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    Default UFC 136 Results: Edgar vs. Maynard 3 **Spoiler**

    Main Card

    Frankie Edgar def. Gray Maynard via fourth-round TKO
    Jose Aldo def. Kenny Florian via unanimous decision
    Chael Sonnen def. Brian Stann via submission (arm triangle)
    Nam Phan def. Leonard Garcia via unanimous decision
    Joe Lauzon def. Melvin Guillard via submission (rear-naked choke)

    Undercard

    Demian Maia def. Jorge Santiago via unanimous decision
    Anthony Pettis def. Jeremy Stephens via split decision
    Stipe Miocic def. Joey Beltran via unanimous decision
    Darren Elkins def. Tiequan Zhang via unanimous decision

    Aaron Simpson def. Eric Schafer via unanimous decision
    Mike Massenzio def. Steve Cantwell via unanimous decision
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    UFC 136 Bonuses: Frankie Edgar Knockout Leads $75,000 Winners

    Frankie Edgar survived another first-round onslaught from Gray Maynard on Saturday.

    But this time, rather than going the distance for a draw like the two did in January, Edgar got out of the first, controlled the pace of the fight in the second and third, and in the fourth he dropped Maynard with a right and finished him on the ground. One of the best rivalries of the year finally had a finish – with an exclamation point – at UFC 136 in Houston.

    Edgar's fourth-round TKO in the lightweight championship main event earned him $75,000 for Knockout of the Night – the night's only KO stoppage. Joining him with $75,000 bonuses were Joe Lauzon for Submission of the Night and Nam Phan and Leonard Garcia for Fight of the Night.

    It was like deja vu for Edgar and Maynard in the first round. Just like their second fight at UFC 125 on Jan. 1, Maynard dominated the first, dropping Edgar with big shots on the feet. In January, it was a decisive 10-8 round for Maynard that Edgar had to come back from. On Saturday, just one just, Doug Crosby, gave a 10-8 to Maynard, while the other two scored it a standard 10-9.

    Still, Edgar had to go into rally mode with his face bloodied to start the second round. Maynard was decidedly more cautious in the second and third rounds, both of which saw Edgar controlling the tempo and landing decent shots on the feet. But deep in the fourth round, Edgar landed a right uppercut that stunned Maynard, followed it with several more rights on the feet that put Maynard on the canvas, and then finished with several big shots on the ground.

    The end came at 3:54 of the fourth, and Maynard retained his lightweight title. It also gave him a win over Maynard in his third try. In the pair's first fight, in April 2008, Maynard won a unanimous decision. After Edgar won the lightweight title from BJ Penn and defended it in their rematch, he defended it against Maynard at UFC 125 – and the two fought to a rare title match draw. Finally with some closure, Edgar's next opponent will be just his third in more than two years after a steady diet of Penn and Maynard the last four fights.

    Lauzon's Submission of the Night was also the card's biggest upset. It came just 47 seconds into the first round against Melvin Guillard, who was riding a five-fight winning streak and came into the fight a more than 5-to-1 favorite. Guillard came out bouncing around and looking to land big shots, but a left from Lauzon stunned Guillard, and Lauzon pounced, quickly took Guillard's back and sank in a fight-ending rear naked choke.

    Amazingly, Lauzon now has won six straight fight night bonus awards and seven in his last eight fights. He has four submission bonuses and three Fight of the Night awards in that stretch. He also won Submission of the Night in June, a first-round kimura against Curt Warburton.

    Lauzon's only competition for the Submission of the Night award came from Chael Sonnen, whose second-round arm triangle choke of Brian Stann probably earned him another shot at middleweight champion Anderson Silva. Sonnen called Silva out after the fight and said that he wants to up the stakes. Sonnen proposed that if he wins and takes the middleweight title, which he nearly did in August 2010, Silva should have to leave the 185-pound division. And if Sonnen loses, he said he will leave the UFC forever.

