Thursday, January 14, 2010

Gonzaga vs. Dos Santos Booked For Incredibly Stacked "UFC On VS 1", March 21st


In addition to a stellar main event of Brandon Vera (11-4) vs. Jon Jones (9-1), UFC on VS.: 1 will feature a heavyweight (HW) showdown between fast-rising Junior "Cigano" Dos Santos (10-1, 4-0 UFC) and the formidable Gabriel "Napao" Gonzaga (11-4, 7-3 UFC).

By announcing these fight so far in advance, not to mention stacking the rest of the card as well, The Ultimate Fighting Championship seems understandably determined to convince fans to sign up for cable providers that offer VS. in advance of the octagon's debut on the network. The fights will air live from Bloomfield, CO on March, 21st.

Junior Dos Santos was previously scheduled to fight Gabriel Gonzaga on the "cursed" New Year's card, UFC 108: Evans vs. Silva, but the fight was canceled due to an injury to "Napao." The UFC scrambled to find a suitable replacement to face Dos Santos, but their man, Gilbert Yvel (36-14-1), lasted only about two minutes with the hard-hitting "Cigano." Since his octagon debut at UFC 90: Silva vs. Cote, Dos Santos has run roughshod over the UFC's HW division-- finishing all four opponents by (T)KO, including the likes of world-ranked Fabricio Werdum (13-4-1) and the legendary Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic (25-7-2).

As dangerous as Dos Santos appears to be, he will still have his hands full with he man they call "Big Nose" ("Napao" in Portuguese). Gonzaga has been considered a serious threat to finish opponents standing since becoming the first fighter to finish "Cro-Cop" with the Croatians own trademark right head-kick. Since then Gonzaga has finished two other UFC fights by (T)KO, plus broken Randy Couture (17-10)'s arm with a high-kick and dropped current interim title challenger, Shane Carwin (11-0), to the canvas with his fists. At the same time, Gabe has also been finished by (T)KO in three of his last six UFC fights, so attempting to strike with Dos Santos may be risky. Luckily for "Napao," he is a also a submissions expert with six MMA tap-outs to his credit--which, by the way, is the only method by which "Cigano" has ever lost.

Regardless of the outcome of this very closely-matched fight, it will clearly drive fan interest in the UFC's debut on the VS. network. In addition to two drool-inducing main events, Zuffa have also slotted fan-favourite Anthony "Rumble" Johnson (8-3) into the card against fellow-slugger John "Doomsday" Howard (13-4). Other massive UFC stars like Clay Guida (25-11), Sean Sherk (33-4-1) and Spencer Fisher (23-5) are also expected to compete at UFC on VS.: 1 on March 21st.

Interestingly, VS. is a subsidiary of NBC, which was recently majority-purchased by cable-giant Comcast. So drawing a big number on VS. these days would clearly get the attention of some pretty powerful TV industry-types. Could loading this card with talent be an attempt by the UFC to convince NBC/Comcast that MMA is a viable form of 21st century sports entertainment? It seems like a definite possibility.

However, most Canadians will be more concerned with how to watch the fights at all, given that VS. is currently seen only in a very limited number Great White Northern homes. It could be that Canadian sports giant and well-known MMA aficionados, The Score, will somehow acquire the Canadian broadcasting rights the way the have for VS.'s World Extreme Cagefighting programming, but nothing has been announced to that effect at this time. If nothing changes soon, there could be hordes of ravenous Canadian MMA fans phoning every sports bar from coast-to-coast looking for a place to watch these fights.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Extended Preview for UFC 109: Couture vs. Coleman



When Randy Couture vs. Mark Coleman was announced as the main event for UFC 109, a lot of MMA fans had some snide comments to share about "two old men"-this and "protecting Randy"-that. As this fight draws closer, though, it seems like a lot of people are starting to become believers.

As for the criticisms:

If competing successfully at the highest level of 21st century MMA when you're well into your mid-forties is some sort of joke, rather than being truly awe inspiring, can somebody please explain the punchline-- because I don't get it.

