Sunday, July 31

UFC 201 Results: Matches to Make for the Winners and Losers

UFC 201 saw the crowning of yet another new champion.

Tyron Woodley ousted Robbie Lawler in the first round with his vicious right hand. The former Strikeforce standout claimed UFC gold and will now be looking for his next challenge.

In the co-main event, Karolina Kowalkiewicz defeated rising star Rose Namajunas by split decision. The victory puts Kowalkiewicz in prime position in the strawweight division, but the result also makes for an interesting next step for Namajunas.

11 fights in total happened in Atlanta on Saturday. There are 10 winners, 10 losers and 2 fighters coming off a draw. The UFC matchmakers, Joe Silva and Sean Shelby, now have to determine the next best steps for these athletes and the company as a whole.

We are here to help them along.

Here is your look at the matches to make, for both the winners and losers, following UFC 201's outstanding night of fights.

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UFC 201: Karolina Kowalkiewicz Steals Rose Namajunas' Thunder in Gritty Scrap

Perhaps from the way she stood in her corner smiling like she had a secret, we should've known Karolina Kowalkiewicz was about to do something spectacular.

Kowalkiewicz looked calm and composed during the tense moments preceding her co-main event bout against Rose Namajunas at Saturday’s UFC 201. In the end, the confidence she projected proved justified—as Kowalkiewicz weathered a difficult first round and rallied to score a split-decision win (28-29, 29-28, 29-28).

The victory may well make her the surprise No. 1 contender to Joanna Jedrzejczyk’s strawweight title in the coming months.

“I know Joanna, I respect her very much,” Kowalkiewicz told Joe Rogan in the cage after the judges' verdict was announced. “She’s the best in the world, but I want to fight the best and I will beat the best.”

If it happens, it will make Jedrzejczyk’s fourth 115-pound title defense an all-Polish affair.

So, yeah, go ahead and let the name jokes start to flow like wine:

On paper, this bout appeared set up to be the one that would earn Namajunas her second shot at UFC gold.

After garnering a reputation as the woman to beat on Season 20 of The Ultimate Fighter, she lost to Carla Esparza in the promotion’s inaugural strawweight title fight back in 2014. Namajunas was just 22 years old at the time, and with so much time left to mature as a martial artist, she was still considered a potential future divisional front-runner.

As if to prove it, she followed the loss to Esparza by ripping off three straight wins. A meeting with the undefeated but relatively unheralded Kowalkiewicz was meant to be the capper on that run.

As has been the trend in the UFC of late, it ended up going the opposite way.

The fight started well enough for Namajunas. She came out of her corner looking fluid and light on her feet. As Kowalkiewicz pushed forward, Namajunas countered nicely with snapping punching combos as well as the occasional leg kick.

With under a minute to go in the first round, however, Kowalkiewicz caught Namajunas in the clinch and uncorked a series of stiff knees to the body. While Namajunas likely still took that round on the judges’ scorecards, the late exchange began to shift the momentum and turned out to be a preview of what was to come.

Kowalkiewicz controlled the second stanza, doing her best work when she could force the fight into close range. The pair spent the bulk of the round pressed against the fence, where Kowalkiewicz’s thudding body shots appeared to sap Namajunascardio. The accumulation of blows prompted the 24-year-old Milwaukee native to try to take the fight to the ground, but with little success.

The third round was the closest of the fight. It saw Namajunas attempt to keep the action at range, where she could continue to touch Kowalkiewicz with combinations. Midway through the round, however, Kowalkiewicz sent Namajunas topping to the canvas during a flurry near the fence.

During the ensuing scramble on the ground, she wound up in top position. Most of the rest of the fight stayed there, with Kowalkiewicz avoiding Namajunas’ submission attempts and pestering her with enough strikes to salt away the victory.

“I feel really great,” Kowalkiewicz told Rogan moments later. “It’s my dream come true and now I want a fight with Joanna Jedrzejczyk. I am ready.”

Kowalkiewicz improved her spotless record to 10-0 overall, 3-0 in the UFC, but whether she’s truly ready for Jedrzejczyk remains to be seen. The two met in an amateur bout in Poland years ago, and Jedrzejczyk emerged with the submission win.

Since coming to the UFC, Jedrzejczyk (12-0, 6-0) has been in a class by herself.

On July 8, her latest fight included a hard-fought win over longtime rival Claudia Gadelha. In that bout, Jedrzejczyk looked vulnerable to Gadelha’s hard-nosed grappling attack for the first two rounds, but she won the day with her superior pace, cardio and striking game.

As Gadelha wilted in the later rounds, the champion began to pour it on, picking Gadelha apart with her trademark striking skills, and scored the unanimous-decision win. The lasting impression it left was that Jedrzejczyk is still going to be very hard to knock from her throne. 

