UFC 135: Jones dismantles Rampage; Hunt, Te Huna victorious

By Sam Cupitt / Roar Guru

Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson had a lot to say about the hype behind UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones heading into Sunday’s UFC 135 class. Rampage had described Jones as “cocky” leading into the bout and claimed he had not fought anyone to warrant the praise he was receiving.

After 16 minutes and 14 seconds of being picked apart, battered and then finally submitted by Jones, Rampage changed his tune.

It was a masterful performance by Jones, who kept the fight at a distance with a variety of kicks that pretty much nullified Rampage’s boxing centric game.

It’s a credit to Rampage that he was able to stuff a lot of Jones’ takedowns; a feat that vaunted wrestlers like Ryan Bader, Matt Hamill and Vladimir Matyushenko were unable accomplish.

However, all it did was prolong the inevitable. A clearly frustrated Rampage was finally taken down in the fourth round and submitted by rear naked choke without much resistance.

To put the win in perspective, this was the first time Rampage was stopped since 2005 and the first time he was submitted since 2001.

Jones’ performance was much more measured than his shellacking of Mauricio ‘Shogun’ Rua in March but it was equally as freakish. He made Rampage look silly on a number of occasions and didn’t give him a sniff at all.

I have my doubts that his next opponent, Rashad Evans, will have any more success considering Evans could probably make middleweight if he tried but I’m still excited to see it.

Both Jones and Evans are probably looking forward to the bout too after their friendship fell apart earlier this year after Jones replaced him to challenge Rua for the title.

On the Australasian front, adopted Kiwis Mark Hunt and James Te Huna were both successful against their opponents.

Hunt defeated “Big” Ben Rothwell via unanimous decision in a gruelling, and at times hard to watch, heavyweight battle.

The ‘Super Samoan’ was in trouble in the first as Rothwell scored a takedown and quickly achieved mount but Hunt was able to get back to his feet.

Shortly thereafter, Rothwell’s gas tank hit empty while at altitude. The thin air of Denver, Colorado and the punishment Hunt was beginning to deal out took its toll on Rothwell to startling effect, as the six foot five beast began to stumble around the cage in zombie like fashion.

Hunt took over the fight and easily sealed the last two rounds to claim a decision victory.

James Te Huna kicked off the card in brutal fashion as he stopped Ricardo Romero with punches in just 47 seconds. It was clear from the outset that Romero wanted the fight on the ground and it was also clear that he wasn’t very adept at doing so.

He ducked his head and rushed in wildly for a takedown only to be met by a Te Huna uppercut that dropped him. Romero briefly recovered only to attempt the same thing a few seconds later where he was again dropped and pounded out.

In the night’s co-main event, Josh Koscheck essentially retired UFC Hall of Famer, Matt Hughes with an emphatic knockout at 4:59 of round 1.

Koscheck took a few minutes to get going as Hughes did his best to keep the memories of Koscheck’s ill-fated title tilt against Georges St. Pierre fresh in his mind. Once Koscheck found his rhythm though it was pretty much all over though.

Hughes ended up on his back after finding himself off balance in a scramble and Koscheck seized on the opportunity by landing some thudding ground and pound that put the former welterweight champion out cold with just one second to spare in the round.

That makes two straight losses for Hughes, who preferred the term ‘shelved’ as opposed to ‘retired’ in his post-fight interview.

Regardless of the terminology, that fight will most likely be the last of his career. He finishes up tied with Tito Ortiz for the most UFC fights in the company’s history with 25.

Nate Diaz kicked off the pay-per-view card with a flawless performance against faded former PRIDE lightweight champion, Takanori Gomi.

Diaz nabbed the lucrative $75,000 ‘Submission of the Night’ bonus with a slick armbar finish. In the night’s other main card bout, rising heavyweight, Travis Browne scored a dismal unanimous decision over Brit, Rob Broughton.

Attendance: 16,344

$75,000 Bonuses:

KO of the Night: Josh Koscheck

Submission of the Night: Nate Diaz

Fight of the Night: Jon Jones and Quinton Jackson

The Crowd Says:

2011-09-26T09:26:28+00:00

ash

Guest


Don't count out Hunt and Browne, they are lower to middle of the tear guys working there way up. The HW div is shallow and while it doesn't always make for great tv the ufc can kind of afford to keep them around. Also dont count the altitude out.. Its not an excuse but i think we have to just take it into our stride and call it bad match making for the card. The UFC really need to start showing more of the Banta/Featherweight guys.. Mizugaki vs Escovedo should of opened the pay per view card. My 2cents anyway..

AUTHOR

2011-09-26T06:44:10+00:00

Sam Cupitt

Roar Guru


It probably wasn't the best idea for the UFC to book two heavyweight fights for a card in Denver. They struggle for air at the best of times. Rothwell fought Velasquez two years back before Velasquez had the title and it wasn't pretty. It was as if Rothwell's head had personally wronged Velasquez's fists. Hunt will probably carve out a niche in the UFC as a mid-tier banger ... at sea level but yeah, he won't get into title contention barring some freakish results. The two heavyweight fights did a lot to dent the pacing of the show, which is a shame as there were some great fights on the preliminary portion. I disagree with the Okami suggestion, the guy earned his shot. He was 10-2 in the UFC when he fought Anderson. It's not the UFC's fault that Anderson is just on another planet to him.

2011-09-26T06:32:00+00:00

Mark

Guest


Right - nice call angrywicket.

2011-09-26T04:37:25+00:00

angrywicket

Guest


Mark, As far as i'm aware you're can bat the hands away, but "small joint manipulation" is illegal, so he'd be risking a dq if he tried grabbing the fingers.

2011-09-26T03:33:58+00:00

turbodewd

Guest


Travis, i agree, some of the fights in the UFC are very ordinary. If Rothwell and Hunt cant even complete 3 rounds then they shouldnt be there. Same with the super fat Roy Nelson who is actually a decent fighter. I think UFC bouts are on too often. They have about 12 per year, drop that to 10. Rampage was disappointing, mainly coz Jones was so good. CAnt wait for JDS v Velasquez!!

2011-09-26T00:56:43+00:00

Travis

Guest


That Hunt v Rothwell fight was without a doubt the WORST fight I've seen on a ppv that I can remember. They were both so gassed that Rothwell actually doubled over and had his hands resting on his knees when Hunt came up to him to (try) kick him in the head he didnt even put up a block, luckily for him though Hunt was also so gassed that he had no power left and Rothwell kept on standing! Are these guys seriously a threat to the title at all? Cain V would annihilate either one of those two. Standards need to lift in the heavyweight division, or maybe the UFC needs to start doing some prefight fitness testing. The PPV was not worth the $45, enough with these one sided title fights, Okami didn't deserve a shot and neither did Rampage. More fights like Diaz v Faber please

2011-09-26T00:53:31+00:00

Mark

Guest


Nice summary Sam, and look, that guy Jones is a freak. I found it really interesting that he keeps his long arm in your face, with fingers kinda poking you in the eye if you advance. Rampage was clearly frustrated by that too. Are you allowed to attack hands to try and keep that away? Anyway, the Australians were good, Te Huna clearly has heavy hands and Romero wasn't too good, but Te Huna fought him off well enough - if it had gone to the ground in those opening moments it may have been a different story. Hunt was impressive, although I wanted him to finish Rothwell with some blows to the head! I've watched some of his K-1 stuff, he didn't really explode and try to annihilate Rothwell - maybe he knew he had the win and didn't feel he had to push.

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