Then there's the notion that the UFC is pitching Couture a softball. Well, that's patently ludicrous for more reasons than one. Suffice it to say that, following the controversial Vera win, Randy still has plenty left to prove before he can be considered a viable contender at light-heavyweight. On top of that, Mark Coleman is far from a gimme opponent for anyone in the division. I admit I have joked a bit in the past about how badly he gassed against Mauricio Rua, but don't forget that "Shogun" is an amazing fighter who just took the LHW champ, Lyoto Machida, to a decision that many felt went the wrong way. Since then, Coleman won a decisive victory over one of Couture's regular training partners, Stephan Bonnar. So it's not like it has been years since "The Hammer" last tasted victory, either.

At the end of the day, critics will say what they want, but most of them will be glued to the screen when these two titans of MMA history clash on February 6th.

Patrick Cote Set To Make His UFC Return, May 1st


In an exclusive interview with MMACanada.net, Canada's best middleweight Patrick "The Predator" Cote (13-5) confirmed that he will be making his long awaited return to the octagon at the next UFC show in Montreal-- UFC 113 on May 1st.

Cote had this to say about the announcement, "It feels great! I'm very happy and it's about time"

It has been rumored that "The Predator" will face surging middleweight Alan "The Talent" Belcher (15-6), but he was not able to confirm that match-up at this time. Regardless of who he fights, UFC fans, and Canadian MMA fans in particular, will surely welcome the hard-hitting Cote back into the octagon with open arms.

Patrick hasn't fought since suffering a freak knee-injury in the second round of his middleweight title fight with the world's #1 ranked fighter, Anderson "The Spider" Silva (25-4) at UFC 90: Cote vs. Silva in October, 2008. The first round of that fight was fairly close and, with Patrick's power in both hands, there is simply no telling how it would have ended if not for the untimely injury

He is, of course, eager to to prove himself once again in his long-awaited return.

King Of The Cage Announces Main Event For Nanaimo Show


King of The Cage has confirmed for B.C. MMA Fan that the main event at Nanaimo, B.C.'s upcoming show will be Adam Gabel (1-1) vs. Darcy James (3-1). That fight, scheduled for March 12th, is a potential five-rounder that will be contested for the KOTC lightweight title, which used to belong to B.C.'s MMA golden boy Rory MacDonald (10-0, 1-0 UFC).

Regardless of the fight's outcome, the KOTC Canadian lightweight champion will soon be a British Columbia native as Adam Gabel trains at Victoria's Peterec's Kickboxing, while Darcy James trains at Impact MMA in Nanaimo.

I had the good fortune of witnessing James' most recent fight at Vernon, B.C.'s King of The Cage: Catalyst. It was a short, thrilling, back-and-forth fight in which Darcy gutted out an early armbar attempt by is opponent, Chad Bellwood. James eventually finished the fight in the first round with knees from the clinch. You can read my full review of that event right HERE.

Meanwhile, Adam Gabel should be very well-known to Nanaimo's MMA faithful. His last fight was a second-round TKO stoppage over Adzin Nedzic at last April's KOTC: Island Pride event at Nanaimo's 3000+ capacity Frank Crane Arena.

This title match between Adam Gabel and Darcy James should be one of the evening's best fights at KOTC in Nanaimo on March, 12th.

Congratulations, guys, on earning the title shot.

Of course, B.C. MMA Fan intends to be there once again to cover all the action!

Dana White And Lorenzo Fretitta Discuss UFC's %10 Stake Sale On CNBC





There isn't a lot of new information in this video, but it is definitely worth a watch if you are following the story closely. It is also refreshing to see a mainstream news source that clearly understands the sport of MMA and treats it fairly.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

UFN 20 Main Event Fall-Out: Maynard To Regroup, Diaz Considers Changing In Weight, Edgar To Fight Penn


The main event at Ultimate Fight Night 20, which saw Gray Maynard (9-0) squeak by Nate Diaz (11-5) to win a split-decision, has been widely panned. There have been cries that Diaz deserved the win, questions about the soundness of Maynard's strategy, and, most of all, criticisms that neither fighter went all out to secure the victory. Even if some of those critiques are justifiable, there is still no denying that the fight sent shock-waves through the UFC's lightweight division.