If Kowalkiewicz means to match stand-up skills with the champion, she might be in for a very long night indeed. Jedrzejczyk's pinpoint accuracy, relentless aggression and near peerless kickboxing skills have established her among the best technical fighters in the UFC. 

Stylistically, at least, their fight would have all the makings of a crowd-pleasing war. To have success, however, it seems a good bet Kowalkiewicz would have to opt for a different, potentially better-rounded game plan that she did against Namajunas.

The loss dropped the popular American fighter to 5-3 overall, 3-2 UFC.

While she remains very young, this defeat undermines any momentum Namajunas had built for herself in her recent appearances. She came into the fight as the third-ranked strawweight contender, according to the UFC's official rankings, and is still young and talented enough to work her way back into future title eliminators.

For now, however, we assume Poland will have the immediate title picture all to itself.

If Kowalkiewicz and Jedrzejczyk do meet up next, we'll see if Kowalkiewicz can be such a cool customer when confronted by the best in the world. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Marlon Moraes Gets a Vicious Head Kick KO on Josh Hill at WSOF 32

Marlon Moraes (17-4) successfully defended his bantamweight title for the fourth time at World Series of Fighting in Everett, Washington on Saturday night. After a competitive first round, Moraes dropped challenger Josh Hill (14-2) with a head kick early in the second, landing two lefts as referee Steve Newport rushed in to stop the fight. 

Moraes won the inaugural bantamweight title in a decision over Josh Rettinghouse in March 2014. The main event of WSOF 32 was the second time they'd met in the cage; in his first defense of the belt, Moraes took a decision against Hill. Since then, Moraes has stopped Sheymon da Silva Moraes with a rear-naked choke and Joseph Barajas via leg kicks. He's on a 12-fight win streak, and has gone 10-0 in WSOF.

Hill was on a four-fight win streak before this loss. 

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Dana White 'Would Love' Joanna Jedrzejczyk vs. Karolina Kowalkiewicz in Poland

Karolina Kowalkiewicz all but assured her title shot with a split-decision victory over Rose Namajunas at UFC 201.

Kowalkiewicz entered as the No. 5-ranked strawweight with Namajunas holding the No. 3-ranked position, according to the official UFC rankings. Following Joanna Jedrzejczyk’s successful defense against No. 1-ranked contender Claudia Gadelha, it would make the most sense to book the Poland vs. Poland title tilt.

UFC President Dana White agrees.

White told Megan Olivi during their post-fight interview on Fox Sports 1 that the fight is not confirmed, but it does make the most sense. White admitted that he “would love” to book the contest for a card in Poland.

The UFC made its debut in Krakow, Poland in 2015.

Also a possibility is New York City at Madison Square Garden. Olivi suggested to White during the interview that both Kowalkiewicz and Jedrzejczyk mentioned their desire to fight on that card in previous days. White affirmed that it would be a possibility, but double-downed on wanting the possible clash in the fighters’ home country.

Kowalkiewicz, in her post-fight interview with Olivi, said she hopes to fight against Jedrzejczyk in New York.

Kowalkiewicz is an undefeated fighter, but only as a pro. Her last loss was in an amateur bout against Jedrzejczyk who won via submission. The rematch is a long-awaited bout for both women. In the post-fight press release by the UFC, Kowalkiewicz stated simply, “I’m happy I won, and now I want a fight with Joanna Jedrzejczyk.”

Everything is in place except signed contracts, a date and a venue. Those are just minor details. Kowalkiewicz vs. Jedrzejczyk looks all but set, and everyone who is a fight fan should be excited to watch the two strikers come to blows—no matter where it takes place.

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Tyron Woodley Calls out Nick Diaz and Georges St-Pierre After UFC 201 Title Win

After a long climb up the UFC's mountain of 170-pound talent, Tyron Woodley reached the top at UFC 201 by knocking out Robbie Lawler. Now the proud owner of a big gold belt, the newly minted welterweight champion has just one goal left; make enough cash to comfortably retire.

Speaking with the assembled media at the UFC 201 post-fight press conference (warning, NSFW language), the Chosen One called for a big-money fight against an established name while dismissing any discussion of facing less-marketable opposition. Via BloodyElbow.com's Anton Tabuena:

You know, I want to make some money now, to be honest...This is a sport where we can make cash now, so instead of just saying 'this person deserves it, he worked his way up the ranks,' I think Nick Diaz comes out of suspension in 2 days. I would love to fight him at UFC 202, I know his brother is fighting (there)...I would like to give him that opportunity, or I would like to fight Georges St-Pierre in New York City.

