Weekend Post-Mortem: Cung Recast, Lowest Blow, More

Jake RossenDec 21, 2009
D. Mandel/Sherdog.com


Prior to Saturday’s fight with Cung Le -- one in which he was expected to lose colorfully -- Scott Smith was told by a concerned corner that he needed to stop taking such significant punishment in his fights. He went out and spent nearly fifteen minutes getting knocked on his rear.

Smith is an accidental storyteller: taking a sustained beating is part of screenwriting 101, with the protagonist suffering horribly before coming out on top. After being knocked down multiple times and with a Le decision seemingly inevitable, Smith snuck in a left hand, then swarmed in for the kill. It was Le’s first defeat in 24 career combat-sport fights.

There were better matches this weekend -- the WEC’s Brandon Visher/Courtney Buck horn-ramming, Strikeforce’s Josh Thomson/Gilbert Melendez rematch -- but none with that kind of resonance. Smith’s ability to snatch victory from jaws of defeat -- jaws, to really extend the metaphor, which usually have bitten off an arm and have begun to partially digest his lower body -- has become the new normal. In 2006, nearly ready to keel over from a body shot, he launched a desperation bomb from his hip that dropped Pete Sell; earlier this year, he battled back from a beating to put down Benji Radach in the third round. You could make a lot of money bottling the guy’s constitution. And if he could learn to pull these things off earlier in a fight, he might enjoy his 40s.

Next for Le: Likely another long layoff to film movies with highly dubious award potential; a Smith rematch would sell though, and provide him with a chance to rub out his one blemish.

Next for Smith: Motrin; Tim Kennedy or Evangelista "Cyborg" Santos.

Next for Donald Cerrone: The winner of January’s Ben Henderson/Jamie Varner title bout.

Next for Ronaldo Souza: Settling his issues with Jason "Mayhem" Miller before meeting the winner of the expected Dan Henderson/Jake Shields title bout.

Next for Gilbert Melendez: Hoping that Shinya Aoki has his passport in order.

Next for Chris Horodecki: 145.



WEC 45, Strikeforce ‘Evolution’ Awards

The Can’t-Help-Himself Award Mauro Renallo, for suggesting that it took Scott Smith’s “’Hands of Steel’ to steal this fight.” Nyuk, nyuk. And etc.

The Insulation Award Versus, for promoting a program called “The World MMA Awards” on Jan. 6 that is likely to consist of nothing but WEC and UFC nominations.

The Look-Both Ways-Before-Crossing-the-Mat Award Chris Horodecki, for the absurd decision to jog away from Anthony Njokuani with his back turned. (Lesson one in any introductory self-defense class: don’t fall on your head. Lesson two: don’t turn your back.)

The Petition-to-Put-Lawal-on-Last Award Muhammed Lawal, for shaking and then spraying energy drink solution all over the canvas. Maybe sticky, carbonated water might be better for traction, but it’s doubtful anyone wants to experiment during a title fight.

New Questions

Where does Muhammed Lawal belong?

Lawal looked like a fighter cast in bronze next to a gelatinous Mike Whitehead, and the 40 pound weight differential didn’t seem to matter. Strikeforce could use free-roaming athletes like Lawal and Dan Henderson to jump around their medium-weight rosters, but it doesn’t create much consistency, and doesn’t do any favors to casual fans confused by the skipping. Lawal is a credible threat as a heavyweight, but once he runs into men who know how to use their size --Brett Rogers, even Bobby Lashley -- he might realize he’s in over his head.

Who can handle “Jacare” on the Strikeforce mat?

Ronaldo Souza began his MMA career with the sympathies normally given to outstanding grapplers making the transition: of course he’s trouble on the mat, but he’ll be a mess standing. Instead, De Souza has shown proficiency in all ranges, developing his hands into something to worry about. How Jake Shields or Nick Diaz would approach him -- and where -- is worth exploring.

Can Cung Le still pack a house?

Le has fought in MMA seven times at the HP Pavilion: each time, the crowd had some belief that his San Shou background was so unique that his opponents wouldn’t have answers. That changed after Scott Smith took advantage of a break in Le’s guard, following him to the mat and scoring (another) unlikely victory. Le diehards will point out that, until that reversal in the closing two minutes, Le was making Smith look foolish.

Everyone loses: a focused Le with more training time, especially in a bid for redemption, might prove to be more popular than ever.

What are athletic commissions going to do about groin shots?

If there’s one thing worse than suffering a blow to the groin, it’s suffering two: Donald Cerrone nailed Ed Ratcliff three time in the basket Saturday, prompting a point deduction and a bit of a tainted victory over a clearly aching Ratcliff; Josh Thomson ate a shot against Gil Melendez. These are fouls with real consequences in the fight, yet no athletic commissions have any particular policies beyond use of a solid-material cup. No material -- even the steel Thai bowls -- can make a fighter totally immune to the shock, but some protection is better than others. It’s time for regulatory bodies to investigate (and mandate) better shields.

Etc.
Dan Henderson appeared to get the loudest reaction of any Strikeforce spectator Saturday; all the promotion invested by the UFC appears to be paying off…Following a TKO over Mike Whitehead, Muhammed Lawal is making noise about a fight with Fedor Emelianenko. If he can score that fight without beating one (or three) ranked heavyweights, it’s a sorry state of affairs…The WEC offered up a bizarre contradiction by awarding “Fight of the Night” honors to both Donald Cerrone/Ed Ratcliff and Takeya Mizugaki/Scott Jorgensen. I’m not advocating that Ratcliff should’ve been stiffed, but why award Cerrone with a bonus when he spent half the night fouling his opponent?