Prior to the fight, it was assumed that a decisive victory for Gray Maynard would earn him the next shot at 155lb. champ, B.J. "The Prodigy" Penn (15-5-1). After the fight, however, neither Gray Maynard nor his head-trainer Randy Couture seemed particularly interested in a showdown with the world's greatest lightweight.

Randy's thoughts via MMAJunkie.com :

"Gray learned a valuable lesson in this fight, and it's that you can't let someone get in your head...I think Gray verbalized that and realizes that's what happened and that he got caught up in Diaz's attitude. I think he's capable of beating B.J. Penn right now, but I think a little more experience would do him well... You think Diaz talks some [expletive]? B.J.'s a pretty good [expletive]-talker too."


Not exactly a statement of interest, but surely Gray is raring to go:
"If they want me to (fight Penn), I guess I will, but it all depends on the timing... I just go where the bosses tell me to. I'm not going to be down on my knees. I'm not going to make up some stuff (to talk my way into it) ... Whatever they want, I'll be ready."

Alright maybe not.

Truth be told, Randy and Gray are probably right to seek a bit more seasoning before calling out Baby Jay. Sure, there aren't many UFC lightweight fighters who have a better chance of beating the UFC's Flyin' Hawaiian, but that doesn't instantly make risking a first-class whoopin' from Penn a great idea for Maynard at this point in his development.

Meanwhile, Nate Diaz, Gray's main-event opponent at UFN 20, is not a happy camper-- he feels he did enough to win all three rounds. Via Nate's Twitter.com account:

"Just watched the fight 3 times I won last nite all three rounds (expletive) the haters....."

Nate is also considering abandoning the lightweight class for at least some of his future fights, citing the fact that he doesn't earn enough money there to justify putting himself through the difficult weight-cutting process multiple times per year. The following quote is available on Graciefighter.com:

'I fought like garbage and I'm sorry to my fans for my performance. I was hesitant about throwing hard punches because I kept thinking he was going to go for a takedown. It looked like I was knocked down in the second but actually he stepped on my foot and when I tried to back out I slipped. I really don't think I'm going to stay at 155lbs. I don't make enough money to have to drop this much weight so I'd like to fight at 170 and only go to 55's every once in awhile. You know if you look at his face compared to mine right now you'd think there was no way he beat me in a fight but I've never been too popular with the judges."

I am not nearly tough enough to tell Nate Diaz what to do. That said, it seems to me that if he wants to pursue a career at welterweight it would be wise to commit to the jump full-time. That way he could pack on the serious muscle it would take to compete against the GSP's, Jon Fitch's, and Anthony Johnson's of the world. There are some scary dudes up there and just casually putting a toe in the welterweight waters would seem to be a great way to get your face turned inside-out.

Finally, perhaps the biggest news to come out of Maynard's controversial victory over Diaz is that Frankie "The Answer" Edgar (11-1) will now receive the next UFC lightweight title shot. This fact was confirmed by UFC President Dana White in an exclusive interview with MMAFighting.com. White went on to explain that, despite the fact that Maynard is undefeated and still holds a win over Edgar, "The Answer" has looked better in recent fights. Dana also said that Edgar has faced better UFC opponents than Maynard since their fight (Edgar: Veach, Sherk, Franca / Maynard: Diaz, Huerta, Miller, Clementi), which is very debatable. He also implied that Edgar vs. Penn was justifiable based on the fact that Edgar had finished more UFC opponents (Edgar: Veach, Bocek / Maynard: Veres), but that is hardly relevant since neither fighter is much of a finisher. In any case, the UFC clearly believes Edgar is better prepared for a shot at Penn, despite the fact that "The Answer" was totally dominated by "The Bully" from bell-to-bell when the two met at UFN 13.

