Dillashaw: ‘I Don’t Know If Barao Had Enough Time to Recover from May’s Beating’

UFC bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw certainly isn’t lacking confidence heading into his UFC 177 title defense against Renan Barao. 
The first UFC titleholder in Team Alpha Male history, Dillashaw questioned if his Brazilian counterpart was read…

UFC bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw certainly isn’t lacking confidence heading into his UFC 177 title defense against Renan Barao

The first UFC titleholder in Team Alpha Male history, Dillashaw questioned if his Brazilian counterpart was ready to fight him again based on his comments on Twitter

Dillashaw met Barao at UFC 173 in May, where “The Baron” was riding an incredible 33-fight unbeaten streak. 

While oddsmakers had it down as a quick finish for Barao, “The Viper” had other plans, effortlessly outstriking the champ for four-and-a-half rounds. 

Halfway through the fifth and final round, Dillashaw dropped Barao with a headkick and finally finished him off with subsequent punches on the ground. 

As expected, the matchup was awarded “Fight of the Night” honors, while Dillashaw was predictably awarded a second “Performance of the Night” bonus. 

Dillashaw has won six of his past seven contests, with his sole blemish during that 18-month span being a controversial split-decision loss to Raphael Assuncao in October 2013.

UFC 177 is headlined by Dillashaw vs. Barao II and takes place this Saturday at the Sleep Train Amphitheatre in California.  

Will Barao be able to prove the first fight was a fluke, or will Dillashaw cement himself as the best male fighter at 135 pounds with another convincing victory?

 

John Heinis is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 177 Will Show TJ Dillashaw Has Renan Barao’s Number

It’s funny what conclusions people will jump to when consuming modern media, where click bait abounds and reading a headline is akin to reading the thousand words that follow it in the minds of many.
You needn’t look any further than May’s UFC 173 lead…

It’s funny what conclusions people will jump to when consuming modern media, where click bait abounds and reading a headline is akin to reading the thousand words that follow it in the minds of many.

You needn’t look any further than May’s UFC 173 lead-up, in which a particular intrepid columnist pondered the challenge of one TJ Dillashaw for the bantamweight title. Though the headline suggested Dillashaw had no hope of snatching gold at that event, the argument that followed did nothing to suggest he never would.

In fact, that piece suggested that Dillashaw looked very much like a man who could one day be a champion. That suggestion was made almost verbatim, in fact:

Dillashaw is good. Like, really good. “Potential champion” good.

Now, again, in a world where many believe reading a headline is the equivalent of reading, comprehending and forming an opinion on the argument that follows it, it’s easy to see how some confusion could exist.

When you suggest a man has no hope but save the argument as to why for after, it’s inevitable some people are going to be lost. It’s likely because they couldn’t focus beyond 50 words or so, but so it goes.

Yet the real reason that argument was wrong didn’t come to light until Dillashaw was punching and kicking Barao with considerable ease and frequency at UFC 173. The reason the argument was wrong had nothing to do with ignorance or a vendetta or simply being blind to the facts of life entering that fight. The reason was far more simple than any of that: TJ Dillashaw arrived early.

At a time when the whole sport still saw him as a guy who could fight for a title in 2015 or 2016, he was in the gym working on things no one dared to see coming. People still believe now that he’ll be fighting for a title in 2015 or 2016, but they’re inclined to think he’ll be defending it instead of challenging.

The first Barao fight was a culmination of hard work and dedication to his craft, one that saw Dillashaw marry his natural physical gifts of speed and athleticism with a perfect game plan and an opponent on whom he could unleash it all.

He walked into Las Vegas that night with the looseness and confidence of an uncrowned champion, and it took him less than 25 minutes of work to yank away the crown and legitimize himself.

That’s why Saturday’s main event is so intriguing: this idea that Dillashaw is simply the best guy out there at 135 and Barao no longer is.

Perhaps UFC 173 wasn’t a fluke, but instead the final step in a rise that was evident but was expected to take longer than it did.

