It’s Time… For the UFC to Create a Cruiserweight Division
Fightlinker has a great post today about the UFC’s Heavyweight division and how it has now grown from the talented but lesser division in comparison to Japan’s talent (”Fighters like Fedor, Cro Cop, Barnett, Nogueira, Coleman, Werdum, Kharitinov, Aleks, Herring, and Hunt competed in Japan”) to a division that is now better than any other promotion’s Heavyweight class and among the UFC’s most talent-rich. It’s now time to split the UFC’s Heavyweight division into Cruiserweight and Heavyweight divisions.
Fightlinker correctly writes “If big names like Lesnar, Mir, Couture, Nogueira, Herring, and Kongo weren’t enough, Junior dos Santos upset Fabrico Werdum in his UFC debut last year and put the division on notice. Shane Carwin recently cemented himself as a contender by smashing his ham-fists into Gabe Gonzaga’s face en route to a TKO victory. If Cain Velasquez is able to do something similar to Kongo at UFC 99, he too will join the sport’s upper echelon.” Add to this division the return of Cro Cop, talented young fighter Pat Barry, and the introduction of Kimbo Slice and an all Heavyweight cast in the next season of The Ultimate Fighter and you have a lot of talent from which to cull matchups from.
The problem with matchmaking this division has become the great size disparity between guys like Couture, Barry, and Cro Cop when compared to Lesnar, Carwin, and Tim Hague, who defeated Barry at UFC 98 while utilizing an over 30 pound weight advantage over Barry. The creation of a Cruiserweight division would be instantly marketable, extend careers, and provide for more fair competition.
Weight Disparity
When Randy Couture was defeated by Brock Lesnar last November there was at least a 45 pound weight disparity between the two fighters. It has been widely commented that Lesnar needs to cut to make the Heavyweight Division’s 265 pound weight limit while Couture is the former Light Heavyweight Champion, a division with a limit of only 205. It is remarkable the athletic commissions are willing to allow matchups of fighters with as much as a 50 pound weight difference come fight time. The UFC needs to be pro-active before the athletic commisssions begin to look at this relic from the “David vs. Goliath” tournaments of the old UFC.
Pat Barry’s recent loss to Tim Hague, a much larger fighter, and the destruction of marketable guys like Brandon Vera at the hands of the Tim Sylvias and Fabricio Werdums point to a gap between the Heavyweight and Light Heavyweight divisions that needs to be filled. Vera has been 2-1 since dropping to Light Heavyweight but seems to have lost the pop he had at a larger weight. Barry too seems to relish the thought of being the smaller fighter in the Octagon but one has to wonder how his talent matches not with the biggest of UFC’s competitors but with opponents his own size.
Randy Couture
When Randy Couture lost to Ricco Rodriguez at UFC 39 he was smothered by a much larger opponent. Rodriguez is a talented fighter but his size advantage was too great for Couture to be able to compete fairly. With this fight in the wake of a loss to the also-larger Josh Barnett it seemed Couture’s career may have had its best days in the rear-view mirror. Of course, this preceded Couture’s awe-inspiring and unprecedented reign as Light Heavyweight Champion and a trilogy of classic fights with Chuck Liddell but Couture has now said he does not want to make the cut to 205 again.
Couture’s value to the UFC is more than any other fighter’s. His Pay-Per-View sales are greater than that of any other fighter and his popularity with the casual MMA fan is incomparable. One has to feel Couture is competing on borrowed time - he has already “retired” once and is now closer to 50 than 40 and stands with Mark Coleman as the oldest competitors in the UFC. Couture’s career should be nurtured as much as possible. Fights with larger men like Brock Lesnar only endanger his career and demotivate a willing competitor. However, fights with men closer in size such as Coleman, Cro Cop, Barry, and other new talent not only keep Couture out of the harm’s way of dangerous size mismatches but also provide an opportunity for Coleman to compete for another championship belt, a great way to extend Couture’s legacy and bring in more pay-per-view sales.
