Thursday, April 14, 2011

MFC 29 (4/10/2011)

We've got the debut of MFC in a proper round cage and also their debut in Ontario as they ran a show at the Caesars Windsor Ballroom. We've got Terry Martin, Hermes Franca, Ryan Jimmo, Pete Spratt, and Marcus Davis. Yes indeedy, this is gonna be a quality second rate show. I hope. Or not.

1) Andreas Spang vs. Ali Mokdad: Mokdad is a local boy from Windsor, Spang is Swedish but training in Vegas. No idea who either is.

FIGHT: Mokdad Submission Rnd 1. Mokdad gets the clinch, the takedown, takes the back when Spang tries to stand, and we have a KOTC special. (0)

2) Demi Deeds vs. Pete Spratt: Spratt is a legend who has never been in a bad fight. Ever. It should be noted that Spratt is now 40 years old. Both men are coming in on two loss slides.

FIGHT: Spratt Submission Rnd 2. Tough fight to break down. In effect, you have a very dull first round in which Spratt establishes the distance as well as the ability to get up from Deeds' takedowns and/or defend the shot. Deeds comes straight in, offers no angles, and doesn't really set anything up well and gets raked with punches at the end of the round for his trouble, along with low kicks. The theme continues in round 2, Spratt hurts him badly with a right hand and has to go chasing Deeds around the cage until he falls down. Spratt continues the battering there and then moves to an armbar from side control to force the tap. This is at least the second time that I can remember Frank Trigg being all wowed that Spratt does have submissions. Too bad they only work against crappy fighters. Spratt notes that he's getting old in the post fight interview. (2)

3) Robert Washington vs. Hermes Franca: Washington was on MFC 28 which I neglected to do a review of (but will soon). Franca has been on a tail spin in recent years. Now 36 (officially), he's won only one fight in his last 5, with one of the bouts being a "should be a win" sort of result against Ferrid Kheder.

FIGHT: Franca TKO Rnd 2. Horrible first round where both guys stand at distance and feel each other out. Washington tries to move his body around and throw jabs and stuff to set up his punches, but doesn't really do a good job of it. Its pretty predictable that he throws one jab and then the right hand and when he's going to close the distance. Franca times him jumping in with a looping right and Washington drops and takes a few more shots before the fight is stopped. Nothing to get excited about for anyone involved. (2)

4) Marcus Davis vs. Curtis DeMarce: Davis has fallen so, so far. From welterweight top 15 fighter in the UFC to a guy scrapping with generic lightweights on small casino shows in the course of about 36 months.

FIGHT: Davis Split Decision (2)

DeMarce: Not going to do a lot of breaking down on him because, hey, does he really matter? Some attempts at takedowns, not very good standing compared to Davis (as expected), but more often than not taken down himself or would lose position. He does damage Davis with what is said to be an elbow on the mat from the bottom, but honestly I thought it was a butt. Whatever. No biggie. You want to hear about Davis, right?

Davis: Davis fought this bout like a man trying to reinvent himself for the long run. Problem #1: That should have happened 5-6 years ago when he was in his physical prime. Problem #2: He's not that effective in doing it here against a nobody. Davis fights rounds 1 and the first half of roun 2 as a top control grappler who lies in half guard or guard and lands shots. That is astonishing to see from a guy who used to chase $50K/60K bonuses instead of wins like they were 6 figure paydays. In round 1, he clearly succeeds. In round 2, the cut that forms early on leads to a standup, and as a result of that, DeMarce comes forward and gets his own takedown. This is part of the problem of being a top control grappler - if you aren't the better wrestler, it doesn't really work as a long term plan. Yes, Davis sorta helps the matter by going for a guillotine, and yes, Davis then proceeds to shrimp and turn over and take top control on DeMarce. But this happens again and again as Davis continues to go for low kicks and knees and other strikes that are stupid to throw against a guy who is trying to wrestle you down. Especially when your hands are a million times better than the other guy's and landing at will.

