Sam Stout was favored but came up short on the scorecards at UFC 154. | Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Sam Stout had a bad night at UFC 154 on Saturday, as he faced fellow Canadian John Makdessi in a preliminary lightweight bout at the Bell Centre in Montreal.
Prior to the fight, Makdessi had suffered back-to-back losses. He succumbed to a first-round submission from an overweight Dennis Hallman at UFC 140 and dropped a decision to Anthony Njokuani at UFC 145. Stout, on the other hand, had won his previous fight, handily defeating Spencer Fisher at UFC on FX 4 in June.
Mark Hominick File Photo
Hominick also fell short at UFC 154.
Despite the Canadian’s recent skid, UFC president Dana White was quick to point out that “Hominick always comes to fight” at a post-fight press conference. “That was a really good fight. They both went at it,” he added. Although White said the UFC does not make decisions during the presser about which fighters will get cut, he made it a point to express his respect for Hominick.
Garza had lost two in a row before the bout; he was a victim to a Dustin Poirier brabo choke at UFC on Fox 1 and lost a decision to Dennis Bermudez at UFC on Fox 3 in May. An improved striking game paved the way for his victory.
Stout and Hominick have seen brighter times. They fought on six of the same cards for the now-defunct Canadian MMA promotion TKO Championship Fighting, with five of the events taking place in Montreal and the other in Victoriaville. The two Team Tompkins teammates also made their promotional debuts at the same Ultimate Fighting Championship event: UFC 58 “USA vs. Canada” in March 2006. There, Hominick submitted Yves Edwards with a triangle choke, while Stout walked away with a split decision in his first matchup with Fisher.