    At the post-fight press conference, UFC president Dana White said it was tough to choose between Lauzon and Sonnen for Submission of the Night, but he ultimately gave it to Lauzon because Lauzon was such a heavy underdog and he rocked the favorite so quickly in the first round.

    The Fight of the Night may had checks written for it the day it was announced. Phan and Garcia fought to a controversial split decision win for Garcia at the TUF 12 Finale in December. A rematch was booked for March, but Phan was injured. And when Phan's original UFC 136 opponent, Matt Grice (who replaced Josh Grispi) was forced out, Garcia stepped in.

    In what amounted to a continuation of their first fight, Phan and Garcia again had moments of a backyard brawl. But Phan was more accurate and controlled the pace in the first two rounds, landing more consistently. Garcia may have been on his way to a possible 10-8 third round, but Phan did enough to stay in the round and won a 29-28 unanimous decision.

    Both Phan-Garcia fights have been Fight of the Night winners, and while Phan said after the fight he doesn't want to do No. 3, Garcia said if the fight could be in Houston, in his native Texas, he'd gladly do a trilogy fight.
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    Demian Maia vs. Jorge Santiago

    Maia (14-3) is coming off a close unanimous decision loss to Mark Munoz at UFC 131 in June. Former Sengoku champion Santiago (23-9) lost his UFC debut in May to Brian Stann via knockout.

    Round 1: The two dance around the cage exchanging punches. Maia flurries, then drives low and takes Santiago down. As Maia tries to pass to a better position, Santiago gets to his feet. We're almost midway through. Santiago throws a head kick. Maia sidesteps him and lands a hook. During an exchange, Maia takes Santiago down again. Santiago is doing a good job keeping his guard closed against Maia's dangerous submissions, but Maia lands a few strikes, and rides out the round on top. It's 10-9 Maia.

    Round 2: Santiago takes the middle as Maia wades around the outside. Santiago just misses with a head kick. Santiago has done well in the exchanges but just as he finds his rhythm, Maia takes him down again. Santiago defending well from guard. Maia gives up on trying to pass to a better position and instead looks for strikes. It's sort of a stalemate, and the crowd boos them for the last 10 seconds. It's Maia again, 10-9.

    Round 3: Maia tries for a single leg takedown, this time Santiago defends. Maia keeps driving for it, and Santiago spins away. He's got to let his hands go. Maia won't let him. He clinches again. He has Santiago's back but can't drag him down. The pace is a grind. Finally, Maia takes him to the ground with 2:30 left. Maia scores with an elbow. Santiago is so intent on closing his guard that he hasn't thought of trying to get up. Maia passes to side control but does nothing with it. This crowd is now officially restless. Luckily, time is nearly out. Maia lands a series of elbows in the final seconds, and it's his again, 10-9.

    Winner: Demian Maia via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
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    Anthony Pettis vs. Jeremy Stephens

    Pettis (13-2) is a former WEC lightweight champion in search of his first UFC win. Stephens (20-6) has won both his UFC fights this year against Marcus Davis and Danny Downes.

    Round 1: Left-right combo fired off by Stephens early. Pettis measuring the distance, and as he comes forward, Stephens ducks down and takes him to the ground. Pettis threatens with an armbar and Stephens pulls away. As he does, Pettis gets to his feet. Pettis knocks Stephens back with a straight right on the restart. A Pettis left kick lands to the body. Stephens closes the distance and pushes Pettis against the cage. Stephens clasps his hands and pulls Pettis down. Pettis uses the fence to get up, and puts Stephens' back against the fence before they work free. Both land in an exchange. A super close round that I'll give to Stephens by a hair, by virtue of his takedowns, 10-9. Could go either way though.

    Round 2: Pettis drives in for an early takedown, and moves right to side control, with Stephens against the fence. Overhand right by Pettis lands. Stephens works hard to get back to his feet. Pettis takes him right back down. The same sequence happens a third time. Pettis can't keep him down for long but he has been able to pull him down. Another takedown from Pettis, who is on Stephens' back. He looks for the choke but settles for punches. He's got the body triangle now. Stephen turns into him and lands two punches from the top as the round ends. Pettis, 10-9.

