Wednesday Links: Travis Browne’s Anti-Wrestling Elbows, Details on TUF: Latin America, The World’s Most Violent Plants + More

(“And after your opponent hits the ground, make sure you walk away with your arms raised, like you just performed the world’s greatest magic trick.” / Funny stuff from Mixed Martial Animations)

A Cheerful Nick Diaz Reacts to the News of Shogun Rua’s Mugging in Brazil (PopCandiesTV)

Hector Lombard ‘Not Impressed’ by Fellow UFC Contender Matt Brown (MMAJunkie)

Jason DeLucia vs. Trent Jenkins: Previously Unseen Alternate Bout From UFC 1 (YouTube)

Managers Express Concerns Over Bellator’s Sticky Contracts (BloodyElbow)

Rosters, Start Date For TUF: Latin America Revealed (FiveOuncesofPain)

TJ Dillashaw Hitting Pads on an Airplane (UFC Instagram)

The 2014 NBA Playoff Coaches and Their Serial Killer Equivalents (HolyTaco)

Meet Cherie DeVille: Adult Film Star, Gamer and Doctor (EveryJoe)

What Your Choice of Social Media Says About You (Guyism)

Quiz: How Much Do You Know About the ‘Wolfenstein’ Series? (EscapistMagazine)

Bras Optional — 41 Photos (Radass)

The World’s Most Violent Plants (Ranker)

Tetyana Veryovkina: Lingerie Model of the Day (DrunkenStepfather)

Not My Best Day: The Friend Zone (PopHangover)


(“And after your opponent hits the ground, make sure you walk away with your arms raised, like you just performed the world’s greatest magic trick.” / Funny stuff from Mixed Martial Animations)

A Cheerful Nick Diaz Reacts to the News of Shogun Rua’s Mugging in Brazil (PopCandiesTV)

Hector Lombard ‘Not Impressed’ by Fellow UFC Contender Matt Brown (MMAJunkie)

Jason DeLucia vs. Trent Jenkins: Previously Unseen Alternate Bout From UFC 1 (YouTube)

Managers Express Concerns Over Bellator’s Sticky Contracts (BloodyElbow)

Rosters, Start Date For TUF: Latin America Revealed (FiveOuncesofPain)

TJ Dillashaw Hitting Pads on an Airplane (UFC Instagram)

The 2014 NBA Playoff Coaches and Their Serial Killer Equivalents (HolyTaco)

Meet Cherie DeVille: Adult Film Star, Gamer and Doctor (EveryJoe)

What Your Choice of Social Media Says About You (Guyism)

Quiz: How Much Do You Know About the ‘Wolfenstein’ Series? (EscapistMagazine)

Bras Optional — 41 Photos (Radass)

The World’s Most Violent Plants (Ranker)

Tetyana Veryovkina: Lingerie Model of the Day (DrunkenStepfather)

Not My Best Day: The Friend Zone (PopHangover)

UFC 173 Betting Preview: Renan Barao Heavily Favored vs. TJ Dillashaw

Renan Barao will be a heavy favorite at UFC 173 Saturday night when he puts his UFC bantamweight title on the line against TJ Dillashaw.
It has been over nine years and 32 decisions since the 27-year-old Brazilian last went down to defeat, the longest …

Renan Barao will be a heavy favorite at UFC 173 Saturday night when he puts his UFC bantamweight title on the line against TJ Dillashaw.

It has been over nine years and 32 decisions since the 27-year-old Brazilian last went down to defeat, the longest current win streak in MMA.

Dillashaw (9-2-0), ranked as the No. 4 challenger in the UFC bantamweight division, opened as a modest plus-325 underdog, per Odds Shark, when the fight was announced, but he is now pegged as a plus-575 underdog against Barao (32-1-0, one no-contest).

It is the first title shot for the 28-year-old Dillashaw, who was bumped up to the main event after Raphael Assuncao, the No. 2 bantamweight division challenger, was forced to decline the bout due to a rib injury suffered at UFC 170.

Assuncao defeated Dillashaw by split decision when the two battled at UFC Fight Night: Maia vs. Shields back in October.

In the co-main event, undefeated Daniel Cormier (14-0-0) is heavily favored to defeat Dan Henderson in a light heavyweight bout that may be the most highly anticipated fight on the card at UFC 173.

Cormier, the No. 4 challenger in the division, has the respect of sportsbooks going into Saturday, with odds of minus-950 at some books monitored by Odds Shark.

Henderson (30-11-0), who currently sits as the division’s No. 6 challenger, is a tempting plus-650 long shot, and it is easy to understand why. The 43-year-old lost all three of his fights in 2013 but bounced back with a gutsy rally to defeat Mauricio Rua this past March at UFC Fight Night 38 with a third-round TKO after clearly losing the first two rounds.

