Posts Tagged ‘Alistair Overeem’

UFC 141: Main Card Predictions

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

Brock Lesnar vs Alistair Overeem: There are several questions surrounding the main event at UFC 141. Has Brock Lesnar trained enough in striking so that his brain won’t scream “retreat” the first time Alistair Overeem lands a powerful strike? Has Alistair Overeem trained enough in takedown defense that he can keep the fight standing? How will the time off and surgery affect Lesnar when the Octagon door locks behind him? There is no doubt that Overeem is the better striker here, just like there is no doubt that Lesnar is the better wrestler.  I’m really torn on this one, it all comes down to who can get the advantage early. If Brock gets the takedown right away he’ll win via ground and pound. If Overeem can stun Brock with strikes when he’s going for the takedown, then it’s Alistair’s fight.  In the end, I’m going to have to go with the wrestler (although I’m not 100% confident on this)….Lesnar via second round TKO.

Donald Cerrone vs Nate Diaz: If I had to pick a Fight of the Night right now, this one would get it.  You know these two guys are going to come out and bring it.  There are few fighters in the UFC who seem to love their job as much as these two do; all they want to do is fight. Cerrone is on one hell of a roll and if it wasn’t for a certain UFC Light Heavyweight Champion he would be most likely by a Fighter of the Year candidate.  This is probably his biggest test of the year as well, but he’s just been a juggernaut in 2011 and I think he makes it 5-0 with a win over Diaz. Cerrone via unanimous decision.

Jon Fitch vs. Johny Hendricks: A lot of folks are probably dreading this fight and maybe even the UFC since there has been little done in the way of promotion for it.  Like it or not, Jon Fitch is one of the best in the welterweight division, the dude just wins.  In this fight he will be taking on another high level wrestler in Johny Hendricks and that is why many are concerned about how high the excitement level will be with this fight.  We could see 15 minutes of ground control and strikes from short range or, we could see the wrestling go out the window and the two may elect to stand and bang. Yes, I know the latter is unlikely, but one can dream.  Either way, it’s Fitch by unanimous decision.

Vladimir Matyushenko vs Alexander Gustafsson: The age difference is pretty glaring in this contest as Vladimir Matyushenko is closing in on 41 while Alexander Gustafsson is 24 years of age.  This is a big fight for both of these men.  A win from Matyushenko and he proves that even though he may be a bit older than most, he is still a viable commodity in the UFC’s light heavyweight division.  A win from Gustafsson and he takes another step up the ladder toward “real deal” status. In this one, youth will carry the day and Gustafsson will win via third round TKO.

Nam Phan vs Jim Hettes: In this fight you have the submission artist versus the fighter that has never tapped.  Jim Hettes is 9-0 with all his wins coming via submission before the end of the second round. His opponent, Nam Phan is 17-9 and has never been submitted.  Phan is, without a doubt, the best fighter that Hettes has faced in his career, with that being said, the pressure in this bout is clearly on Phan.  He has not put together two consecutive wins since 2007-08 and he really needs to capitalize on his recent victory of Leonard Garcia.  Will he do it?  I don’t think so, Hettes by unanimous decision.

UFC Announces Brock Lesnar vs. Alistair Overeem and Several Other Big Fights

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

The UFC had a busy day on Tuesday, September 6, announcing the several significant fights. The highlight of the day was the announcement that Brock Lesanr would be making his return to the Octagon before the end of 2011, with his opponent being Alistair Overeem.

Lesnar has not fought since losing the UFC heavyweight title to Cain Velasquez at UFC 121. Lesnar had been set to face Junior dos Santos following their stints as coaches on season 13 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” but a second bout of diverticulitis put Lesnar out of commission. The digestive disease forced Lesnar to undergo surgery in May.

Recently there were rumors that Lesnar had been advised to retire due to the stress the sport of MMA puts on his body.  Last week those rumors were refuted by UFC president Dana White, who said that they were ridiculous and not even close to being accurate.

Lesnar’s opponent, Overeem, will be making his UFC debut when he faces Lesnar on December 30 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, NV. Overeem was recently released from Strikeforce with one fight left on his contract. Overeem spoke to the LA Times about the fight, saying, “I want to see this fight myself. Overall, I’m a different fighter. A striker, athletic, big. These are going to be two big trucks going at it on a collision course.”

The Times also announced that the winner of the Lesnar vs. Overeem fight will be next in line to fight for the UFC heavyweight title, which will be up for grabs on November 12 when Velasquez meets number one ranked Junior dos Santos. The Velasquez versus dos Santos bout will be the first UFC fight to be televised under their new agreement with FOX.

Also announced for the UFC on FOX card was a lightweight battle that could also result in the winner receiving a title shot. Clay Guida and Ben Henderson will meet at the Honda Center in Anaheim on the FOX card. Henderson is coming off a big win over the fighter that many thought would be the next to fight for the UFC lightweight title, Jim Miller. Henderson, the former WEC lightweight champion, easily handled Miller during their August 14 bout.

Guida is riding a four fight winning streak, defeating Anthony Pettis in his last bout. Pettis was the fighter that ended Henderson’s 10-fight winning streak and WEC title reign when he took a five round unanimous decision from Henderson.

It is widely believed that the winner of the Guida versus Henderson fight will face the winner of the Frankie Edgar versus Gray Maynard lightweight title bout that is set for October 8.

Two big fights were not enough for the UFC on Tuesday, they also announced that Josh Koscheck would be stepping in for the injured Diego Sanchez to face UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes at UFC 135, which will take place at Denver’s Pepsi Center on September 24.   Koscheck has not fought since sustaining a serious injury to his orbital bone during a unanimous decision loss to UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre at UFC 124 on December 11 of last year.  Hughes, dropped his last fight as well, falling to BJ Penn by way of a 21 second knockout on November 20, 2010.

The promotion announced one additional fight on Tuesday as up and coming welterweight prospect Rory MacDonald was booked to fight Brian Ebersole at UFC 140, which is scheduled to take place on December 10 at Toronto’s Air Canada Centre.

Sometimes you really need to look beyond MMA’s hype

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011
Tim Marchman

Tim Marchman

Alistair Overeem is big, strong, and a K-1 GP titlist. He's also likely to be in danger against a top-shelf foe like Josh Barnett.
Alistair Overeem is big, strong, and a K-1 GP titlist. He’s also likely to be in danger against a top-shelf foe like Josh Barnett.
Tony Medina/Icon SMI

You either care about this sort of thing or you don’t — if you don’t, my apologies — but I wrote last week that Alistair Overeem, the Dutch fighter and kickboxer who has spent most of the last five years knocking out non-entities in Japanese rings, is a fraud. This brought me many, many angry e-mails, some from dimwits but more were from people who just thought I was too keyed on what the man has done in actual fights. Writing off as a fraud an experienced and monstrously strong fighter who holds a K-1 Grand Prix title is ridiculous, the line went, and judging a man only by what he’s done in competition is bad practice.

Oddly, no one dropped a gloating note after Overeem defeated Fabricio Werdum, one of the five best heavyweights in the world, this past Saturday. They might have, but they didn’t, most likely because the way he won validated every criticism that every skeptic has made. (I actually came out of the fight thinking better of Overeem than I had previously, but results matter a lot to me.)

The most basic critique of Overeem is that he hasn’t, past week aside, faced any legitimate competition in years. This is a problem not because, once you set a giant computer whirring, his record comes up short,
Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/tim_marchman/06/22/alistair.overeem/index.html#ixzz1PxwAthSR