Perhaps, for whatever excuses are out there, Dillashaw is the man now and Barao is only five short rounds away from being banished to contendership purgatory alongside guys like Benson Henderson and Junior dos Santos.

Perhaps Dillashaw simply has Barao‘s number.

He certainly looked like a man who does when he became one of the greatest underdog title-winners in UFC history a few months back. He looked like that and everything more.

And even if that’s not the case, no one is going into UFC 177 claiming he doesn’t have a hope. Considering how much of an improvement that already is with fans and pundits, if his performance Saturday is also appropriately improved, you’d have to think it may be Barao who doesn’t have a hope this time.

But we won’t go that far, will we?

 

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

TJ Dillashaw vs. Renan Barao 2: A Head-to-Toe Breakdown

In arguably the biggest and most shocking title upset in UFC history, current bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw dominated former kingpin Renan Barao at UFC 173.
With tactical precision, overwhelming pressure and the sort of five-round conditioning we’…

In arguably the biggest and most shocking title upset in UFC history, current bantamweight champion TJ Dillashaw dominated former kingpin Renan Barao at UFC 173.

With tactical precision, overwhelming pressure and the sort of five-round conditioning we’re not used to seeing, especially in the midst of landing 140 significant strikes, “The Viper” made Barao look like a technician without his tools.

Dillashaw’s commanding performance not only shed light on how dynamic and prolific he can be, but it proved that Barao is in fact mortal and the 135-pound crop heap is more open battleground than closed circuit.

In any case, Barao’s perennial excellence and current pound-for-pound ranking landed him a well-deserved immediate rematch.

That rematch takes place this Saturday at UFC 177 in Sacramento, California—Dillashaw’s home state.

Here is a true head-to-toe breakdown scripting the most anticipated reboot in bantamweight history. 

Begin Slideshow

Barao vs. Dillashaw II: A Complete Guide to UFC 177

Hello. Come in, I’m glad you came. Sit down. Can I get you something to drink? Coffee, distilled water, perhaps something stronger, Nos Active, whiskey?
Great, that’s great. But let’s get down to brass tacks now. I called you in today because I want to…

Hello. Come in, I’m glad you came. Sit down. Can I get you something to drink? Coffee, distilled water, perhaps something stronger, Nos Active, whiskey?

Great, that’s great. But let’s get down to brass tacks now. I called you in today because I want to level with you. I want to be honest. You do appreciate honesty, don’t you? Honest discussions. They make the world go around, in my opinion.

Today’s honest discussion is about UFC 177. That’s right, the one going on this Saturday in Sacramento. 

Well, now that you mention it, no, there will be no rematch between Jon Jones and Alexander Gustafsson. They scuttled that. Nope, no Demetrious Johnson vs. Chris Cariaso, either. They moved that to UFC 178. I know, I’ve seen those ads, too. They just haven’t replaced the old, outdated version. I’m not sure why.

There is still a title fight on the docket. It’s a rematch of Renan Barao and T.J. Dillashaw for the bantamweight belt. Dillashaw knocked him out in their first match. That was three months ago. 

Here’s the bottom line: I’m not saying don’t order UFC 177. I’m not saying don’t watch it, I’m not saying don’t enjoy it. I’m just saying don’t expect it to be something that it’s not, and what it’s not is a top-quality fight card. You have a right to understand that. And you know what else? You don’t have to watch this, if you don’t want to.

Be gimlet-eyed on this one. That’s all I’m suggesting. Sometimes in life, you can make chicken salad out of chicken, you know, leavings. And sometimes you just end up eating leavings.

I’m glad we had this talk. Of course, now there will be five knockouts and five submissions and everyone will come back here and tell me we never should have had this talk. But that won’t change the fact that this pay-per-view card held a notable lack of elite-ness. And you have a right to know that. I’m a public serviceman, after all. A warrior for the truth, if I may. And I wouldn’t be doing my part if I didn’t inform you of the options.