Robbie Lawler (22-10-0) returns to action at UFC 173 in his first bout since losing by unanimous decision to Johny Hendricks in a UFC welterweight championship fight at UFC 171. Lawler is a minus-215 favorite against No. 5 welterweight challenger Jake Ellenberger (29-7-0).

The Juggernaut is a plus-185 underdog against Lawler but hopes to improve his division ranking and increase his chances of getting a title shot against Hendricks. Ellenberger is coming off a dreadfully boring loss by unanimous decision to Canadian Rory MacDonald last July at UFC on Fox 8.

 

Current UFC 173 odds 

Sam Sicilia               -150                      

Aaron Phillips           +130                     

Li JingLiang              +130                     

David Michaud          -150                      

Anthony Njokuani      -230                      

Vincent Pichel           +195                     

Al Iaquinta                -360                      

Mitch Clarke              +295                                     

Chico Camus             +295                     

Chris Holdsworth        -360                                                      

Tony Ferguson           -275                      

Katsunori Kikuno        +235                     

Mike Chiesa                -135                      

Francisco Trinaldo       +115                     

Francisco Rivera         +145                     

Takeya Mizugaki         -170                      

James Krause            +150                     

Jamie Varner              -175                      

Robbie Lawler            -215                      

Jake Ellenberger         +185                                                     

Dan Henderson           +650                     

Daniel Cormier            -950                      

TJ Dillashaw               +575                     

Renan Barao               -800     

 

Odds courtesy of BestUFCOdds.com unless otherwise noted.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 173 Bantamweight Title Challenger TJ Dillashaw Hits Pads in Strange Places

TJ Dillashaw is utilizing some extreme training techniques to ensure that he’s prepared for his UFC 173 bantamweight title fight against reigning king Renan Barao. 
First, the Team Alpha Male product warmed up with former UFC lightweight Justin Bu…

TJ Dillashaw is utilizing some extreme training techniques to ensure that he’s prepared for his UFC 173 bantamweight title fight against reigning king Renan Barao

First, the Team Alpha Male product warmed up with former UFC lightweight Justin Buchholz mid-flight as he traveled to Las Vegas for his May 24 scrap. 

The video, which was first published on the UFC’s official Instagram profile, surfaced on Reddit Tuesday evening. 

While an elite fighter hitting pads in the aisle of an airplane is both funny and impressive on its own, this clip really shines because of the flight attendant’s commentary. He says: 

We’ll be on the ground shortly. Again, please remain seated for the short duration of the flight. For the people in the last five rows that don’t know what ‘seated’ means, that means put your butt in the cushion.  

Dillashaw‘s innovative training techniques didn’t end there, though. 

To improve his balance and hand-eye coordination, Dillashaw took to the baggage claim for his next circuit on the pads. 

Cheered on by teammates Joseph Benavidez, Chris Holdsworth and some adoring fans (or stunned passersby), a shirtless Dillashaw went to work on a moving conveyor belt in a very public place. 

This is Team Alpha Male we’re talking about, after all, so the “no shirt” thing is kind of a requirement, really. 

Since nothing else has even remotely worked against Barao thus far in the Brazilian champ’s UFC career, maybe Dillashaw is on to something here. 

Or maybe he’s just being silly and calming the nerves before his date with a killer inside the Octagon. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 173: TJ Dillashaw Doesn’t Have a Hope Against Renan Barao

Unfortunate reality alert: Saturday’s UFC 173 main event is basically a waste of everyone’s time.
TJ Dillashaw is challenging Renan Barao for the bantamweight title in the main event, and there’s almost no hope he’ll wrest the gold from the Brazilian.

Unfortunate reality alert: Saturday’s UFC 173 main event is basically a waste of everyone’s time.

TJ Dillashaw is challenging Renan Barao for the bantamweight title in the main event, and there’s almost no hope he’ll wrest the gold from the Brazilian.

That’s not to say the card is not without its charm, as there are two other solid fights being offered in Jake Ellenberger/Robbie Lawler and Dan Henderson/Daniel Cormier. But the main event is the epitome of hopelessness on the battlefield. It’s a panzer tank running over a Volkswagen, a dinosaur competing with an iguana for a food source.

And you know what’s even worse? Dillashaw is good. Like, really good. “Potential champion” good.

He’s just not that good yet.

In the meantime, he’s being thrown to the wolves at least a year too soon because the promotion’s original headliner fell apart, and someone’s gotta fight someone to justify charging that sweet pay-per-view cheddar.

That means, very much to his own chagrin, Dillashaw doesn’t have a hope. He’s in far too deep, far too soon, and it’s going to show Saturday night.