My takeaways from the fight regarding Davis are this: His legs are shot. You can see it in his lack of real bounce in the ring. It looks like they're not really under him anymore and that everything he does has fragility. If you are a striker primarily and your legs are shot, your career is kaput-ski. Obviously Davis has tried to then transition to a different game, but its not really his game. And he did it far, far too late. He's not getting back to the big show and if he does, its on the basis of a Phil Baroni because he's broke and its the UFC's way of giving alms to the poor old fighters that broke down fighting for them to give them not much money in an attempt to be George Foremans and Randy Coutures.

5) Ryan Jimmo vs. Zak Cummings: Cummings is a balding grappler who is fighting above his best weight against a guy who is much, much bigger than him. Cummings also is a lousy striker, which makes the task even more difficult. Meanwhile, the MFC and HDNet continue to prop up Jimmo, one of the most boring fighters in the game. They note his 14 wins in a row coming in and compare it to guys like Jake Shields and Anderson Silva, who have beaten live bodies. 5 rounder for the MFC LHW title.

FIGHT: Jimmo Unanimous Decision. Impossible to reasonably breakdown on the basis of the fighters. (2)

Cummings comes forward with chopping right hand leads and shots and Jimmo defends them by going backwards and leaning on the cage. Sometimes Jimmo throws body kicks or low kicks. He throws about 3 right hands the whole fight. Both men are bleeding - Jimmo from a headbutt that occurs inside the first 30 seconds, Cummings from a punch to the face. Jimmo wins by inflicting actual damage on his opponent, particularly when he reverses position and ends up on top in the 3rd and 4th round landing blows and seeking kimuras.

This gets to a bigger point to make here and its about Jimmo. Boxing fans know who Jameel McCline is. He was a converted football player turned heavyweight boxer who nearly won the IBF heavyweight title in a fight against best friend Chris Byrd and came to prominence with an early KO of Michael Grant way, way back (2002? 2003?). Anyhow, I remember a poster on rec.sport.boxing saying that he hated Grant because in spite of being a huge beast of a man and being so athletic, he fought like a pussy. He never sat on his punches, leading to an abnormally low KO rate for a man his size. Here was a giant of a man who slap boxed guys he should have walked through.

Jimmo has similarities. He is this huge hulking dude who still has trouble being controlled by wrestlers much smaller than him, or at least in terms of them nullifying his offense. That's problematic. More problematic is his style. Again, huge dude, has power, what does he do? He sits on the outside and throws leg kicks. He still can't time dudes coming in to land shots, his lateral movement still isn't very good, and when dudes shoot in, he can't force them down to the mat himself and beat the shit out of them. I mean, if you can control how the grappling exchanges go, you win fights. Instead, he is a victim of wall and stall time and time again. And he sucks at avoiding punches. He leaves his chin out. 15 wins in a row is great, but man, who does he beat at 205 in the UFC? I'm clueless. I hate to say it, but give him Eliot Marshall in his next MFC fight and go from there.

6) Douglas Lima vs. Terry Martin: YOUR MAIN EVENT. MFC welterweight title is on the line.

FIGHT: Lima TKO Rnd 1. I'm shocked immediately by the size differential. Lima is two weight classes larger than Martin, who himself was actually a light heavyweight at one time. I know at that point that I had made the oh-so-wrong pick when predicting this fight. Lima catches Martin coming forward with a right hand, he drops to a knee, takes a couple more punches, and its waived off. Martin is washed up to the max. He looks like he needs to seriously consider 155 or retiring. (2)


FIGHT OF THE NIGHT: Davis/Demarce

KO OF THE NIGHT: Lima/Martin

SUBMISSION OF THE NIGHT: Spratt/Deeds

OVERALL FOR THE SHOW: 5 out of 10. There's some terrifically bad, some kinda interesting, some utterly lousy and soul crushing. This is minor league MMA defined; lots of ex UFC contenders who got somewhere short of the top fighting in a casino ballroom for scraps against no-names. None of them come out looking much better for it.

D&R Rating: 33% (10/30)



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