To help you make an even more informed decision, here is a full guide to the 10-fight slate, including information capsules, predictions and viewing coordinates for each and every bout. Thanks again for coming in. 

Begin Slideshow

3 Bantamweight Title Fights We’d Have Preferred over Dillashaw vs. Barao Rematch

At UFC 173 T.J. Dillashaw put on a scientific performance against Renan Barao, dominating the former champion for almost an entire five rounds before putting him away in the middle of the last round. Barao was thought to be unbeatable, and Dillashaw be…

At UFC 173 T.J. Dillashaw put on a scientific performance against Renan Barao, dominating the former champion for almost an entire five rounds before putting him away in the middle of the last round. Barao was thought to be unbeatable, and Dillashaw beat him with near-impunity.

The rematch is set for the main event of UFC 177 on August 30, but there are other fights that may have been a better option for Dillashaw’s first bantamweight title defense. Because of Barao’s previous 33-fight unbeaten streak, he is definitely deserving of a rematch. But after such a one-sided first fight, it would be smart if Barao took on someone else and rematched Dillashaw coming off of a win.  

The top of the UFC’s bantamweight division is vibrant, and there is no shortage of interesting fights for both Dillashaw or Barao. Dominick Cruz is jumping back into the fray at UFC 178, Raphael Assuncao and Brian Caraway have been booked opposite one another in October, and there’s always Urijah Faber, who is looking to return at the end of the year.

With so many viable contenders in the bantamweight division, there were numerous fighters Dillashaw could have faced in his first fight as champion. Here are three fights that would have been preferable over the Dillashaw vs. Barao immediate rematch.

Begin Slideshow

Renan Barao Says He Woke Up in the Locker Room at UFC 173

TJ Dillashaw put on a mesmerizing performance at UFC 173. One person who didn’t get to witness it was the man who was facing Dillashaw in the main event, Renan Barao.
Barao had a media scrum in Brazil that Guilherme Cruz of MMAFight…

TJ Dillashaw put on a mesmerizing performance at UFC 173. One person who didn’t get to witness it was the man who was facing Dillashaw in the main event, Renan Barao.

Barao had a media scrum in Brazil that Guilherme Cruz of MMAFighting.com was able to grab some interesting quotes from.

“I remember everything that happened until that point,” Barao said. “After (that punch), I only woke up in the locker room. The fight was really close in the beginning, but everything changed after that punch.”

The punch Barao mentions is the one landed by Dillashaw in the opening round that floored the Brazilian. Following the knockdown, the former UFC bantamweight champ said he was basically fighting on autopilot.

It’s not the first time we’ve heard of a fighter making it through a rough outing while on autopilot.

Barao also explained that he believes a different result will occur at UFC 177.

“I accepted the fight on short notice and I wasn’t 100 percent ready for it, but this time will be different,” Barao said. “I never trained so hard in my entire life, so it’s going to be different.”

Depending on your view of the UFC 173 clash, this either echoes the fact that Barao didn’t take Dillashaw as a legit contender or seems like an odd excuse. It was Dillashaw stepping in for an injured Raphael Assuncao while Barao should’ve been in the middle of his training camp. Perhaps Barao meant he didn’t have enough time to game-plan, but he shouldn’t have been out of shape.

It’s also shocking to hear that Barao says he doesn’t remember anything after the first knockdown. In the fight against Dillashaw, he still showed signs of life in the second round. He had his moments in the second frame, and despite getting worked over by Dillashaw up until the finish, Barao never seemed to be totally out of it in the way Dos Santos did in his title fight with Cain Velasquez.

But that’s the intrigue the UFC is hoping will turn into pay-per-view buys at UFC 177. Is Dillashaw really as good as he looked at UFC 173? Or was it just a case of Barao not taking a title challenger seriously?

Hopefully MMA fans will have clear answers to those questions following UFC 177 on Aug. 30.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com