Barao, even considering the UFC’s comically hard sell of his talents, warrants incredible respect. Though he never formally beat Dominick Cruz to earn his title, there are few people who would suggest he’s not the best 135-pounder in the world today.

He hasn’t lost since his debut fight in 2005, and under the Zuffa umbrella, he’s a 9-0 champion that’s stopped six of those opponents. He’s the type of killer who, if he were 70 pounds heavier, would be on every piece of UFC merchandise imaginable.

Conversely, Dillashaw is 5-2 in the UFC and is just over two years removed from a stint on The Ultimate Fighter as a skilled but green athlete that was learning the ropes in MMA.

From the outset, there was little question he was a talent to watch but definitely not the type one would have expected to see in a title fight after seven UFC appearances. He was more of a project, a guy that could take a steady road to relevance if handled right.

Now, just as he’s coming into his own, his development is destined to be damaged irreparably by a title fight he didn’t really earn and isn’t really ready for. That’s unfortunate on its own, but when one considers the challenge he could have been for Barao had he fought a couple of more contender fights, it’s even worse.

Based on his current trajectory, it wouldn’t have been hard to imagine Dillashaw becoming a major player at bantamweight over the next year had he not been put in his current situation.

His stand-up has been improving rapidly, and his wrestling base provides the type of unshakable stability that every fighter hopes to achieve in the cage. His fights have also been growing increasingly more interesting the more he competes, which is the type of pattern the UFC likes to see.

He looked excellent in his win over Mike Easton earlier this year, and his loss to Raphael Assuncao before that was one many thought he’d won. Prior to those two signature showings, he was riding a three-fight stoppage streak against lesser competition in a run that indicated he might one day be ready for big things.

Now, those things have come to his doorstep much earlier than anticipated, and there’s no telling how it might derail him.

There’s no clear blueprint for beating Barao right now. Actually, there’s no real blueprint for even competing with him. He’s crushing everyone.

To have a hope, contenders are going to need to be appropriately groomed and experienced, or they’re going to end up like the past 32 guys who’ve tested Barao: losers in varying degrees of post-fight agony.

Dillashaw hasn’t been groomed appropriately, and he isn’t sufficiently experienced yet, though there were encouraging signs that he one day would be. As a result, he’s likely to be next on that list of Barao victims, which is a true waste of his athleticism and growing prowess in the sport.

 

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

T.J. Dillashaw Has to Win

T.J. Dillashaw’s competitive streak started at an early age.
Dillashaw is the son of two highly competitive parents. He has two brothers. And growing up, even casual situations were often turned into a chance to win.
For example: The Dillashaw family h…

T.J. Dillashaw‘s competitive streak started at an early age.

Dillashaw is the son of two highly competitive parents. He has two brothers. And growing up, even casual situations were often turned into a chance to win.

For example: The Dillashaw family had two cars, and they would often split up. T.J. sometimes rode with his dad, and his brothers piled into their mom’s car. A simple drive from point A to point B morphed from a leisurely drive into a chance to score a victory over the rest of the family.

T.J. and his dad had to win. They had to be the first to arrive at their destination.

“I don’t care what it takes. We’re running red lights. We’re cutting them off,” Dillashaw tells Bleacher Report. “I think that’s where it all started. I had two brothers and competitive parents. They just bred me that way.”

All fighters are competitive by nature. It’s a rule for any professional athlete because winning is the only thing that matters.

But Dillashaw may be the most competitive fighter I’ve ever met.

Joseph Benavidez, his Team Alpha Male teammate, once told me that Dillashaw has to win at everything. Checkers? Chess? Volleyball? Board games? Dillashaw will do anything to win.

Urijah Faber noted that Dillashaw displayed the same intensity on the first day he began training with the team. He was green behind the ears and nowhere near the complete fighter he would become. But that didn’t stop Dillashaw from going 100 percent, from trying to beat Faber and Benavidez and the others.

I have seen his intense competitive nature before. Before his 2013 fight against Issei Tamura, I saw Dillashaw backstage, preparing to walk to the Octagon. As he paced back and forth waiting for his music to hit, Dillashaw began screaming.

It was as intense a moment as I’ve ever seen from a fighter. And it was scary, if we are being honest.

It is a trait that permeates every area of his life. He has to be the best at everything.

“When it comes to board games, you try every trick you can to beat someone. When it comes to fighting, you want to be a respectable opponent,” Dillashaw says. “But other than that, I’ll do anything I can to win.

“It’s tough, especially when it’s bred into you. You just want to be the best.”

After a recent kickboxing session with coach Duane Ludwig, Dillashaw picked up his phone. He noticed several text messages and missed calls from his manager, Mike Roberts. Dillashaw figured his scheduled opponent, Takeya Mizugaki, was injured.