That declaration will almost certainly irk diehard fans. In many ways, Woodley fell into his own title shot at UFC 201 by narrowly edging out Kelvin Gastelum at UFC 183 and having a UFC 192 fight with Johny Hendricks get scrapped due to a botched weight cut. Many fans claim that Woodley, who sat out 18 months for a fight with Lawler, cut the line by getting a title shot instead of surging veteran Demian Maia or knockout artist Stephen Thompson.

That said, the move is undeniably good business. The UFC has drawn constant questions about fighter pay over the last few years, and the only reliable way for talented-yet-unknown fighters to make bank is by working opposite established names. Fights with either St-Pierre or Diaz offer substantially larger paydays than any alternative, and that would be further boosted by taking a spot on a big card like UFC 202 or UFC 205.

So what does he think should come next for Thompson, who many view as next in line for the title?

"Stephen Thompson said he wanted to fight Robbie Lawler. ... He'll get the opportunity to have that fight," he said and continued, "I feel no obligation to go by the rankings. We all know how those rankings are produced anyway. I want to fight the money fights."

While it's unlikely he gets a crack at St-Pierre (who likely has no interest in going after the welterweight title), a fight with either Nick or Nate Diaz is a legitimate possibility. 

As Woodley stated, Nick will soon come off suspension and, outside fighting St-Pierre himself, has few logical options for a return opponent. A title fight with Woodley could be big enough to lure him back into the cage, and could do numbers at the box office.

Nate is in a similar position. Currently lined up to face Conor McGregor in a rematch at UFC 202, there are very few lucrative matchups available to him past that. With another win, he will have out-grown any potential fighters in the lightweight division, and has little to work with in a burdensome welterweight division.

Ultimately, it's impossible to guess what will happen at this point. The welterweight title picture just became much more chaotic...and not necessarily in a bad way.

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Tyron Woodley Stops Granite-Chinned Robbie Lawler, Continuing UFC Chaos

Stepping into the cage for UFC 201 in Atlanta, Tyron Woodley must have felt at least a little bit out of his element. It had been 547 days between fights. In the interim, eight of the 10 UFC title belts had changed hands, USADA began to randomly drug test the promotion’s athletes and the company had been sold.

There hadn’t just been a few changes; the MMA landscape had been profoundly transformed. Ironically, the stability atop Woodley’s division had one of the few constants; alongside Demetrious Johnson, welterweight king Robbie Lawler had been one of the two champs to hold on to gold.

While Lawler made war a personal habit to the degree that it became the expectation, his chin couldn’t hold up forever. It was finally compromised on Saturday night, with a sledgehammer right ending his exciting reign and installing a new champion. 

Let the chaos continue.

That’s the kind of year it’s been in the Octagon—one where the only predictable outcome is unpredictability and champions are vulnerable by nature of their very existence. 

Woodley did the deed with a stutter-step right hand that began with a feinted overhand and then ended with the real thing. It landed flush, leading to a sight about as rare as the Leonid meteor storms: Lawler on his back, helpless.

He was already out, the fight was by any meaningful measure decided, but referee Dan Miragliotta offered Lawler the champion’s grace period, meaning he got to eat five more gloved hammers before being rescued. The fight took all of two minutes, 12 seconds. 

It marked the first time Lawler had been knocked out since April 2004, when Nick Diaz pulled the trick at UFC 47.

“I wanted to use all my angles, go back-and-forth and side-to-side,” Woodley (16-3) said in the Fox Sports 1 post-fight show. “No one’s had great success standing right in front of him. I was prepared.”

To add to the mayhem that 2016 has brought, Woodley brushed off the idea of a fight with current No. 1 contender Stephen “Wonderboy” Thompson, instead suggesting the possibility of facing off with the aforementioned Diaz or with former champion Georges St-Pierre.

“If I’m an athlete in this sport, in this division, and I want to say I’m the best in the world, I feel I should compete against those guys,” Woodley said in the post-fight press conference. “I don’t feel any obligation to go by the rankings. I want to go out there and fight the money fights.”

Prior to UFC 201, the storyline between Woodley and Lawler was their shared lineage at American Top Team, where they were ostensibly “teammates.” But the two only rarely trained together and spent little time together. 

In fact, when Woodley joined the team, he was just an amateur, and competing at that level, Lawler actually refereed two of his fights. 

“I was getting my butt kicked,” he said. “I was just a bag of bones.”

While Lawler (27-11, 1 no-contest) calls the gym’s Coconut Creek, Florida, world headquarters home, Woodley opened a satellite ATT school in his native Missouri in 2011, making that his home base.

