The MMA Digest

Kongo relaxing after Big Win

Photo Credit: UFC.com

After the biggest win of his career last Saturday over Mirko Filipovic, Cheick Kongo is taking a couple weeks to unwind. It was a grueling training camp in preparation for the Croatian heavyweight. “We are still celebrating the fresh decisive victory of the legend Mirko Cro-Cop and will have a couple of weeks to relax and recover from the intensive training and tough fight”, comments Kongo’s manager Reed Wallace of White Chocolate Management. “We will then speak with the UFC regarding Cheick’s next bout.”

Kongo has now won 2 straight and ups his record to 20-3-1.

Popularity: 8%

What’s next for Cro Cop?


Photo Credit: www.mirko-crocop.com

Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic has always bounced back from every defeat in the past with a win, but Saturday night he ran into a determined Cheick Kongo, who was able to impose his will on the Croatian heavyweight and win a unanimous decision. Many have now questioned where Filipovic goes from here, and the answer lies within Filipovic. He has the raw talent to work his way up to the top of the UFC ladder–with knockout power, great speed for a heavyweight, an excellent sprawl, an improving ground game and ability to take the fight to the ground, he has a lot of bases covered. At the same time, Cro Cop is still most effective on the feet striking, which leaves many areas for him to still hone and master. He definitely has had the right idea in bringing in ground specialists like Dean Lister to his gym, as well constructing a cage for UFC Octagon specific training.

Oftentimes with Cro Cop, it seems he’s accustomed to pushing people around, and is most effective in that domain. He shines brightest when it’s clear who’s pushing the pace. But when fighters come forward on him with fearlessness as Mark Hunt did, as Fedor Emelianenko did, and as Cheick Kongo did Saturday night in London, his gameplan appears to unravel and focus tends to wane. But other times, such as one year ago today, Cro Cop seems unstoppable—finishing off Wanderlei Silva with a headkick and lighting up Josh Barnett into submission. On that night one year ago it appeared as though Cro Cop would be able to beat any fighter in the world. That ability surely hasn’t been dried up within the span of 365 days. Thus it becomes a mental game on the road to redemption. He’s been knocked out brutally and had bad performances in the past, just not in succession. But that’s no reason why he can’t step back into the Octagon and get back to the same level he fought at just one year ago. Filipovic can surely get back to the same form…if he’s still up to it.

Popularity: 9%

This Day in MMA History: Mirko “CroCop” Wins Absolute Grand Prix

 
One year ago today, Mirko Filipovic defeated Wanderlei Silva and Josh Barnett to win the Pride FC absolute Grand Prix. Also on the card, Aleksander Emelianenko defeated  Sergei Kharitonov, and Ricardo Arona was victorious over Alistair Overeem

Popularity: 9%

Cro Cop has never lost 2 in a Row


Photo Credit: www.mirko-crocop.com

In his 6 year MMA career, Mirko “Cro Cop” Filopovic has never dropped 2 fights in a row. He’s looking to keep that streak in tact this Saturday night when he takes on Cheick Kongo at UFC 75. After his 4 losses in Pride FC, Filipovic came back strong every time with 2 decisions and 2 TKO victories the next fight out. Coming off a devastating KO defeat to Gabriel Gonzaga in April, Filipovic returns to England to seeking redemption in the UFC heavyweight division.

Popularity: 4%

Awaiting the Advent of a Welterweight Striker


Photo Credit: AP

The welterweight division is zone for takedown artists. You’ve got Josh Koscheck, a former NCAA division one champion with astounding wrestling skills, who was just outwrestled and taken down often by Georges St. Pierre last weekend. We have Matt Hughes who himself is a takedown machine. Diego Sanchez and Jon Fitch’s bread and butter are wrestling. Karo Parisyan’s ability to toss someone on their head in the cage via Judo throws is second to none. While not known for supreme takedown ability, Matt Serra’s forte is also the ground game. While all these fighters possess striking skills, the most refined being St. Pierre’s, there isn’t the dominant striker who invokes terror into the hearts of his opponents trying to trade with him in the cage. In other weight classes you have fighters who are devastating on their feet if they can impose their game plan on you. You have Mirko Cro Cop at heavyweight, Chuck Liddell at 205, Anderson Silva at 185. In the welterweight class where there is such a deep pool of talent when it comes to wrestling and takedown ability, any new dominant champion to emerge onto the scene in this division will need to be a miniature version of a Chuck Liddell. It’ll be a fighter with devastating knockout striking power who can stop a takedown, and get back if when taken down. Such skills are rare and the abilities of Liddell in this area have not been duplicated in other weight classes. But with the superior wrestling of fighters at 170, the next big thing in the division will required to be equipped with devastating striking, an amazing sprawl, and equally talented scrambling skills.

Popularity: 12%