take a punch, he has to, his defense is full of holes. But he can also dish it out in the midst of his opponent's onslaught. If Hendricks decides he can stand and bang with Brown instead of utilizing his wrestling, Brown has the tools to turn the tide. Hendricks has shown in previous fights to have a tank that runs low from time to time. His wrestling has allowed him to surpass those moments and he needs to keep that in mind during this fight. He can't let rounds slip as this is only a three round fight. Hendricks has shown increased cage IQ, so unless he abandons all he's learned I expect him to win a grueling three round decision. Matt Brown has yet to KO'd in his career, I don't expect Hendricks to change that.

UFC 185: Pettis Vs. Dos Anjos

UFC LIGHTWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP
Anthony Pettis (-430) vs. Rafael dos Anjos (+435)

Interesting match-up in the main event. Since his uneventful defeat at the lay and pray of Clay Guida, Anthony Pettis has looked every bit of the dynamic athlete he promised to be in his WEC days. After proving he could wrestle against Jeremy Stephens, Pettis has finished his last four opponents including former UFC/WEC champion Ben Henderson and former Strikeforce champion Gilbert Melendez, both had never been finished at that point. He has done it not only with athleticism but a very high skill level as well as cage IQ. He strikes unexpectedly and does not lose an opening. Against Melendez, some may argue Pettis lost the first round. Melendez rushed and pressured him against the cage and controlled the round, not giving Pettis the space he loves to perform. In round two, Melendez left an opening, was rocked by a strike and quickly finished in a classic guillotine choke. Small mistakes and failure to impose their game plan will cost any Pettis opponent dearly.


In Rafael dos Anjos, Pettis finds an opponent almost as gifted and probably larger and stronger. Dos Anjos is riding his own 3 fight win streak finishing 2 of those including the first ever knockout of Ben Henderson. He is an exceptional Thai kickboxer with vicious and accurate kicks. Beating Donald Cerrone goes a long way towards opening people's eyes to your stand up skills. Yet in 30 professional bouts he has only registered 8 KO's. He does have 11 submissions on his resume but hasn't submitted an opponent since 2012. He does have the physical attributes to hang with Pettis but for how long? Dos Anjos has shown the ability to employ a game plan, follow it to a decision victory. But Pettis is not run of the mill opponent.

One of the rarely discussed aspects of the fight game is footwork. But I emphasize it tremendously. A few MMA fighters possess next level footwork. Georges St. Pierre, Jon Jones, Anderson Silva. Anthony Pettis is nearing that level. If a fighter can control where the fight takes place he controls the outcome. That's where Pettis has the largest advantage. Dos Anjos is a solid wrestler and BJJ practioner but Pettis learned plenty in his loss to Clay Guida. since that loss, his takedown defense has been exceptional. Assuming Pettis can stuff the takedown, his fluid mobility on the feet will confound dos Anjos and keep him guessing. While dos Anjos is solid in the kicking game, Pettis is creative and deadly. He strikes from anywhere, anytime with accuracy and power. While his opponent is trying to time a leg kick Pettis is busy doing Crescent kicks or wheel kicks or some new invention we've never seen. He is a showman with victory on his mind. While dos Anjos is not merely another opponent, he will face the same fate as the previous contenders. I look for 2nd round finish via ref stoppage by strikes. Pettis will catch dos Anjos in a scramble and finish him brilliantly.