With our usual keeper of the MMA Gradebook, the esteemed Mr. Kevin
Wilson, indisposed this week, we might normally have let this
column have a week off as well -- that is, if the Ultimate Fighting Championship had not offered
up a card that ended up boasting not one, but two early candidates
for “Fight of the Year.”
However, if there were ever an event that called for the Gradebook, UFC 236 was it, with its mix of all-time barnburners and relative duds. Here to help the DVR crowd navigate its way through the must-see as well as the must-skip fights from Saturday in Atlanta is your humble substitute columnist. Below are all 13 fights from UFC 236: Holloway vs. Poirier 2, rated for, as Mr. Wilson says, "competitiveness, showcase of skill and technique, finishes, and the story and heightened drama of the contest." I will do so without spoiling the outcomes, except in those few cases where, in my opinion, the fight is not worth watching; any fight rated 2.0 or higher is guaranteed spoiler-free.
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The night got off to a hot start with a wild bantamweight scrap
that was a whole lot of fun while it lasted. The second round alone
packed more action into a minute and change than some other fights
on this card managed from bell to bell. Rousing back-and-forth
action on the feet and a stunning reversal of fortune make this one
well worth your time. [3.25]
What had been an interesting contest between two flyweight hopefuls
fizzled out late through a combination of fatigue and a boneheaded
strategic error. In the relative power vacuum of women’s flyweight,
and with both women entering this fight off of losses, the stakes
make it worth a look -- after all, anyone who wins a fight in this
division is practically in the Top 15 right now. [2.25]
Slight spoiler, but there isn’t much here worth watching unless
Soukhamthath stole your girlfriend recently and you really just
wanted to see him catch an ass-whupping. It’s mildly interesting
for the full gamut of offensive techniques on display from “Quik,”
as well as Soukhamthath’s gameness and grit. [1.75]
Two men entered the Octagon with something to prove -- both were
coming in having lost their last outing in the ultra-competitive
Ultimate Fighting Championship welterweight
division -- and we were rewarded with a scrap that was surprisingly
entertaining, considering how one-sided it was for long stretches.
The loser here has a crystal-clear lesson to take back to the
drawing board, and it only remains to be seen if he can shore up
the glaring weaknesses that were exposed in the cage Saturday
night. [2.0]
A fight this short is, almost by definition, worth your time. This
one is no exception. Nasty early finish that, upon replay, shows
itself to have been a nifty bit of technical work. It’s always
impressive when one fighter can get this good a read on the other
in such a short time. [3.5]
This fight had all the earmarks of a prelim banger. Griffin may
have been fighting for his job, with losses in his previous two
outings and an overall 3-4 mark in the UFC, and he and Imadaev
apparently had some personal animus stemming from a previous stint
training together. Unfortunately, whatever training these two did
together did not involve enough cardio, as both men appeared badly
gassed by the first minute of Round 2. Catch this one if you’re in
suspense about Griffin’s career arc or you just really enjoy
watching welterweights breathe at each other with open mouths.
[1.5]
Once again, going by the principle that a first-round finish is not
asking for much of the viewer’s time, this one is certainly worth a
few minutes of yours. The two men entered on nearly opposite arcs,
as Reis had struggled to remain relevant in the wake of his
disastrous title shot against Demetrious
Johnson, while Pantoja had been stringing together victories,
looking for a true signature win and almost certainly wondering if
there would be a flyweight belt left to fight for by the time he
got there. Go see which one took a step in the right direction.
