Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

UFC 140

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
UFC mixed martial arts event in 2011
UFC 140: Jones vs. Machida
The poster for UFC 140: Jones vs. Machida
PromotionUltimate Fighting Championship
DateDecember 10, 2011
VenueAir Canada Centre
CityToronto,Ontario, Canada
Attendance18,303
Total gate$3,900,000
Event chronology
The Ultimate Fighter: Team Bisping vs. Team Miller FinaleUFC 140: Jones vs. MachidaUFC 141: Lesnar vs. Overeem

UFC 140: Jones vs. Machida was amixed martial arts event held by theUltimate Fighting Championship on December 10, 2011 at theAir Canada Centre inToronto,Ontario, Canada. It was the penultimate event for the UFC in 2011. The event featured eight bouts televised internationally, seven preliminary bouts aired on cable in the United States and Canada, and three preliminary bouts streamed live onFacebook.

In the co-main event,Frank Mir, who was the first man to knock outAntônio Rodrigo Nogueira atUFC 92, became the first man to submit Nogueira. Mir accomplished the feat with akimura that ultimately broke Nogueira's arm. In the main event,Lyoto Machida also suffered his first submission loss at the hands ofJon Jones. In doing so, Jones retained theUFC Light Heavyweight Championship title.

Background

[edit]

A bout betweenLyoto Machida andPhil Davis was initially announced by UFC President,Dana White, to happen atUFC 140. However, White, after discovering that Davis was still recovering from a knee injury, admitted to "[jumping] the gun" on the announcement .[1] Early reports also included a Light Heavyweight Championship bout betweenJon Jones andRashad Evans. First, Evans would need to be medically cleared following an operation that required pins to be inserted into his right hand due to an injury during his technical knockout victory overTito Ortiz.[2] When it became clear that Evans would not be ready for the fight, he was replaced by Machida for the championship bout.[3]

Jon Jones had won theUFC Light Heavyweight Championship earlier in the year after defeatingMaurício Rua atUFC 128 by technical knockout. Six months later, Jones defended the title after submittingQuinton Jackson, a former UFC Light Heavyweight Champion, atUFC 135. Lyoto Machida was himself a former UFC Light Heavyweight champion, having won the title via a knock out win overRashad Evans atUFC 98 in 2009. Machida lost the title a year later to Maurício Rua atUFC 113, the same man from whom Jones won the title in Rua's next outing. Machida's only career losses were to Rua and Jackson, both of whom Jones had beaten earlier in 2011.[4]

The co-main event was a rematch betweenFrank Mir andAntônio Rodrigo Nogueira. The two had fought about three years prior, when Nogueira was theInterim UFC Heavyweight Champion, atUFC 92 . In that match, Mir became the first person to defeat Nogueria by stoppage, due to a technical knockout in the second round.[5]

Another headlining fight involved Nogueira's twin brother,Antônio Rogério Nogueira, who faced off againstTito Ortiz. The pair were originally scheduled to fight at aUFC Fight Night in March 2011. However, when Ortiz withdrew due to an injury, he was replaced byPhil Davis. Plans forUFC 140 initially paired Ortiz againstRich Franklin. Shoulder surgery required Franklin to withdraw from the fight; Franklin was replaced by Ortiz's original opponent from eight months prior, Nogueira.[6]

Rory MacDonald was expected to faceBrian Ebersole at the event. However, on November 8, MacDonald pulled out of the bout because of injury and was replaced byClaude Patrick. Patrick was originally scheduled to faceRich Attonito on the preliminary card of the event.[7]Rich Attonito remained on the preliminary card and faced UFC newcomerJake Hecht.[8]Dennis Hallman missed the weight allowance for his lightweight return, weighing in at 158.5 pounds. He was fined 20% of his earnings for the fight and his fight withJohn Makdessi was subsequently changed to acatch weight bout.[9]

Event

[edit]

UFC 140 consisted of twelve mixed martial arts bouts sanctioned by Ontario's Athletics Commissioner under the MMA rules established by theNew Jersey State Athletic Control Board and often referred to as theUnified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts.[10] The non-championship bouts were held for three five-minute rounds. The championship bout between Jon Jones and Lyoto Machida was scheduled for five five-minute rounds. The event was planned to feature four preliminary bouts live onIon Television and onSportsnet in Canada[11] as well as three preliminary bouts streamed onFacebook. Due to the early end of the televised preliminary fights, the three fights on Facebook were also televised on cable. The attendance atAir Canada Centre was reported to be just over 18,000, bringing in almost $4 million from ticket sales.[12] Thepay-per-view buyrate was reported to be 485,000.[13]

Preliminary card

[edit]

The first fight of the evening was betweenMitch Clarke andJohn Cholish. In the second round, Clarke attempted to take down Cholish. During the scramble, Cholish managed to take Clarke's back. Cholish flattened Clarke out and began striking Clarke until refereeJohn McCarthy stopped the fight.[14] Cholish won the fight at 4:36 of the second round, due to a technical knockout, giving Clarke his first ever professional MMA loss.