Still, Woodley felt that brief time together meant something on Saturday, conditioning Lawler to overreact to his subtle takedown fakes. The first two minutes were slow going on action, but Woodley did fake the level change several times, and used it again in his final feint before landing the championship right.

“I think he realized the level of wrestling I brought to the table,” he said of their time together. “He was fearful of that. I used the level fakes, and I saw the reaction. I knew as long as I did that, it would set up my hands.”

While the knockout was only the sixth of Woodley’s career, he has been something of a late bloomer in developing his power, making it a significant complementary threat to rival his wrestling pedigree in a well-rounded game. But a knockout coming against Lawler still has to be characterized as a surprise.

According to FightMetric, Lawler came into the fight with a 16-1 career knockdown ratio and hadn’t been dropped since the loss to Diaz over a decade ago. 

So of course it would be in a crazy year like this when this would happen.

We’ve seen Jon Jones and Brock Lesnar test positive for banned substances, media darling Conor McGregor briefly fall out of favor with UFC management, Ronda Rousey disappear without a trace and Michael Bisping knock out Luke Rockhold on a two week's notice. 

And now we’ve seen the iron-chinned Lawler go down, too.

If this were a book, we’d criticize it for having too many plot twists.

Instead, it’s exactly the draw of the sport. At its best, MMA brings an electric unease to the air, and whether you have 10 days to prepare or 547, you can create a magical moment.

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UFC 201 Results: The Real Winners and Losers from Tyron Woodley to Robbie Lawler

UFC 201 is in the books. On paper, it looked like a forgettable card wedged between the madness of the milestone UFC 200 event and the promise of Nate Diaz and Conor McGregor at UFC 202; in practice, it delivered fantastic finishes, a lot of wild action and a few upsets for the ages.

In the main event, Tyron Woodley became 2016's fifth new UFC champion (seventh, counting interim titleholders). It took just one devastating right hand to separate defending champion Robbie Lawler from consciousness and crown Woodley the new king of one of MMA's most prestigious divisions, the heir to Matt Hughes, Georges St-Pierre and now the ruthless one himself.

Karolina Kowalkiewicz became the second Polish fighter to establish herself as one of the world's top strawweights, sending prohibitive favorite Rose Namajunas back to the drawing board after yet another setback. Kowalkiewicz will now face Joanna Jedrzejczyk for the 115-pound title later this year in what promises to be a barnburner of a fight.

While the top two fights delivered, the rest of the card went up and down.

Jake Ellenberger rebounded from the mother of all rough patches to finish the tough Matt Brown in the first round. Before that, Erik Perez and Francisco Rivera put on a mostly forgettable fight aside from a 20-second stretch of utterly mad exchanges at the beginning of the third round, after which Rivera was so exhausted that he essentially collapsed to the canvas for the rest of the frame.

The main card opener between Fredy Serrano and Ryan Benoit was equal parts fun and bizarre, with Serrano landing wild kicks and huge slams while Benoit cracked him with meat-and-potatoes shots.

On the undercard, Nikita Krylov announced himself as a fighter to watch at 205 pounds in knocking out Ed Herman. Jorge Masvidal defeated Ross Pearson in a fun fight, while Wilson Reis overcame the letdown of losing his title shot by submitting Hector Sandoval in entertaining fashion.

With all that in mind, let's take a look at the event's real winners and losers.

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Matt Brown vs. Jake Ellenberger: Results and Reaction from UFC 201

Wow. Anyone else need a cigarette after that? No one would blame you if you did.

Welterweight action fighters Matt Brown and Jake Ellenberger brought some thunder to Atlanta at UFC 201, with Ellenberger coming out on top in an entertaining affair that crammed about as much pandemonium as you could imagine into 1:46.

The fight was crazy from the first punch, with Ellenberger skittering Brown across the octagon with a right hand. Brown defended from the ground before pushing things back to the feet and beginning to land some shots of his own. Looking loose and confident after weathering the initial storm, Brown pressed forward until Ellenberger fired a vicious kick to the body that stopped the Ohio native in his tracks.

From there, Ellenberger followed up with shots on the ground until the ref pulled him off, making the biggest win of his UFC run official. He’d lost five of six coming in and hadn’t won since February 2015, and there was talk on the broadcast of this being his last shot at sticking in the promotion.

It’s a massive result for The Juggernaut, who has been treading water at 170 for some time now with more wins than losses in one of the true shark tank divisions the UFC has on offer. Few people would challenge the contention that Ellenberger is one of the more talented fighters at the weight, however, bouncing around to different training camps and drawing some tough matchups had hampered his progress as of late.

