Fabricio Werdum's stock continues to rise. | Photo: Jeff Sherwood/Sherdog.com
When news broke a few weeks back that Cain Velasquez was out of UFC 180 with a knee injury, it put a serious damper on the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s first-ever trip South of the Border. In the meantime, Fabricio Werdum -- a Brazilian fluent in Spanish -- took it upon himself to become Mexico’s adopted son. Now, in addition to a new legion of fans, “Vai Cavalo” has some shiny hardware, as he captured the interim heavyweight title with a second round technical knockout of Mark Hunt in the UFC 180 headliner in Mexico City on Saturday night.
A date with Velasquez, the reigning heavyweight king, still looms for Werdum as soon as the American Kickboxing Academy product returns to health. Here is a by-the-numbers look at UFC 180, with statistics courtesy of FightMetric.com.
5: Consecutive wins for Werdum, tying him with Andrei Arlovski -- whose streak is over two separate promotional tenures -- for longest active streak in the UFC’s heavyweight division.
6: Career knockdowns in UFC competition for Hunt, who floored Werdum early in their fight to move past Heath Herring and into a tie with Frank Mir for No. 8 all-time among heavyweights in the promotion. Roy Nelson, Matt Mitrione and Gabriel Gonzaga are tied for No. 5 with seven knockdowns.
21: Significant strikes landed by Werdum, who outlanded Hunt by 11 significant strikes. “Vai Cavalo” also held a 31-to-15 edge in total strikes landed. In his last outing, a five-round decision win over Travis Browne, Werdum landed a career-high 121 significant strikes.
386: Significant strikes landed by Werdum in the Octagon, No. 7 among all UFC heavyweights just behind Joey Beltran (388) at No. 6.
504: Total strikes landed by Werdum, No. 8 in UFC heavyweight history. Frank Mir is No. 7 with 511 total strikes landed.
0: Takedowns landed, in three attempts, by Werdum. Heading into UFC 180, Hunt’s takedown defense rate of .830 ranked No. 2 among all heavyweights in the promotion behind Arlovski (88.4 percent).
7,400: Mexico City’s elevation above sea level. By comparison, Denver’s elevation is 5,300 feet above sea level.
25: Days since Velasquez withdrew from the UFC 180 headliner against Werdum with a knee injury. The reigning heavyweight king hasn’t not competed since besting Junior dos Santos at UFC 166 in October 2013.
1,694: Days since the last UFC interim heavyweight title fight, when Shane Carwin knocked out Frank Mir 3:48 into the first round at UFC 111.
4: Consecutive welterweight wins for Kelvin Gastelum, the second longest active streak in the division behind Neil Magny, who has won five straight. Gastelum submitted Jake Ellenberger with a rear-naked choke 4:46 into the opening frame on Saturday night.
1: Takedown landed by Gastelum against Ellenberger, the first takedown “The Juggernaut” has surrendered in UFC competition since a split-decision loss to Carlos Condit in his promotional debut in 2009.
4: Finishes for Ricardo Lamas in UFC competition, second most in the featherweight division behind Dustin Poirier’s five. Lamas tapped out Dennis Bermudez with a guillotine choke 3:18 into the initial stanza of their 145-pound bout, ending “The Ultimate Fighter 14” veteran’s seven fight winning streak.
2: Points deducted from Jose Quinonez by referee John McCarthy for what was deemed a flagrant headbutt landed on Alejandro Perez in the third round. Perez would go on to capture a unanimous verdict and “The Ultimate Fighter: Latin America” bantamweight crown.
52: Significant strikes which Jessica Eye outlanded Leslie Smith in their women’s bantamweight clash, which was stopped 1:30 into round two due to Smith’s injured ear. “Evil” Eye held an 80-to-28 advantage in significant strikes overall.
55: Significant strikes to the head landed by Eye. By comparison, Smith landed 21.
5: Submissions attempted by Gabriel Benitez in his victory over Humberto Brown Morrison. The last of those attempts, a guillotine choke, rendered Brown unconscious 50 seconds into the third frame.
12: Fighters, of the 22 on Saturday’s card, who were making their professional debut at UFC 180.