    Round 3
    : Stephens with a quick takedown to start the round. Pettis threatens an armbar and Stephens gets out of dodge, letting Pettis up. Pettis ducks under a big left hook and tries the takedown. Stephens ends up on top. Pettis reverses and they move against the cage. Pettis pulls him down again. This probably isn't the fight people were expecting from two strikers, but it's still intriguing. Pettis scores with a combo and takes him down again. Stephens is breathing hard now. Pettis' conditioning might end up winning him this fight. A "Showtime" chant goes up as we're inside of a minute left. Close fight, but I score the round for Pettis 10-9.

    Winner: Anthony Pettis via split decision (29-28, 29-28, 28-29)
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    Joe Lauzon Submits Melvin Guillard in 47 Seconds

    In a significant upset in the UFC's lightweight division, Joe Lauzon stunned Melvin Guillard on Saturday night at UFC 136, needing just 47 seconds to force him to tap.

    Guillard came out swinging hard as he usually does, but it was Lauzon who surprised Guillard by landing a hard left hand of his own to Guillard's chin, sending Guillard staggering backward.

    From there it was Lauzon's fight: He pounced on him, sunk in the rear-naked choke and forced Guillard to tap the canvas. It was the biggest win of Lauzon's career.

    The victory improves Lauzon's record to 21-6, with 17 of his wins coming by submission. The loss drops Guillard to 29-9-2, with eight of his losses coming by submission.

    There had been a great deal of talk leading up to the fight that Guillard was closing in on a lightweight title shot. Now it may be time to wonder if Lauzon is getting close to a crack at the title. Lauzon puts on good shows, finishes fights, and now he has a victory over a Top 10 opponent. This was a big-time win for Lauzon.
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    Nam Phan Beats Leonard Garcia

    Nam Phan got his revenge on Leonard Garcia on Saturday night at UFC 136, beating Garcia by unanimous decision in a fight that looked a lot like the bout last year when Garcia beat Phan by a controversial split decision.

    All three judges gave the fight to Phan, 29-28.

    It was every bit the wild, sloppy brawl that everyone expected from these two, but Phan was the more technical, accurate striker, while Garcia was unloading haymakers that often didn't land. By the end of the fight both men were exhausted, but Garcia wasn't just breathing hard, he also had a bloodied and bruised face.

    However, Garcia's wild style appeals to some judges, and Garcia did land a hard strike in the third round that sent Phan to the canvas. It wouldn't have been a shock if Garcia had been given the decision.

    But Phan won, and he deserved to win. The victory improves Phan's professional MMA record to 17-9. Garcia falls to 15-8-1.
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    Chael Sonnen Submits Brian Stann, Calls Out Anderson Silva

    Chael Sonnen returned to the Octagon after a 14-month layoff on Saturday night and won in dominant fashion, submitting Brian Stann in the second round at UFC 136.

    It was a one-sided beating by Sonnen, who completely outclassed Stann on the ground and forced him to tap to an arm-triangle choke at 3 minutes, 51 seconds of round 2.

    But the real news came after the fight when Sonnen demanded a rematch with the man who defeated him in his last fight, UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva.

    "Anderson Silva, you absolutely suck," Sonnen said. "Super Bowl weekend, the biggest rematch in the history of the business. I'm calling you out, Silva, but we're upping the stakes. I beat you, you leave the division. You beat me, I will leave the UFC forever."

    Sonnen showed after the fight that he's a good talker, but he showed during the fight that his wrestling is as good as anyone's in MMA. Sonnen came out fast and clinched with Stann immediately, and after working at it for a little more than a minute, Sonnen secured a takedown and got into side control. From there it was a dominant round for Sonnen: He relentlessly beat on Stann on the ground, and Stann was able to do nothing about it.

    Within five seconds of the second round, Sonnen jumped on Stann again and dominated him. The referee stood the fight back up midway through the second round, and Stann briefly hurt Sonnen with a couple of punches, but that was just a speed bump for Sonnen, who picked Stann up, slammed him down, and finished him off.