With that in mind, he remains a formidable foe for anyone given his wrestling chops, elite punching power and athleticism. He showed a ferocity against Brown that had been lacking in recent bouts, and he showed it against one of the purest tough guys fighting in the UFC today. To score a vicious knockdown on the first punch of the night, shell up when Brown was coming on in response, then stop him with a perfectly timed, expertly placed liver kick is indicative of a return to the right track buoyed by sharpening the skills he’s always had and evolving new ones as well.

For Brown, it’s a devastating loss that sends him back to the drawing board. He’s 35 years old and has a lifetime of wars both in and out of the cage behind him. He sits near the back of the welterweight top-10 with little evidence supporting the notion that he might climb the mountain once again. Ellenberger might have helped catapult Brown back up the ranks had he won, but the loss almost surely relegates him to fun fights and wild brawls for the rest of his time in the UFC.

Ellenberger will need an equally stout test next time out. The winner of Neil Magny-Lorenz Larkin at UFC 202 might work on that front. Brown could stand to provide some entertainment against Dong Hyun Kim when he returns from injury and should be booked as such.

 

Follow me on Twitter @matthewjryder!

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UFC 201 Results: Winners, Scorecards from Lawler vs. Woodley Card

This is beginning to sound like a broken record, but we have a new UFC champion.

On Saturday night in Atlanta, Georgia, Tyron Woodley destroyed Robbie Lawler in the very first round of the UFC 201 main event to become the new promotion's new welterweight champion.

It happened in a flash, but the UFC tweeted this message almost as fast as Woodley finished Lawler:

Woodley landed the big right hand with just under three minutes left in the first round and Lawler was flattened. The former closed in on his fallen opponent and delivered a few shots that forced referee Dan Miragliotta to stop the bout.

Woodley gave honor to God after his victory, per this quote tweeted by Mark La Monica of Newsday:

Since April, six UFC champions have now lost their titles. Sports Illustrated's Jeff Wagenheim adds even more perspective:

Woodley would appear to be on a collision course with Stephen Thompson. That would be a matchup between dynamic strikers and superb athletes. 

It could be a race to see who lands the first big shot. As we saw on Saturday, Woodley only needs one.

 

Kowalkiewicz Edges Namajunas

In the co-main event, Karolina Kowalkiewicz set herself up for a shot at UFC strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk with a hard-fought split-decision win over Rose Namajunas.

Kowalkiewicz used well-placed knees and counter shots to earn an advantage. Namajunas secured two first-round takedowns to grab the early momentum, but Kowalkiewicz's striking in close quarters became a factor in the second round.

The aforementioned knees did more damage in the third and were enough to earn her the decision.

 

Results

  • Damien Brown def. Cesar Arzamendia via first-round KO
  • Michael Graves def. Bojan Velickovic majority draw (30-28 Graves, 28-28 x2)
  • Wilson Reis def. Hector Sandoval via first-round submission
  • Anthony Hamilton def. Damian Grabkowski via first-round KO
  • Jorge Masvidal def. Ross Pearson via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28x2)
  • Nikita Krylov def. Ed Herman via first-round KO
  • Ryan Benoit def. Fredy Serano via split decision (28-29, 29-28 x2)
  • Erik Perez def. Francisco Rivera via unanimous decision (30-26x2, 29-28)
  • Jake Ellenberger def. Matt Brown via first-round KO
  • Karolina Kowalkiewicz def. Rose Namajunas via split decision (29-28x2, 28-29)
  • Tyron Woodley def. Robbie Lawler via first-round TKO 

 

Analysis and Highlights

Savage Beatdown

Damien Brown was hellbent on putting in a short night's work. He walked through Cesar Arzamendia with a ferocious first-round KO. 

Brown initially hurt Arzamendia with a counter right hand and once he did the damage, he would not relent until he had captured the victory via stoppage:

It was a brutal way to kick off the UFC Fight Pass prelims.

 

Quick Tap

Wilson Reis was supposed to face Demetrious Johnson for the UFC flyweight title on Saturday, but an injury forced the champion out of the fight.

Perhaps Reis was irritated and decided to take out his frustrations on Hector Sandoval. The result was the fastest submission win in the history of the UFC featherweight division.

Here's a look at the finish:

Reis proved he's ready for a shot at the title whenever the opportunity arises.

 

Hammerin' Hamilton

It only took 15 seconds for Anthony Hamilton to take out Damian Grabowski. A quick onslaught from the big heavyweight left his opponent down and humbled next to the cage.

Hamilton has unquestionable power and this quick victory could put him in line to appear on another card before the end of the year.

 

Krylov the Crusher

Nikita Krylov is a fun fighter to watch, but not too joyous to face. Ed Herman found that out the hard way. Take a look at the head kick that spelled the end for Herman:

Rarely do you see a light heavyweight fight finished with a head kick. When you consider Krylov used to fight at heavyweight, it makes the finish even more impressive.