All logic and reason aside, in their infinite wisdom, the UFC may be right. Edgar's game is probably slightly more well-rounded and, as mentioned above, Maynard's mental game may not be developed to the point that he is prepared to deal with one of the best smack-talkers in the game. Dana White also confirmed that B.J. Penn's next fight will likely occur at the UFC's Middle Eastern debut in Abu Dhabi, which is unofficially set to go down April 10th at UFC 112.

Congratulations, Frankie!

Rarely has such a cooly received, non-title match as UFN 20's Gray Maynard vs. Nate Diaz had such a significant impact on a UFC division. If nothing else, it should be remembered for that. Although, I also thought it was a pretty fun little scrap in its own right.

Zuffa Sells A %10 Stake To The Govt. Of Abu Dhabi, U.A.E


Though it had been rumored for days, it was officially announced today that a ten percent stake in the UFC has been sold to a Middle Eastern entertainment promotion company known as Flash Entertainment.

The company, based in the opulent city of Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emerates, is owned by the government of Abu Dhabi, which is also embodied in the person of Sheik Tahnoon bin Zayed al Nahyan.

According to Sherdog.com, to make room for another shareholder, Frank and Lorenze Fretitta's %45 stakes were reduced to %40.5, while President Dana White's previous %10 stake was reduced to %09.

As for why the UFC would choose to bring a new investor in at this time, there are a variety of plausible explanations-- all of which could be true simultaneously, of course. First, if we believe Dana White's statements of several months ago, they must have thought the Sheik of Abu Dhabi was a pretty awesome dude. If the picture above, featuring the Sheik and one of the Frettita brothers apparently hunting dinosaurs, is any indication, I think we can assume that much is true.

Beyond that, the UFC claims the move was made to accelerate their plans for global expansion. I guess, Flash Entertainment has certain connections throughout the Middle East and Asia that are not available to outsiders? That could be true, I suppose.

Finally, there is some speculation that, after years of relentless efforts to promote and sanction MMA worldwide, the UFC had come up against a bit of a cash shortage and that the stake sale was designed to deal with that short-term difficulty.

It will be fascinating to see how this move is regarded after the rigors of history have revealed the various results. At least it's now clear why the UFC seems so eager to load up their debut card in Abu Dhabi (UFC 112, April 10th). At this point, it features no less than two title fights (Anderson Silva vs. Vitor Belfort -- and -- BJ Penn vs. Frankie Edgar), and a very marketable match between UFC legend Matt Hughes and BJJ master Renzo Gracie.

Check out the following video from MMAFighting.com in which Dana White confirms and comments on the deal:



Thanks to Sherdog.com and MMACanada.net for the assists.

Gray Maynard Unenthusiastic About Fighting Penn; Should Another UFC Lightweight Step Up?

In this interview with Sherdog.com, Ultimate Fight Night 20 main event winner Gray Maynard is refreshingly realistic both about his lackluster performance against Nate Diaz and his slim chances of beating BJ Penn at this stage of his development.



The similarly matched skills of Diaz and Maynard raises the bigger question of whether anyone in the UFC lightweight division is ready for a shot at Penn. It is very arguable that "The Prodigy" has already cleaned out the best of the 155'ers and should be given at least one showcase fight at welterweight. This would give a credible number one contender a chance to emerge.

I would suggest putting on Frankie Edgar vs. Kenny Florian in New Jersey at UFC 113 (March 27th) then having the winner face Gray Maynard this summer. Whoever comes out of that three-man mini tournament would be the most deserving in the division by far, which is kind of what you want from a title challenger.

Efrain Escudero's Arm Is Okay...Somehow


Despite staying in a fully locked-in armbar for what seemed like an eternity, perhaps waiting to see if his opponent, Evan Dunham, would just get bored of inflicting pain, Efrain Escudero reports via his twitter.com account that
his arm is not broken. Don't get me wrong, I am happy for the guy, but I remain perturbed by the sense that he learned nothing from all this.