When Dillashaw got home, he called Roberts and asked if Mizugaki was out of the fight. Roberts told him he had a new opponent, but it was Renan Barao, and it was for the bantamweight title. Roberts, knowing Dillashaw would say yes, had already accepted the UFC 173 main event bout on his behalf.

Dillashaw let out a scream.

“I couldn’t help but just shout. I was very excited,” he says. “Luckily, I was at home, so I didn’t scare anybody other than my dog.”

It is the perfect scenario for Dillashaw. He has twice gone through the process of helping Faber get ready for bouts against Barao. And so, in a way, this is his third training camp preparing for Barao.

“I was there every step of the way to help Urijah get ready for him,” he says.

This time, it is Faber’s turn to help Dillashaw prepare for a title fight. Dillashaw will likely be a heavy underdog to Barao. The champion hasn’t lost a fight in years and is entrenched near the top of the UFC’s pound-for-pound rankings.

But Barao‘s lofty status won’t affect Dillashaw‘s preparation. Not one bit. He plans on going in the Octagon and winning because winning is everything.

Winning is the only thing, in fights or board games or even a weekend drive with his parents.

“I have been raised to win,” Dillashaw says. “You do everything you can to win.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Renan Barao vs. TJ Dillashaw Bantamweight Title Fight Booked as New UFC 173 Main Event


(“Renan Barao is a MONSTER!” — Barao’s dance coach. / Photo via Getty)

Coming off his first unified bantamweight title defense against Urijah Faber in February, Renan Barao will return to the Octagon at UFC 173 (May 24th, Las Vegas), where he’ll take on Team Alpha Male’s TJ Dillashaw in the main event. UFC 173 was originally supposed to be headlined by the middleweight title bout between Chris Weidman and Lyoto Machida, but that match was bumped to July due to Weidman’s knee injury.

Dillashaw had already been booked to face Takeya Mizugaki at UFC 173, but he’s now been promoted to a championship fight, despite being on a one-fight win streak. (It should be mentioned that Mizugaki has won his last four fights. Asian brother can’t get no love, man?) As MMA Junkie reports, the far-more-deserving Raphael Assuncao was also being considered for Barao’s opponent, but lingering injuries will keep the Brazilian contender sidelined a while longer.

Essentially, Renan Barao vs. TJ Dillashaw is one of those title fights that was thrown together out of convenience and desperation. Due to a recent wave of injured champions, the UFC’s options are very limited right now in terms of arranging big fights on short notice. To put it gently, most UFC fans will probably decide to save their $55 when May 24th rolls around, when you consider that the current UFC 173 main card lineup looks like this…


(“Renan Barao is a MONSTER!” — Barao’s dance coach. / Photo via Getty)

Coming off his first unified bantamweight title defense against Urijah Faber in February, Renan Barao will return to the Octagon at UFC 173 (May 24th, Las Vegas), where he’ll take on Team Alpha Male’s TJ Dillashaw in the main event. UFC 173 was originally supposed to be headlined by the middleweight title bout between Chris Weidman and Lyoto Machida, but that match was bumped to July due to Weidman’s knee injury.

Dillashaw had already been booked to face Takeya Mizugaki at UFC 173, but he’s now been promoted to a championship fight, despite being on a one-fight win streak. (It should be mentioned that Mizugaki has won his last four fights. Asian brother can’t get no love, man?) As MMA Junkie reports, the far-more-deserving Raphael Assuncao was also being considered for Barao’s opponent, but lingering injuries will keep the Brazilian contender sidelined a while longer.

Essentially, Renan Barao vs. TJ Dillashaw is one of those title fights that was thrown together out of convenience and desperation. Due to a recent wave of injured champions, the UFC’s options are very limited right now in terms of arranging big fights on short notice. To put it gently, most UFC fans will probably decide to save their $55 when May 24th rolls around, when you consider that the current UFC 173 main card lineup looks like this…

Renan Barão vs. TJ Dillashaw*
Junior dos Santos vs. Stipe Miocic**
Takeya Mizugaki vs. TBD***
Tony Ferguson vs. Katsunori Kikuno****
Jamie Varner vs. James Krause*****

* Bantamweights are a weak PPV draw even under the best circumstances. Keep in mind that Barao only pulled in 230,000 buys against Urijah Faber, and Jose Aldo was on the same card.

** OK, at least the co-main event is solid.

*** Yikes. Of course, it’s possible that a prelim fight will be promoted to the main card, but it’s not like there’s a lot to choose from there, either. UPDATE: Mizugaki will now be fighting Francisco Rivera on the main card.

**** Ferguson’s always entertaining, but he’s fighting a guy who made his UFC debut on the prelims of the Royston Wee Fight Pass card.

***** For a “loser might get fired” fight, it could be worse.