Krylov has now won five fights in a row and each of the victories have come by stoppage. With two or three more wins, he could be fighting for the title.

 

Ellenberger Blows Up Brown

The finishes just kept coming. In the second biggest surprise of the evening, Jake Ellenberger stopped the rugged Matt Brown in the very first round.

Brown is known for his toughness, but on Saturday, he fell victim to Ellenberger's titanic right hand. No one has ever questioned Ellenberger's punching power and Brownfound that out firsthand.

The victory might have saved Ellenberger's spot on the roster as he had lost two fights in a row and five of his last six. If he wasn't dangling on the cut line, no one should be.

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Rose Namajunas vs. Karolina Kowalkiewicz: Results and Reaction from UFC 201

The UFC 201 co-main event was the Rose Namajunas show.

The 24-year-old has been one of the most intriguing fighters at 115 pounds since her flying armbar submission of Kathina Catron at Invicta FC 5 in 2013. In 2015, however, she established herself as one of the division's best by running through the competition on The Ultimate Fighter season 20. The UFC felt it had a star on its hands and gave her a massive push exiting the season, which lasted even after her loss to Carla Esparza in the finale. 

Unlike so many other young fighters the UFC has hitched its wagon to, however, Namajunas has been able to maintain her success after the initial hubbub. She has cemented her place at the top of the division with wins over Angela Hill, Paige VanZant and Tecia Torres. It's easy to get excited about both her present and her future, and that has cast a shadow over nearly every opponent she has faced to date.

Enter Karolina Kowalkiewicz

The Polish striker made her way into the UFC after a strong run in KSW and posted wins in her first two UFC fights. Despite being an unheralded contender, she owns a legitimate, formidable skill set and made sure to make the most of her time in the spotlight at UFC 201.

The first round featured very little output from either woman, but a great deal of tension as both women bounced through the cage in a way that made their athletic and technical skills clear. There was little in the way of damaging strikes outside the closing 30 seconds, which saw Kowalkiewicz land a series of knees with Namajunas scoring a takedown just before the horn.

The second round got off to a much faster start. Kowalkiewicz clearly liked the results of her clinch striking and started working Namajunas in close with knees and short elbows while Namajunas worked for trips and throws. They separated after a hard Kowalkiewicz knee, and both women landed shots at range from there.

By the third, Kowalkiewicz's body work-heavy clinch striking was taking its toll on Namajunas, who looked slower and less explosive. That resulted in a chase-heavy final frame with Kowalkiewicz pressing forward on a back-pedaling Namajunas. Kowalkiewicz would eventually land a takedown and used the opportunity to land steady, albeit less-than-damaging ground-and-pound.

While the majority of pundits scored the fight in Kowalkiewicz's favor, there was a fair bit of suspense when it came to the decision. The first round was fairly clearly Namajunas' because of her late takedown, and the third was decisively Kowalkiewicz's because of a long stretch of top position. The second, however, had some wondering if the judges would favor Namajunas' control of the center of the cage or Kowalkiewicz's greater output.

In the end, the score cards broke in favor of Kowalkiewicz to the tune of a 29-28, 28-29, 29-28 split decision.

The win is huge for Kowalkiewicz. Despite being regarded as a top-10 name all the way back to her days in Poland's KSW promotion, fans have largely overlooked Kowalkiewicz. An impressive win over a fairly big name in Namajunas should turn some heads.

Namajunas, on the other hand, walks away with yet another setback that feels more like a speed bump. Despite owning three losses from current top-10 fighters, the UFC has put no effort into promoting anyone in its strawweight division outside Namajunas, VanZant and its champion, Joanna Jedrzejczyk. With wins over VanZant and Torres in her pocket, Namajunas remains just two or three wins away from a title shot.

Whether or not Kowalkiewicz will get her opportunity, however, is an open question.

While the fight was pegged as a top contender's bout, that likely hinged on a Namajunas win. With Kowalkiewicz lacking name value, there is a real chance she gets passed over for fan favorite and Great Scottish Hope Joanne Calderwood.

The immediate future is unsure for both women, but there is a great deal to look forward to in both the short-term, and the long term.

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Lawler vs. Woodley Results: Winner and Knockout Reaction from UFC 201

The ruthless reign of Robbie Lawler as the UFC welterweight champion was brought to a halt at UFC 201 with Tyron Woodley winning via first-round technical knockout. 

And all it took was one massive right hand. 

Bleacher Report MMA tweeted the official time of the stoppage:

ESPN Stats and Info noted this wasn't the new champion's first win by first-round finish:

The two got off to a slow start. Woodley and Lawler spent a good bit of the opening minutes gauging distance with a missed punch and a clinch against the cage that was broken up by the referee. 