    And with that, Sonnen's long-awaited rematch with Silva is just a matter of time.

    http://video.aol.com/aolvideo/aol-sports/chael-sonnen-ufc-136-post-fight-interview/1208598225001
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    Jose Aldo Beats Kenny Florian

    Jose Aldo remained the UFC featherweight champion with a unanimous decision victory over Kenny Florian on Saturday night at UFC 136, coming out on top after a hard-fought 25 minutes of battling.

    All three judges scored it 49-46 for Aldo, who got the better of Florian in the exchanges on the feet and stayed in control on the top when the fight went to the ground.

    "It played out great. He's a very strategic fighter, a smart and experienced guy and I just had to go out there and impose my game," Aldo said afterward. "I expected him to pin me against the cage, I watched his fight against B.J. Penn and he did the exact same thing, and I just had to be able to defend it.... He was always looking to take me down."

    Although Florian came out and fought hard and did, in fact, pin Aldo against the cage just as Aldo expected, Florian got very little going offensively. It was a fairly one-sided win for Aldo, even though it wasn't the kind of dominant performance that many expected from Aldo.

    The victory improved Aldo's professional MMA record to 20-1, and kept him atop the featherweight class. For Florian the loss drops him to 14-6, and pretty well demonstrates that he's done fighting for UFC titles. Florian may have some big fights left in him, but he's not quite at the same level as the champion.
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    Frankie Edgar Knocks Out Gray Maynard

    Frankie Edgar finally has his victory over Gray Maynard.

    The third fight between Edgar and Maynard got off to an explosive start and had an even more explosive ending Saturday night at UFC 136, with Edgar winning by fourth-round knockout after nearly getting knocked out himself at the start of the fight.

    It was the third fight between the two great lightweights, and the first one Edgar won. Maynard beat Edgar in 2007, and the two of them fought to a draw on New Year's Day this year. Now Edgar has finally beaten Maynard and eliminated any doubt that he's the best lightweight in the world.

    "This ain't easy fighting someone three times," Edgar said afterward. "Gray forced me to bring the best out of myself."

    Maynard busted up Edgar's face in the first round, just like he did the last time they fought: Within the first few minutes of the fight Edgar had been knocked down, had his nose broken and gotten blood all over his face. It was a dominant first round for Maynard, just as he dominated the first round of their New Year's Day fight.

    But just as in their New Year's Day fight, Edgar came back and looked much better in the second round, while Maynard looked tired and allowed Edgar to get back into it in the second round. Edgar had to be feeling good at the end of the second.

    Edgar continued to look fresh and comfortable in the third, and Maynard still wasn't doing any damage. It was surprising to see Maynard not attempt any takedowns, not hurt Edgar with any punches and allow Edgar back into the fight, just as he had done in the prior bout.

    And in the fourth round Edgar made Maynard pay for letting him survive so long. Edgar rocked Maynard with punches in the center of the Octagon, bullied the "Bully" against the fence, knocked him down with more punches and finally finished the fight after three minutes, 54 seconds of the fourth.

    The win improves Edgar's record to 14-1-1. And now he'll get to defend his belt against someone other than Gray Maynard.
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    Thanks Kemal
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    super.. thanks Kemal!
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    Dana White Looks Back at UFC 136, Talks Strikeforce and Jones vs. Machida

    HOUSTON -- MMA Fighting spoke to Dana White following UFC 136 on Saturday night. The UFC president talked about Frankie Edgar's thrilling title defense against Gray Maynard, what's next for Edgar, Kenny Florian's performance in a loss, what's next for Chael Sonnen, Sonnen's post-fight interview, Joe Lauzon's dominant win, the future of Strikeforce and why he booked Jon Jones vs. Lyoto Machida at UFC 140.

    http://video.aol.com/aolvideo/aol-sports/dana-white-ufc-136-post-fight-interview/1208668358001
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    Lauzon: Guillard Not the Same Fighter When You Move Forward

    Monday, October 10, 2011
    by Sherdog.com Staff

    After studying footage of Melvin Guillard, Joe Lauzon decided he had to take the fight to him when they met Saturday at UFC 136.