Rich Attonito facedJake Hecht in the second bout of the night. Attonito controlled the fight in the first round following a takedown and damaged Hecht while on top of him.[15] Attonito attempted a take down again in the second round, but Hecht hit Attonito in the temple with elbow strikes while defending the takedown. Attonito went down and Hecht continued to punch him until the referee ended the fight.[14] Jake Hecht, in his UFC debut, defeated Rich Attonito by technical knockout at 1:10 of the second round.

Canadian nativeMark Bocek's fight withNik Lentz lasted the full three rounds. Bocek was able to take Lentz down at will and was consistently on top of Lentz throughout the fight. Lentz was not very active from the bottom, although he was able to prevent Bocek from passing his guard. Lentz attempted to apply a guillotine choke several times, but was unsuccessful in submitting Bocek. The judges' decision went to Mark Bocek, 30–27, resulting in Lentz suffering his first loss in the UFC.[16]

In the first bout of the night that aired on cable television,Yves Jabouin facedWalel Watson in the second fight of the night to go the full distance. Most of the fight was held with both fighters on their feet. Watson made use of his longer reach and height to strike from a distance, with Jabouin attempting to get in close to land harder strikes. The second and third rounds also saw Watson attempt to submit his opponent with chokes.[17] In the end, the judges scored the bout a split decision in favor of Yves Jabouin.[14]

John Makdessi then facedDennis Hallman in a catchweight bout due to Hallman's failure to make weight for the fight. Within seconds of the start of the fight, Hallman was able to take Makdessi down, mounted him and began toground and pound Makdessi. Makdessi rolled over in an attempt to defend himself, resulting in Hallman taking his back and applying a rear-naked choke. Dennis Hallman gave John Makdessi his first career loss due to submission with the rear-naked choke at 2:58 of the first round. Afterwards, Hallman stated his win should have an asterisk, since he was overweight for the fight.[14]

A middleweight fight betweenJared Hamman andCostas Philippou also ended in the first round. Philippou was able repeatedly to hit Hamman with powerful right hand punches causing Hamman to fall to the mat at least four times. The last punch resulted in Hamman falling face first to the mat, at which point John McCarthy ended the fight.[14] Costas Philippou earned his second straight UFC victory by defeating Jared Hamman at 3:11 of the first round via knockout.

The final bout of the preliminary card consisted of light heavyweightsKrzysztof Soszynski andIgor Pokrajac. Pokrajac immediately came after Soszynski with punches that staggered and backed Soszynski up to the cage. Soszynski fell to the ground under the rapid series of strikes and covered up to protect himself. Thirty-five seconds into the first round, referee Yves Lavigne stopped the fight, giving Igor Pokrajac the knockout victory.[14]

Main card

[edit]

The first bout of the evening that aired on the pay-per-view broadcast was a featherweight bout betweenMark Hominick andChan Sung Jung. At the start, Hominick threw a wild left punch that missed Jung. Jung responded with a straight right that connected and sent Hominick to the ground. Jung followed Hominick down with follow-up punches that resulted in the referee stopping the match. In a tie for the second fastest official knockout in UFC history, Chan Sung Jung defeated Mark Hominick by knockout seven seconds into the first round.[18] The win also earned Jung the event's "Knockout of the Night" award.

WelterweightsClaude Patrick andBrian Ebersole then faced each other. The first two rounds of the fight consisted of a lot ofclinch fighting up against the cage with occasional grappling on the ground. The third round occurred mostly on the ground, with Patrick making submission attempts at the start and end of the round, while in between Ebersole was on top striking down at his opponent. After all three rounds of the fight were completed, a split decision victory was given to Brian Ebersole.[19]

Tito Ortiz andAntônio Rogério Nogueira then participated in their light heavyweight fight. Ortiz early striking pushed Nogueira back. Nogueira managed to counter Ortiz's attack and reversed the situation, pushing Ortiz back. Nogueira then dropped Ortiz with a knee to the body and began pounding on him. Nogueira threw punches to Ortiz's body and when Ortiz failed to respond to the attack the referee stopped the fight. The result was Antônio Rogério Nogueira earning a technical knockout victory at 3:15 of the first round.[20]