However, when the two were separated, Woodley struck. Hard. 

The former collegiate wrestler loaded up a right hand that put Lawler on the floor and gave him the belt. 

Woodley's victory as the challenger puts an end to one of the more fascinating title runs in UFC history. Lawler started his second stint in the UFC fresh off a 3-5 run in Strikeforce, but he turned things around to become the champion with wins over the likes of Johny Hendricks, Rory MacDonald and Carlos Condit

Now, Woodley is the latest "unlikely" champion. 

T-Wood earned the victory after 18 months away from the Octagon. His last win came over Kelvin Gastelum in January 2015. 

The 34-year-old is now the champion, though. It's a moment he vowed to soak in once it got here, per Jorge A. Mondaca of UFC.com: 

I’m really trying to downplay the moment as much as possible, not look at so much social media, not worry about the odds, not worry about making the event, and really just focus on the skill set it takes to win this fight. Then, after the fight, I’ll want to look back and I’ll try to enjoy the moment and the process, all the things that I had to overcome just to get to this point. I’ll sit back for the first time in my career and try to soak it in.

Woodley might not have much time to sit back and enjoy the moment, though. The position of welterweight champion doesn't leave much wiggle room with title defenses. 

The division is stacked with fighters capable of doing damage. A look at the significant strikes that Lawler absorbed in his time with the belt is indicative of that. 

Now it's Woodley's turn to face the grueling task of holding onto the belt. And it'll likely start with a title defense against the red-hot Stephen Thompson. 

"Wonderboy" has lit the division on fire while Woodley was away. Since T-Wood's last fight, he has beaten Jake Ellenberger, Johny Hendricks and Rory MacDonald in convincing fashion. He's hoping that a fight for the title will be next, per Ryan Gerbosi of Newsday. 

“You never know, but I’m putting my foot down, man; I’m getting this next title shot. There’s already talk about it, and it’s what the fans want to see.”

Regardless, the UFC has a new champion in the welterweight division. It'll be up to him to make sure the welterweight title scene stays just as entertaining and fun as it was with Lawler as champion. 

With Thompson in the horizon, it's a safe bet the division's title landscape will continue to entertain. 

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Saturday, July 30

UFC 201: Live Results, Play-by-Play and Fight Card Highlights

UFC 201 emanates from Atlanta with a welterweight title tilt atop the card.

UFC welterweight champion Robbie Lawler welcomes his latest challenger, Tyron Woodley, in the main event. The two standouts have trained together, and now they will fight against one another. American Top Team will keep the belt in its camp, but will it go back to HQ in Coconut Creek, Florida, or Woodley's affiliate gym in Missouri?

The co-main event looks to be a strawweight title eliminator as contenders Rose Namajunas and Karolina Kowalkiewicz square off in a three-round affair.

Nine other bouts line the card with action, and Bleacher Report will be here all evening to break down the action for you. The first bout of the evening is at 7 p.m. ET on UFC Fight Pass. Televised prelims begin at 8 p.m ET on Fox Sports 2, and the pay-pay-view main card begins at 10 p.m. ET.

    

UFC 201 Fight Card

  • Robbie Lawler vs. Tyron Woodley
  • Rose Namajunas vs. Karolina Kowalkiewicz
  • Matt Brown vs. Jake Ellenberger
  • Francisco Rivera vs. Erik Perez
  • Ryan Benoit vs. Fredy Serrano
  • Ed Herman vs. Nikita Krylov
  • Ross Pearson vs. Jorge Masvidal
  • Anthony Hamilton vs. Damian Grabowski
  • Wilson Reis vs. Hector Sandoval
  • Michael Graves vs. Bojan Velickovic
  • Cesar Arzamendia vs. Damien Brown

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UFC 201 Fight Card: PPV Schedule, Odds and Predictions for Lawler vs. Woodley

Robbie Lawler's third welterweight title defense headlines the card for UFC 201 at Atlanta's Philips Arena on Saturday night. The champion has endured some gruelling recent bouts and faces a skilled challenger who has had to wait for his big chance: Tyron Woodley.

The Lawler and Woodley tussle isn't the only notable bout on the main card, though. Rose Namajunas' meeting with fellow contender Karolina Kowalkiewicz deservedly has co-main event billing.

Here are the schedule details for the pay-per-view event:

Date: Saturday, June 30

Time:  Main Card (10 p.m. ET/3 a.m. BST). Early Prelims (7 p.m. ET/12 a.m. BST). FS2 Prelims (8 p.m. ET/1 a.m. BST). 

