A bloody Jon (Bones) Jones defended his light-heavyweight title but
was pushed to the limit by a hard-charging Alexander (The Mauler)
Gustafsson before winning a memorable five-round decision at UFC 165 on
Saturday night.
The judges scored it 48-47, 48-47, 49-46 for Jones (19-1). It was the champion’s closest call.
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Despite the loss, it was a remarkable show by the confident Swedish
challenger, who had the best of the early rounds and then hung on in the
fourth and fifth. And it will likely be remembered as one of the best
title fights in UFC history.
Gustafsson (15-2) made the champion
look human, cutting him and taking him down for the first time in his
UFC career. As he promised, the Swede’s hands were faster.
It wasn’t until the end of the fourth round that a bloody Jones finally did damage, setting the stage for a dramatic fifth.
Both
men were bleeding. Jones took Gustafsson down but the Swede fought his
way back to his feet. Gustafsson looked exhausted and Jones threw
everything at him, mixing elbows and kicks.
In the co-main event
at the Air Canada Centre, interim bantamweight title-holder Renan Barao
stopped former WEC champion Eddie Wineland in spectacular fashion,
finishing him with a spinning back kick to the face in the second round.
Gustafsson,
wearing trunks in the blue-and-yellow colours of Sweden, walked in to
Avicii’s “Wake Me Up.” The champion, wearing a “Not Quite Human”
T-shirt, followed to the sounds of “Coming Home” by Diddy and Dirty
Money as the noise level escalated in the arena.
At six foot five,
the Swede had a one-inch height advantage on Jones. The champ still had
a reach advantage thanks to his UFC-leading 84.5-inch wingspan, but it
was only a three-inch edge this time.
Gustafsson cooly stuffed an
early takedown and came at Jones, who fought back with kicks. The Swede
cut the champion at the right eye midway through the first round. And
with one minute left, he took Jones down for the first time in the
champion’s UFC career.
Jones just missed with a spinning elbow in a first round that was good for Gustafsson.
The
Swede tripped Jones as he attempted a kick early in the second, only to
have the champion get back up and charge at him. Jones stalked
Gustafsson, who stuffed another takedown.
The crowd roared as the round ended.
Gustafsson
looked to stick and move in the third while Jones looked for answers.
In the fourth, Gustafsson continued to move in and out, with Jones’ face
showing more damage from strikes. The Swede’s jab was laying waste to
Jones’ right eye.
A bloody Jones stunned Gustafsson with a
spinning elbow and followed with a string of knees as the round counted
down, leaving the Swede dazed and bloodied.
“I finally got the dogfight I was looking for,” said Jones, adding he needed more work in the gym.
The
win — his 10th straight — gives Jones the record for most consecutive
title defences (six) in UFC light-heavyweight history. He already holds
the mark for most submissions (five) by a light-heavyweight and is tied
for most finishes (nine).
“He’s the champ for a reason,” said Gustafsson.
Wineland
(20-9-1) had had a good first round but was put away soon after with
Barao following the kick with several punches before referee Yves
Lavigne stepped in after 35 seconds. The UFC said it was the first such
spinning back kick KO in its history
Barao, who has won 21
straight and not lost since April 2005 in his pro debut, danced with his
cornermen in the cage after the win. The flashy Brazilian, a 7-2
favourite Saturday, may upgrade the interim belt to the real thing if
champion Dominick Cruz, sidelined since October 2011 by two knee
surgeries, cannot return to action come 2014.
It was a tough card
for Canadian fighters, who went 2-5 on the night. Bantamweight Mitch
Gagnon of Sudbury, Ont., and Montreal lightweight John (The Bull)
Makdessi were the lone Canadian winners.
Rising lightweight star
Khabib (The Eagle) Nurmagomedov of Russia put on a show to open the main
card, using his speed and well-stocked arsenal to win a unanimous 30-27
decision over veteran Pat (Bam Bam) Healy
Healy, a big
155-pounder who was unbeaten in seven fights, had no answers for
Nurmagomedov, who improved his perfect record to 21-0 and 5-0 in the
UFC. At one point in the third, he slung a bloody Healy (31-16 with one
no contest) over his shoulder and crossed the cage before slamming him
to the canvas, bringing back memories of Matt Hughes manhandling Frank
Trigg.