Escudero also says he expects to get a second shot at Dunham, which simply can not be endorsed. Yes, it was somewhat close, but Evan won the second round and finished the fight conclusively. If UFC fighter were granted rematches every time the wished they hadn't lost we would never get anywhere. Nice try Efrain, but I have to break it to you-- next time out you will have to work some things out on the undercard, while Evan moves on to bigger and better things.

From Efrain Escudero's Twitter page:

Hey guys out the hosiptal nothing broke lil mess up tendenes. I will be back soon now in hungry!! And expect and Evan vs Efrain 2!!!

Monday, January 11, 2010

Ultimate Fight Night 20: Review


I went a below-average 2-2 (%50) on the night, bringing my overall prediction total to 142-81(%63.7) and 18-6 (%75) in main events. I willingly admit that I underestimated Amir Sodollah and heartily congratulate him on his decisive victory over "Bad" Brad Blackburn. That said, I stubbornly retain some lingering concerns about the young Iranian.

Besides that, my analysis was very strong, if I don't say so. This was so even in my other defeat in which Evan Dunham taught Efrain Escudero a valuable lesson in the dangers of the deadliest sin. Speaking of Pride, though, please allow me to take a minute to boast about my betting night. I was nearly flawless with tidy wins on solo Rory MacDonald and Evan Dunham bets, plus a three fight parlay of Gerald Harris, Aaron Simpson, and Gray Maynard to win. My only loss was on Jay Silva to beat Chris Leben, but that was more of a flyer bet, anyway.

My detailed thoughts on the main card and full-card results can be found below.

Gray Maynard Def. Nick Diaz By Split-Decision (28-29, 30-27, 29-28)

It turned out closer than I expected, but Gray Maynard pulled out another decision to retain his perfect UFC record, and padded my already-solid main event predictions record in the process. So, I can't complain too much about the stress he put me through in the process. The real difference from my analysis was that I thought Maynard would mix in some of his vaunted wrestling skills, but he chose, instead, to demonstrate his massively improved striking. Gray's head movement was reminiscent of his trainer, Randy Couture, and his hands were clearly packing K.O. power with sniper precision. That combination would have been enough to beat most fighters decisively, but Nate Diaz has certain advantages in a pure striking match, like his ridiculous reach, stupendous durability, and years of boxing training. Nonetheless, Maynard was able to neutralize those advantages en route to a richly deserved decision win. I just thought he might have made things easier on himself by mixing in a slam or two. Of course, then he would have ended up in Nate "No Hands Triangle" Diaz' guard and risked being submitted, so I can understand "The Bully's" reasoning.

The other story here is that the UFC's absolute worst nightmare came %100 true. Gray Maynard won in fairly pedestrian style and without adding a much-needed dramatic finish to his highlight reel. That makes Gray pretty difficult to market against the lightweight champion, BJ Penn. Meanwhile, the only other viable option, Frankie "The Answer" Edgar, has a glaring loss to Maynard on his record. Perhaps, Zuffa can woo Shinya Aoki from DREAM/Strikeforce to face "The Prodigy," though that seems pretty unlikely. Failing all else, they can either move BJ up for a showcase fight at welterweight, or try to convince a welterweight contender to drop down for an immediate title shot, Josh Koscheck perhaps?

Then again, the UFC could also just give Maynard the title fight, anyway. It's not as if fans won't always tune in to see "The Prodigy" fight, even against an opponent with limited hype. There should really be no problem marketing everyone's favourite demented blood-lick'er, especially if the match goes down on at the much-anticipated Abu Dhabi card (UFC 112, April 10th), as is rumoured.

Evan Dunham Def. Efrain Escudero By Armbar, Rd. 3

Sometimes it just doesn't pay to be right. Well, actually it did pay big-time via my cash bet on Evan Dunham, which I recommended in my predictions post. What I mean, though, is that knowing Dunham was being pathetically underrated by oddsmakers was, not quite enough for me to pick him straight-up against Efrain Escudero, Mexico's favourite TUF 8 winner. It sure was close, though. Going into the third round, each undefeated youngster had one round in the bank, at least in my books. Then when Efrain opened the third with a guillotine attempt it looked like he might pull it out, after all. That is, until Dunham escaped the choke, scored a trip to initiate a scramble, then transitioned flawlessly from a triangle to an armbar that finished the match.