The co-main event then occurred with heavyweightsFrank Mir fightingAntônio Rodrigo Nogueira. During the first round, Nogueira hit Mir with a punch that staggered Mir. Nogueira furthered his attack by attempting to take Mir's back and apply a choke submission. After someground and pound Mir escaped from under Nogueira, grabbed Nogueira's right arm and attempted akimura lock. The pair rolled over several times as Nogueira attempted to escape the submission hold, but Mir held tightly onto Nogueira's arm. Nogueira refused to tap out to the submission attempt until Mir broke his arm. The official decision was that Frank Mir defeated Antônio Rodrigo Nogueira by technical submission due to the kimura at 3:38 of the first round. As a result of this fight, Mir was awarded the event's "Submission of the Night" and earned the distinction of not only being the first man to knock out Nogueira, but also the first to submit him.[21]

The last bout of the evening was the Light Heavyweight Championship bout, in whichLyoto Machida attempted to take the title away fromJon Jones. Throughout the first round and a half it was a fairly even fight. Jones threw kicks and other strikes at Machida and Machida effectively countered the attacks. In the second round, Jones opened a gash on Machida's forehead, at which point the referee,John McCarthy, suspended the match for the cage-side doctor to look at it. The doctor cleared Machida to continue fighting. After the restart, Jones was able to stun Machida with a punch and was able to apply a standingguillotine choke. Machida refused to tap out and fell to the floor unconscious when Jones released him as the ref stopped the bout. Jon Jones retained his title via technical submission at 4:26 of the second round.[22] It became the first time that Machida had been submitted in a professional fight.[23] This championship fight was also awarded the event's "Fight of the Night".

Aftermath

[edit]

Rashad Evans was one of the opponents whomJon Jones was initially reported to fight at this event. That match for the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship eventually occurred atUFC 145 on April 21, 2012.[24]

Frank Mir's victory overAntônio Rodrigo Nogueira moved him one step closer to a championship fight of his own. April 4, 2012,Alistair Overeem was revealed to have failed his pre-fight drug test by the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC). He tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone that exceeded a ratio of 10-to-1, which was over the allowed ratio of 6-to-1. On Friday April 20, 2012, UFC President Dana White confirmed that Overeem has been removed from his fight with Dos Santos and replaced by Frank Mir.

Results

[edit]
Main Card
Weight classMethodRoundTimeNotes
Light HeavyweightJon Jones (c)def.Lyoto MachidaTechnical Submission (guillotine choke)24:26[a]
HeavyweightFrank Mirdef.Antônio Rodrigo NogueiraSubmission (kimura)13:38
Light HeavyweightAntônio Rogério Nogueiradef.Tito OrtizTKO (punches and elbows to the body)13:15
WelterweightBrian Ebersoledef.Claude PatrickDecision (split) (29–28, 28–29, 29–28)35:00
FeatherweightChan Sung Jungdef.Mark HominickKO (punches)10:07
Preliminary card (Ion Television)
Light HeavyweightIgor Pokrajacdef.Krzysztof SoszynskiKO (punches)10:35[b]
MiddleweightCostas Philippoudef.Jared HammanKO (punches)13:11[c]
Catchweight (158.5 lb)Dennis Hallmandef.John MakdessiSubmission (rear-naked choke)12:58[d]
BantamweightYves Jabouindef.Walel WatsonDecision (split) (28–29, 29–28, 30–27)35:00
Preliminary Card (Facebook)
LightweightMark Bocekdef.Nik LentzDecision (unanimous) (30–27, 30–27, 30–27)35:00
WelterweightJake Hechtdef.Rich AttonitoTKO (elbows and punches)21:10[e]
LightweightJohn Cholishdef.Mitch ClarkeTKO (punches)24:36
  1. ^For theUFC Light Heavyweight Championship
  2. ^This bout aired on the broadcast following the Hallman vs Makdessi bout.
  3. ^This bout aired on the broadcast following the Nogueira vs Ortiz bout.
  4. ^This bout aired on the broadcast following the Jones vs Machida bout.
  5. ^This bout aired on the broadcast following the Pokrajac vs Soszynski bout.

Bonus awards

[edit]

The following fighters received $75,000 bonuses.[25]

  • Fight of the Night: Jon Jones vs. Lyoto Machida
  • Knockout of the Night: Chan Sung Jung
  • Submission of the Night: Frank Mir