Here's the full fight card information, along with odds:

 

Predictions

Choosing a winner between Lawler and Woodley is no easy task, but at least two experts agree about how the headline fight will play out. ESPN's Brett Okamoto is going for a fourth-round TKO for the defending champion, while Jonathan Bradley of Fox Sports also fancies a Lawler knockout in the fourth.

A common theme for each writer is punching power, both in terms of each fighter's chops as strikers, along with their ability to absorb shots.

The latter is a consideration Okamoto is unable to ignore. He's cited telling statistics that suggest Lawler will be under pressure if Woodley can land consistently up top: "According to FightMetric, Lawler has absorbed 642 strikes since the start of 2014. He's gone five hellacious rounds, back-to-back-to-back. When do these wars catch up? Lawler is 34 in human yearsand probably something like 112 in fighter years."

In order for Woodley to exploit those concerns, though, he'll need to connect with significant strikes. It's an area in which he's inferior to the champion, however, according to Bradley: "Lawler and Woodley have virtually identical striking statistics, with both fighters landing over three strikes per minute at a 46-percent clip. Where they differ, however, is in significant strikes, as Lawler lands 3.51 significant strikes per minute compared to 2.56 for Woodley."

Assessing Woodley's punching power is a common theme ahead of this fight. UFC Europe also asked whether the 34-year-old challenger can pack enough into his fists to put Lawler down decisively:

Counting on Woodley to land a knockout blow is a risky bet, since he's more at home as a grappler. Unfortunately for the challenger, that's an area where Lawler is rarely troubled.

So count on Lawler making good on these predictions and using his own skill as a striker to wear down and eventually knock Woodley out.

When Namajunas meets Kowalkiewicz, she'll have to be mindful of the latter's ferocity as a hitter. FightMetric detailed how Kowalkiewicz lands 6.17 significant strikes per minute.

Countering those fast and tough hands will demand keeping things on the mat. Fortunately for Namajunas, her 3.49 takedowns average, along with 66 percent takedowns accuracy, per FightMetric, means she's well-equipped to take her opponent out of her comfort zone.

If Namajunas can break down Kowalkiewicz's underrated defense and keep her grounded, she's more likely to lock on the submission hold that can end this intriguing fight.

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Lawler vs. Woodley: Weigh-In Info, Top Comments Before UFC 201

Robbie Lawler and Tyron Woodley hit the scales on Friday ahead of their mouth-watering title bout at UFC 201, and both fighters came in dead on the 170-pound limit, per Fox Sports: UFC:

The main event will see Lawler look to defend his welterweight title for the third consecutive fight, and he comes into Saturday’s clash in excellent shape.

Despite not taking to the Octagon since January, Lawler’s body is ready to be put to the ultimate test—something he should be used to by now.

In his previous two title tilts against Carlos Condit and Rory MacDonald, the American was taken all the way, but his grit and guile enabled him to prevail.

It’s all set to be another thriller at the Philips Arena in Atlanta, as the pair is closely matched on paper, although Lawler is hoping to make light work of his opponent.

Per Peter Carroll of MailOnline, the 34-year-old is looking to get in and out of the Octagon in double-quick time:

The thing is, no one ever wants fight of the night. Every fight I've gone in, I want Knockout of the Night. I want to be in and out quick. Sometimes these guys just have a lot of grit. They're highly trained and I just can't get them out of there so I get Fight of the Night. So it's not necessarily that I'm changing anything, it's like I'm just sick of Fight of the Night. I want to knock people out.

Lawler isn’t the only one who thinks Woodley may not stick around for long on Saturday, as fellow UFC fighter Sean Spencer says Lawler has a professional advantage over the challenger:

Woodley may have something to say about that, though.

The Chosen One has a solid submission game thanks to his wrestling roots, and although he hasn’t taken to the Octagon since January of last year, he’ll look to outwit Lawler tactically.

Woodley claims to be in the best possible shape to do exactly that.

"I'm putting everything together," Woodley explained to Carroll. You guys have seen the submission games, you've seen the wrestling games, you've seen the striking game. Over time I just matured as a fighter and it's my time to seize it. I'm putting everything together and I'm ready to take off."

Although Woodley says he’s improved his all-round game, he’d be smart to keep Lawler on the floor for as long as possible.

The more time the champion spends grappling on the floor, the more desperate and erratic he’ll become. That could lead to Lawler throwing wild punches, which would give Woodley the chance to capitalize.

Even so, Lawler is far more composed nowadays, and he’ll know not to be lured into clumsy attacks.

It’s all set to be an incredibly fiercely contested bout in Georgia, with two fighters at the top of their games going toe-to-toe.

Lawler has the edge in ability, but if Woodley plays a smart game, he could give the champ something to worry about.

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