Unfortunately, Escudero clearly did suffer from never having "learned how to lose." He left the octagon to seek immediate medical attention due to a severely injured arm that did not need to be damaged at all. It was only Efrain's refusal to tap that caused the potentially serious injury. One sincerely hopes the damage won't affect his career too negatively, but, if nothing else, this fight's aftermath should stand as an example to undefeated up-and-comers of the dangers inherent in not tapping. The clothing line may be right that "Jesus Didn't Tap," but when you're helplessly caught....you probably should just go ahead and do it, anyway.


Aaron Simpson Def. Tom Lawlor By Split-Decision
(28-29, 29-28, 29-28)

In another gratifying case of personal vindication for this writer, though this time without the bitter taint of failure, Tom "The Filthy Mauler" Lawlor put up much more of a fight against Aaron "The A-Train" Simpson than just about anyone else predicted he would. To listen to the numerous pro-Simpson doomsayers go on about how Lawlor was going to get completely blasted, you would think "Filthy" wasn't a talented, physically massive, and essentially undefeated middleweight. Well, guess what, he proved he was all those things at UFN 20. Not only did Lawlor put up one a heck fight in defeat, he used better striking than anyone, besides possibly his striking coach, had ever seen from him to utterly dominate the first round. Not only that, but in the mind of one judge and the hearts of many of the assembled fans, he even can lay claim to having "won" the fight.

Ultimately, though, Aaron "The A-Train" Simpson proved his many yay-sayers right. What he really showed was nearly unbelievable durability and incredible mental toughness en route to winning the last two rounds on two cards to secure the split-decision win. Lawlor vs. Simpson was easily the fight of the year in my book, despite the fact that we're only about two weeks in, of course.

I can not wait until either one of these guys fights next. In fact, why not have them fight each other again? I have certainly heard worse ideas in my time.


Amir Sodollah Def. Brad Blackburn by Unanimous Decision

The main card did not start well for my picks, but, my analysis was not as far off as the unanimous 30-27 scores for Amir Sodollah would suggest. For one thing, Brad Blackburn did put up a very respectable fight for the first two rounds. In the first round, Blackburn had his moments and only lost it so clearly due to the knock down Sodollah scored late. In my admittedly biased opinion, Blackburn could even have been awarded the second frame. "Bad" Brad also survived a third-round mauling, just as I predicted he would if the fight went the distance. By failing to finish Blackburn when he had him clearly rocked with a flying knee, Sodollah demonstrated once again that he may lack finishing ability.

On the other hand, I promised to give Amir credit if he proved me wrong twice in a row, so here it comes: his leg kicks looked fast and powerful once again, and Mike Goldberg was right to point out how impressive it is when Sodollah uses his push-kicks, essentially a leg jab, as a serious offensive weapon. Ultimately, Amir Sodollah proved once again that high-quality, eight-point, muay thai striking will almost always trump straight-up boxing. Despite my lingering concerns with regard to Amir's finishing ability, he should feel great about his performance. At 3-1, it is clear now that Sodollah deserves his place in the octagon.


Quick Results

Main Event
***Gray Maynard Def. Nate Diaz By Split Decision

Main Card
---Evan Dunham Def. Efrain Escudero By Armbar, Rd. 3
***Aaron Simpson Def. Tom Lawlor By Split Decision
---Amir Sodollah Def. Brad Blackburn By Unanimous Decision

Undercard
Chris Leben Def. Jay Silva By Unanimous Decision

Rick Story Def. Jesse Lennox By Unanimous Decision
(***)Rory MacDonald Def. Mike Guymon By Armbar, Rd. 1
Nik Lentz vs. Thiago Tavares Ruled a Majority Draw (Lame)
Rafael dos Anjos Def. Kyle Bradley By Unanimous Decision
Gerald Harris Def. John Salter By TKO, Rd. 3
Nick Catone Def. Jesse Forbes By Split Decision