    He is two entirely different fighters when he’s coming forward versus when someone else is coming forward,” Lauzon explained on the Sherdog Radio Network’s “Rewind” show. “We said basically no matter what, even if I was getting my butt beat, I was going to come forward. I couldn’t ever, ever, ever start stepping backwards and start letting him come forwards. I wasn’t going to be intimidated. I wasn’t going to be bullied. Regardless of what he threw at me, I was throwing back the entire time.”

    Lauzon more than threw back. He stunned Guillard with a left hand and then submitted him with a rear-naked choke in just 47 seconds.

    “When I hit him, it stumbled him pretty good,” Lauzon (Pictured) said. “I didn’t think that I hit him that hard. … I didn’t feel it was a knockout shot. I was just [throwing] my jab out there and seeing what happened and then he stumbled and then I was, ‘Oh, did he slip?’ Then I could tell -- I could see it in his face he just wasn’t all there. I just jumped on him.”

    Guillard entered the bout on a five-fight winning streak. With another win, he could have positioned himself for a lightweight title shot. His recent success might have led him to overlook Lauzon, though.

    “I didn’t feel like he was giving me the credit I deserved at all,” Lauzon said. “Not that I felt disrespected, but I thought that he took the fight way too lightly. He was at the Fan Expo. He was doing signings the day of the fight. He was running around calling himself the champ already. He was already talking about what he was going to do after he knocks me out. For me, I focus on the fight. I never, ever, ever want to talk about what I’m going to do after a fight because you just never know. For him to already be jumping to so many conclusions, I had a really, really good feeling and it got better and better with every day that passed.”

    The win improved Lauzon to 8-3 in the UFC. In beating Guillard, he finished an opponent many believed would finish him.

    “I think a lot of people thought I was going to be shooting double-leg takedowns from across the ring and having him sprawl on me and hit me with uppercuts and knees and things like that,” Lauzon said. “That was never, ever going to happen. I can guarantee you that was never, ever going to happen in that fight. I would absolutely go in there bombing with my hands before I would shoot a terrible takedown from way outside.”

    Not only did Lauzon not resort to desperate takedown attempts, he moved forward according to plan and hurt Guillard on the feet -- something few expected.

    “When I do throw my hands, I hit pretty hard,” Lauzon said. “I can definitely punch a little bit. I’m not the best boxer by any means. I don’t have the most power, but I’m pretty accurate, I’m pretty quick and I hit pretty hard. It’s a pretty good mixture, and because I’m always trying to take people down, the takedown’s right there. That helps it out too.”
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    UFC 136 Prelims Show Draws Low Ratings

    Despite two pay-per-view caliber matchups, the UFC 136 Prelims show on Spike TV Saturday drew an unusually small audience of only 1.0 million viewers and a household rating of 0.8.

    The viewership for the UFC 136 prelims show is the lowest for a live prelim show on Spike TV and surpasses only the two preliminary shows aired on ION.

    As a lead-in to the UFC 136 pay-per-view, the UFC offered popular ex-WEC champ Anthony Pettis taking on power puncher Jeremy Stephens and former title challenger Demian Maia facing off against former Sengoku champ Jorge Santiago.

    The preliminary bouts series was coming off a strong performance from the Sept. 24 UFC 135 undercard show, which drew an average of 1.6 million viewers and an average 1.0 household rating. The live fights for the UFC 135 undercard featured Tony Ferguson vs. Aaron Riley and Tim Boetsch vs. Nick Ring.

    The next UFC Prelims card, for UFC 137 on Oct. 29, is expected to feature Donald Cerrone vs. Dennis Siver and Tyson Griffin vs. Bart Palaszewski.
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    Default UFC 136: Chael Sonnen vs. Brian Stann (Gracie Breakdown)


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