The Russian, who walked in with a white furry hat, used his post-fight interview in the cage to ask for a title shot.
Healy sported a close-cropped beard after being told to trim his facial hair by the Ontario Athletic Commission.
French
middleweight Francis (Limitless) Carmont (22-7) improved to 6-0 in the
UFC by winning a one-sided (30-27, 30-27, 30-26) decision over Costa
Philippou (12-3 with one no contest). The bigger Carmont took Philippou,
a former pro boxer, completely out of his game by repeatedly taking him
down and dominating him on the ground. Carmont had the top position for
12:05 of the 15 minutes.
It was like women’s tennis as Carmont grunted loudly each time he hit his opponent in the final seconds.
Still, UFC president Dana White wasn’t impressed by the ground war.
“Sorry I just woke up! Thank god that’s over,” he tweeted.
The Montreal-based Carmont, who had welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre in his corner, has won 11 straight.
Lightweight
Myles (Fury) Jury improved his perfect record to 13-0 with a split
decision over Montreal’s Mike (The Martian) Ricci (9-4) in the final
fight of the undercard. The drab contest drew loud boos and did little
to pump up the volume immediately before the main card. The judges
scored it 29-28, 28-29, 29-28 for Jury.
“That wasn’t the fight I was expecting at all!!!” tweeted White.
In
contrast, Gagnon (10-2) posted a spectacular submission win over the
previously unbeaten Dustin (The Diamond) Kimura. Gagnon bloodied
Kimura’s face with his strikes and then pulled guard when Kimura (11-1)
shot in for a takedown attempt, forcing the Hawaiian to tap out to a
tight guillotine choke at 4:05 of the first round.
Gagnon,
returning from a one-year layoff due to knee surgery, survived an early
shot to the liver and some nasty leg kicks before taking it to Kimura.
Makdessi
(12-2) also looked sharp in knocking out Brazil’s Renee Forte (8-3) at
2:01 of the first round. Makdessi dropped Forte with a grazing right to
the head and then punished him with a dozen more shots on the ground
before Lavigne stepped in.
Heavyweight Brendan (The Hybrid) Schaub
choked out Matt Mitrione in a battle of former football players. Schaub
put Mitrione to sleep at 4:06 of the first round with a D’Arce choke.
Both fighters had pointed fingers and talked trash leading up to the bout but they hugged afterwards.
Mitrione
(6-3) played six season in the NFL with the Vikings and Giants while
Schaub (11-3) had a cup of coffee with the Bills and spent time in the
Arena Football League.
Welterweight Stephen (Wonderboy) Thompson
(8-1) knocked out Chris (The Menace) Clements of London, Ont., at 11:27
of the second round. Clements (11-5 with one no contest), in his first
action since July 2012 due to shoulder surgery, saw his six-fight win
streak ended. He said later he hurt his knee backstage before the show.
Brazil
bantamweight Wilson Reis (17-4) used his grappling skills to control
Montreal veteran Ivan (The Pride of El Salvador) Menjivar (25-11) en
route to a unanimous 29-28 decision.
Michel (Tractor) Prazeres
(17-1), in his first outing at lightweight, earned a split (28-29,
29-28, 29-28) decision over Jesse (The Bodysnatcher) Ronson of London,
Ont. Ronson (13-3) was game in his UFC debut, but could not get his
striking game going until it was too late and was outclassed on the
grappling front. The loss snapped an eight-fight win streak.
Bantamweight
Alex (Bruce Leroy) Caceres (9-5-0 with one no contest) used his
superior striking skills to win a split (29-28, 28-29, 29-28) decision
and hand Winnipeg’s Roland Delorme (9-2 with one no contest) his first
loss in five UFC fights.
Polish heavyweight Daniel Omielanczuk
(16-3-1 with one no contest) knocked out Austrian Nandor (The Hun)
Guelmino (11-5-1), a former bodyguard, at 3:18 of the third round in a
battle of UFC debutantes.
The card was the UFC’s fourth in Toronto and 14th in Canada.