*** Correct Picks --- Incorrect Picks () = Unofficial Pick

B.C.'s Own Rory MacDonald Victorious in UFC Debut


The fight occurred on the untelevised portion of the undercard, but journalists present at Ultimate Fight Night 20 reported that Kelowna, B.C's Rory MacDonald (10-0) defeated Mike "The Joker" Guymon (11-3-1) by arm bar at 4:27 seconds of the first round.

The detailed play-by-play, available at Sherdog.com (middle of page), paints a picture of a very close fight. Rory began by scoring an early takedown. He then landed a solid knee from the clinch as the two fighters returned to their feet. At that point, Rory got clipped and briefly dropped by Guymon, but recovered quickly and returned to his feet. MacDonald then caught an incoming kick from "The Joker" and returned the scrap to the mat.

From there it was all MacDonald as he proceeded to rain down blows and ultimately finished with a late armbar that cut-short the thirty-five-year-old Guymon's long-awaited octagon debut.

Congratulations, Rory! Rumble, Young Man, Rumble!

That makes ten finishes in a row without a single loss!

B.C. MMA Fan.com can't wait to see what you do next!

Picture Props: Dave Mandel of Sherdog.com

The So-Called "Great" Lightweight #1 Contender Debate


With BJ Penn (15-5-1) sitting pretty atop of the worldwide 155lb. division, it is becoming increasingly difficult for UFC fans to picture anyone within the organization taking his championship belt. Unless you consider rematches, in which case I think Kenny Florian deserves a second crack somewhere down the line, there are really only two obvious contenders left for Penn. Those fighters are Gray "The Bully" Maynard (8-0) and Frankie "The Answer" Edgar (11-1).

No matter who fights BJ Penn next it will be seen by many as a forgone victory for "The Prodigy," but both Edgar and Maynard at least possess the wrestling chops to give BJ's unorthodox one-footed takedown defense technique a real hop for its money. Rumour even has it that this fight could take place at UFC 112 in Abu Dhabi-- a highly anticipated event that is also rumoured to include Anderson Silva vs. Vitor Belfort and is confirmed to feature Matt Hughes vs. Renzo Gracie.

A Jersey boy who worked as a plumber well into his UFC career, Edgar has a style that emphasizes lightening-quick strikes, but his greatest asset by far is his wrestling. Maynard is very much a similar fighter, except that what he lacks in speed he more than makes up for in strength. That strength was on display when the two met at UFC Fight Night 13 in April 2008. It was a clear-cut victory for Maynard who simply overpowered Edgar en route to a unanimous decision. If Maynard wins at tonight's UFC Fight Night 20, he will be undefeated in the UFC at 7-0 and will have defeated Nate Diaz who was the only fighter ever to defeat "The Bully" in an exhibition match on The Ultimate Fighter 5.

Here is where the "great" debate comes in. Some have argued that Edgar's body of work, combined with his supposedly more-electrifying style, may give him the edge he needs to lock up the next shot at BJ Penn even despite the a loss to Maynard on his record. Personally, I can not see a way to justify such a move in terms of competitive fairness. Regardless of that, I also do not believe that Edgar is so clearly more marketable. Besides, the UFC has a show planned for New Jersey this march, at which Edgar has already expressed interest in fighting, perhaps against fellow Northeast coast fighter, Kenny Florian.

Ultimately, the "great" number-one contender debate is essentially a non-starter because if Maynard wins tonight and doesn't get the shot it will be a blight on the UFC's reputation as a legitimate sporting event, while a Maynard loss would make him unmarketable for an immediate shot and, thus, throw the proverbial door wide open for Frankie Edgar.

Check out Edgar below in this video interview with Steve Cofield, he discusses this minor controversy as well as other topics including MTV's guido-based hit The Jersey Shore.