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"UFC 140 briefly adds Phil Davis vs. Lyoto Machida, but UFC boss 'jumped gun'". MMAJunkie.com. September 27, 2011. Archived fromthe original on September 29, 2011. RetrievedMarch 25, 2012.
  2. ^Chiappetta, Mike (October 5, 2012)."UFC Targeting Jon Jones vs. Rashad Evans for UFC 140 Main Event". MMAFighting.com. RetrievedMarch 25, 2012.
  3. ^"UFC 140 headliner features champ Jon Jones vs. Lyoto Machida". MMAJunkie.com. October 7, 2011. Archived fromthe original on July 30, 2012. RetrievedMarch 25, 2012.
  4. ^McNeil, Franklin (October 6, 2012)."Jon Jones' defense vs. Lyoto Machida". ESPN. RetrievedMarch 25, 2012.
  5. ^Okamoto, Brett (September 7, 2011)."Frank Mir to fight at UFC 140". ESPN. RetrievedMarch 26, 2012.
  6. ^Non, Sergio (September 9, 2011)."Ortiz vs. Lil Nog added to UFC 140". USA Today. RetrievedMarch 26, 2012.
  7. ^"Rory MacDonald out, Claude Patrick in against Brian Ebersole at UFC 140". MMAJunkie.com. November 8, 2011. Archived fromthe original on November 10, 2011. RetrievedNovember 8, 2011.
  8. ^"Rich Attonito meets newcomer Jake Hecht at UFC 140". mmajunkie.com. Archived fromthe original on 2011-11-12. Retrieved2011-11-10.
  9. ^"UFC 140 weigh-in results".mmajunkie.com. December 9, 2011. Archived fromthe original on July 20, 2012. RetrievedDecember 9, 2011.
  10. ^"Mixed Martial Arts In Ontario" (Press release). Ontario, Canada. August 14, 2010. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.
  11. ^"UFC 140 Prelim Bouts Air on ION Television". UFC. RetrievedDecember 5, 2011.
  12. ^"UFC 140 draws a reported 18,303 attendees for $3.9 million live gate". MMAJunkie.com. December 11, 2011. Archived fromthe original on July 11, 2012. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.
  13. ^"Pay-per-view : MMAPayout.com: The Business of MMA". MMAPayout.com. Archived fromthe original on June 27, 2011. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.
  14. ^abcdefNon, Sergio (December 10, 2011)."UFC 140: Pokrajac, Philippou, Hecht win early fights". USA Today. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.
  15. ^Brookhouse, Brent (December 11, 2011)."UFC 140 Results Recap: Rich Attonito vs. Jake Hecht". BloodyElbow.com. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.[dead link]
  16. ^Stupp, Dann; Morgan, John (December 10, 2011)."UFC 140 results: Mark Bocek delivers Nik Lentz his first UFC loss". MMAJunkie.com. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.[dead link]
  17. ^Brookhouse, Brent (December 11, 2011)."UFC 140 Results Recap: Yves Jabouin vs. Walel Watson". BloodyElbow.com. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedMarch 27, 2012.
  18. ^Stupp, Dann; Morgan, John (December 10, 2011)."UFC 140 results: Chan Sung Jung stuns Mark Hominick with seven-second TKO". MMAJunkie.com. Archived fromthe original on March 18, 2012. RetrievedApril 1, 2012.
  19. ^Smith, Michael David (10 December 2011)."UFC 140: Brian Ebersole Beats Claude Patrick by Split Decision". MMAFighting.com. RetrievedApril 1, 2012.
  20. ^Hemminger, Brian (December 11, 2011)."UFC 140 results recap: Antonio Rogerio Nogueira vs Tito Ortiz fight review and analysis". MMAMania.com. RetrievedApril 1, 2012.
  21. ^Non, Sergio (December 10, 2011)."Mir breaks Nogueira's arm at UFC 140". USA Today. RetrievedApril 1, 2012.
  22. ^"Jones retains light heavyweight title at UFC 140". Houston Chronicle / AP. December 10, 2011. RetrievedApril 1, 2012.
  23. ^Wagenheim, Jeff (December 11, 2011)."UFC 140: Jones slays 'The Dragon' to cap breakthrough year". Archived fromthe original on January 13, 2012. RetrievedApril 2, 2012.
  24. ^Myers, Thomas (January 28, 2012)."Jon Jones vs Rashad Evans main event set for Atlanta on April 21". MMAMania.com. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2012.
  25. ^Staff (2011-12-10)."UFC 140 bonuses: Jung, Mir, Jones and Machida earn $75K awards". MMAjunkie.com. Archived fromthe original on 2013-11-10. Retrieved2011-12-10.

External links

[edit]
Upcoming events are in italics
Flagship events
Fight Nights
(on Spike TV)
UFC on Versus/UFC Live
UFC on Fox
UFC on FX
UFC on Fuel TV
Fight Nights
(on FS1, FS2, FXX,
or UFC Fight Pass)
UFC on ESPN
(or ESPN2)
Fight Nights
(on ESPN+)
UFC on ABC
Fight Nights
(on Paramount+)
The Ultimate Fighter
Finales
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=UFC_140&oldid=1335254461"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp