Jon
Jones has won his last 10 bouts, finishing eight of them. | Photo:
Al Bello/Zuffa LLC/UFC/Getty
The
Ultimate Fighting Championship has put on 34 individual fights
so far in April, with 11 more coming at you on Saturday in
Baltimore. The most important bout is the 45th and final match of
the month. The
UFC
172 main event is a title defense by one of the company’s best
fighters in light heavyweight champion
Jon Jones. The
physical wounds from Jones’ last fight have all healed. The
question remains: How will “Bones” rebound mentally after the
toughest fight of his career? The UFC is more than happy to deliver
the answer to your television set in radiating high-definition for
a mere $54.99.
Photo:
Dave mandel/Sherdog.com
Davis is on the move at 205.
How We Got Here: Jones and challenger
Glover
Teixeira finally landed at the lazily named Baltimore Arena
following a few false starts. After Jones defeated
Alexander
Gustafsson at UFC 165, the time and location for the champion’s
next fight floated around for months. For reasons one can only
speculate, the Jones-Teixeira matchup was announced or rumored to
headline UFC 169, UFC 170 and UFC 171 before finally stopping at
UFC 172. I for one will only believe the match is actually going
down when the two are finally locked in the same cage ...
Phil Davis
finds himself in title-fight discussions after scoring a
controversial decision over
Lyoto
Machida -- in Brazil of all places. Opponents were scarce for
the former Penn State Nittany Lion since most of the division was
busy with other fights, not to mention the next few title
challengers are more or less already lined up. Davis’ foe is former
welterweight, former middleweight and current light heavyweight
Anthony
Johnson. The Blackzilians representative returns to the Octagon
on a six-fight winning streak, the last three of which came inside
the
World Series of Fighting organization. Johnson has an
opportunity to jump right into the top 10 with a win over Davis ...
Former
Strikeforce
champion
Luke
Rockhold is back to his winning ways after defeating
Costas
Philippou in January. The victory represented a crucial step
towards getting the taste of a devastating knockout loss to
Vitor
Belfort out of his mouth. He will face Time Boetsch in what
will be the 10th UFC fight for “The Barbarian.”
Path to Greatness: It seems safe to say the UFC’s
light heavyweight belt remains wrapped around Jones’ waist thanks
to one spinning back elbow in the fourth round of his last fight.
Gustafsson seemed well on his way to dethroning “Bones” until that
devastating strike halted his momentum. This was the first real
stumbling block for Jones’ title reign. He had grown accustomed to
easily dismantling his opposition, rarely losing rounds or failing
to finish a foe. The road may only get tougher from here. That is a
scary thought considering Jones already handled
Mauricio
Rua,
Quinton
Jackson,
Lyoto
Machida,
Rashad
Evans and others. A fresh crop of contenders are chomping at
the bit for the 26-year-old. After Teixeira, Gustafsson expects a
rematch, followed by a grudge match with Olympian
Daniel
Cormier, provided he can get past
Dan
Henderson at
UFC
173. Jones’ resume is highlighted by wins over a who’s who of
light heavyweight royalty, but his next three fights may represent
the most difficult stretch of his career. If he is still champion
after running that gauntlet, a serious Greatest of All-Time
discussions need to happen.
Photo: D.
Mandel/Sherdog.com
Johnson will get his second chance.
Opportunity Knocks Twice: Fighters receiving
second chances litter the UFC 172 lineup.
Chris Beal
opens the card after winning a fight outside of the UFC following a
stint on Season 18 of “The Ultimate Fighter” reality series. No
second chance is more significant than Johnson’s, though. A rocky
11-fight UFC run saw the now 30-year-old miss weight three times,
the final misstep on the scales coming in a losing effort to
Belfort at UFC 142. The former top prospect was immediately cut by
the UFC. “Rumble” now rides six wins in a row, having settled in
the more appropriate light heavyweight division. Johnson is poised
to show doubters he deserved the hype he accumulated early in his
career. Defeating the world-ranked Davis in the co-main event of a
Jones-headlined pay-per-view will do a lot for a fighter’s
image.
Say What: Since Jones defeated Davis’
Alliance MMA teammate, Gustafsson, by the skin of his teeth at
UFC 165, “Mr. Wonderful” has been uncharacteristically vocal. The
verbal poking and prodding of the champion has proven to be one of
the surprises of 2014 thus far. Davis said Jones would crumble like
shortbread, criticized him for trying to match his way out of tough
fights and questioned whether he will even show up in Baltimore.
Everyone pray to the MMA gods that the Zuffa production staff puts
Jones and Davis in the same warm-up area. Oh, to be a fly on the
wall in there. “He may not fight at UFC 172. It’s not too late for
him to back out of this one. It’s happened before. I’m just saying
it might happen again,” Davis told MMAJunkie.com.
Awards Watch: We found
Jim Miller’s
ceiling against fighters like
Benson
Henderson and
Nate Diaz. The
New Jersey native demolishes just about everyone else.
Yancy
Medeiros looks like he could fall into the “everyone else”
category, especially on short notice. Miller should have his way
with the Hawaiian and walk away with a $50,000 performance bonus
... Rockhold’s ceiling is another matter. Only a knockout loss to
Belfort in Brazil has managed to slow the
American Kickboxing Academy standout’s rise. Rockhold will make
a big and violent statement against the rugged but not nearly as
polished Boetsch ... You cannot help but be tempted to lean towards
Joseph
Benavidez and Tim Elliot for “Fight of the Night,” but the
Team Alpha Male ace might finish the fight too early. Keep an
eye on
Max
Holloway and Benavidez’s teammate,
Andre Fili,
in the main card’s opening bout. The two featherweights are
resilient, exciting fighters. Expect 15 minutes of back-and-forth
action.