[3.0]
Slight spoiler here once again, but this fight looked pretty much
the way you would imagine an actual meeting between a tarantula and
a steamroller: one-sided, but kind of slow and predictable. Give
this one a miss unless you’re personally invested in one of the
combatants or you really find Frevola’s accent adorable. [1.25]
A clash -- a rematch, no less -- between two of the more ridiculous
fighters in the light heavyweight division, and it delivered
exactly what it promised… sort of. This fight was a mess, and one
fighter in particular showed off some of the worst cardio I have
ever seen from a Top-15, non-heavyweight in the UFC. The only
saving grace is that this thing did not go the distance. [2.0]
The hook and the charm of the average Jouban fight is that he’s an
incredibly good-looking man -- a literal magazine model -- who
fights as if he doesn’t give a damn about his face. Matched up
against another willing striker in Grant, he would seem to be a
shoo-in for a main card barnburner and potential “Fight of the
Night.” However, it was not to be -- even before the historic
one-two that topped the card an hour later. This bout is proof that
not every close fight is exciting, and porous striking defense does
not equal a brawl. [1.75]
When UFC matchmaker Sean Shelby put this fight together, he
probably looked at these two and saw similarities. Both men are
burly athletes with flawed, but incredibly dangerous standup, and
with their backs to the proverbial wall; Rountree was coming off a
loss, Anders off two straight. The matchup seemed to offer
fireworks, but what it delivered was more of a carpet bombing, and
an early candidate for “Beatdown of the Year.” I was stunned by the
winner’s performance, as it is one of the most impressive upgrades
in skill and technique from one fight to the next that I have ever
seen in an established UFC fighter. [2.5]
This is the motherlode, baby. I do not know whether Mr. Wilson
would have given this fight a perfect five stars, so consider my
rating here unofficial, but the interim middleweight title fight is
easily the “Fight of the Year” so far. It offered everything you
want in a five-round title fight -- huge swings of momentum, true
moments of peril for both fighters and the high drama of going into
the championship rounds with the outcome still very much in doubt.
Going into the fight, nagging questions hovered over both men’s
heads: how would “The Last Stylebender” deal with forward pressure
from a truly gifted and determined wrestler, and would former
welterweight Gastelum be able to navigate the ridiculous reach
advantage of one of the tallest, rangiest middleweights on the UFC
roster? Not only were those questions answered, they were answered
in such a way as to make both men come out looking good. Viewers
hoping to see one or both fighters “exposed” will be disappointed
here, as both cemented themselves as legitimate Top-5
middleweights. [5.0]
I am trying, and thus far failing, to think of another mixed
martial arts event with two fights this good at the top. The
interim lightweight title fight between featherweight king Holloway
and the red-hot Poirier is at worst the third-best fight of 2019.
Going in, the storylines wrote themselves; the stakes could not
have been higher, as the winner would be all but guaranteed a shot
at pound-for-pound stalwart Khabib
Nurmagomedov later this year. Holloway and Poirier are two of
the most likeable fighters in the UFC, genial family men who wear
their emotions -- and their fierce competitive streaks -- on their
sleeves. Leading up to UFC 236, a majority of fans seemed to lean
in the direction of “Blessed,” believing his relentless storm of
offense would be too much for Poirier, and the oddmakers responded
in kind, installing Holloway as a comfortable favorite. Once the
fight started, however, it did not take long to see that Poirier’s
punching power was an x-factor that the books had not fully
accounted for. By the end of the first round, to use a well-worn
cliché, we had a fight on our hands. I won’t spoil anything
further, but simply say that going into the final round, it was
still anyone’s fight. Miss this one at your mortal peril. [4.5]
However, if there were ever an event that called for the Gradebook, UFC 236 was it, with its mix of all-time barnburners and relative duds. Here to help the DVR crowd navigate its way through the must-see as well as the must-skip fights from Saturday in Atlanta is your humble substitute columnist. Below are all 13 fights from UFC 236: Holloway vs. Poirier 2, rated for, as Mr. Wilson says, "competitiveness, showcase of skill and technique, finishes, and the story and heightened drama of the contest." I will do so without spoiling the outcomes, except in those few cases where, in my opinion, the fight is not worth watching; any fight rated 2.0 or higher is guaranteed spoiler-free.
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Brandon Davis vs. Randy Costa
Lauren Mueller vs. Poliana Botelho
Montel Jackson vs. Andre Soukhamthath
Curtis Millender vs. Belal Muhammad
Boston Salmon vs. Khalid Taha
Max Griffin vs. Zelim Imadaev
Wilson Reis vs. Alexandre Pantoja
Jalin Turner vs. Matt Frevola
Ovince St. Preux vs. Nikita Krylov
Alan Jouban vs. Dwight Grant
Eryk Anders vs. Khalil Rountree
Kelvin Gastelum vs. Israel Adesanya
Max Holloway vs. Dustin Poirier
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