Brock Lesnar
Brock Lesnar is a talented champion but his 2-1 professional record when he faced Couture was that much more telling. Lesnar’s size was a distinct advantage against Couture and gives him and the other towering mountains of the division an unfair advantage over the smaller athletes. Even his matchup with Mir has to be analyzed not through the prism of one fighter’s skillset against anothers but one fighters skillset against a size advantage. Regardless of the outcome of the rematch with Mir, many UFC fans are clamoring to see Lesnar against competitors his own size. Like the other divisions of the UFC, this should be provided exclusively. If Lesnar is the best in the world, have him prove it against competition his own size.
The Timing for the Cruiserweight Division is Now
With today’s announcement Kimbo Slice will be competing on the next season of The Ultimate Fighter, an all-Heavyweight tournament, an even greater influx of talent is expected to arrive into the UFC’s biggest division. Former NFL pro Rex Richards will be joining Slice on the show and, perhaps even with first-round belly flops from both fighters one should expect their instant marketability to overcome any reservations the UFC may have in bringing them into the Heavyweight division at all costs.
For a long time the excuse for not creating the Cruiserweight division has been the lack of money and the lack of fight cards for the talent. Now, the opposite may be true. Although the UFC continues to operate as a well-oiled machine when it comes to expenses (the Pride purchase notwithstanding), the fact is the UFC is printing money and finding more outlets such as the video games and other licensing efforts to print even more. As Europe and the UK begin to become profitable ventures Dana White’s oft-repeated goal of being “bigger than the NFL” may come to pass. The UFC can afford the larger contracts the larger fighters seem to demand.
As well, the number of fight cards begins to grow. According to MMAJunkie.com, there are at least eight fight cards rumored for the rest of this year and if the fight cards continue at the same pace they did last year, another four could be held in addition to those eight. With potentially twelve fight cards in the last seven months of the year this will be a strain not only on the UFC’s talent pool but more importantly on its most marketable fighters - the champions. To add another champion to the mix makes more of those fight cards more marketable with not only the championship matches but also the contender matchups.
The UFC also needs to be pro-active about the safety of its fighters. As the talent levels increase for all fighters the ability for smaller fighters to use their talents to overcome the larger fighters’ physical gifts becomes less and less possible. These size advantages also become dangerous for the smaller fighters in a sport that is already inherently dangerous. Gone are the days of no rules, no time limits, and no weight classes. The addition of a Cruiserweight division is the last step in cleaning up this remnant of the past. The athletic commissions have begun working for additional weight classes, including an incredibly silly 14 classes proposed last year by the Association of Boxing Commissions, and a pro-active UFC will make the right changes happen on its own terms.
A Cruiserweight division has become a necessity for the safety of its fighters, marketability of its upcoming cards, and the longevity of Randy Couture’s career. With the coming influx of talent from The Ultimate Fighter and the increasing talent of the division’s largest competitors, the timing is now, before the athletic commissions begin to clamor for all sorts of unnecessary weight classes. This weight class IS necessary. Let’s hope the UFC can make this happen soon.
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UFC 96’s Card is Weak… UFC 98 in Danger (Frank Mir v Brock Lesnar is Off) Updated
Fiveouncesofpain.com is reporting Frank Mir vs. Brock Lesnar II is off the UFC 98 card due to a back injury to Mir that may require surgery.
Update: Zach Arnold at Fight Opinion has collected a number of the conflicting reports on Mir’s ability to fight as scheduled.
In a weekend that is pretty devoid of good news for MMA fans, this may be the worst. Besides a Rampage vs. Keith Jardine headlining bout that does little to change the fact Machida should be next in line for a chance at Rashad Evans’ Lightheavyweight belt and the rest of the card devoid of both starpower or interesting matchups, the UFC is now trapped between a plethora of fight cards over the next few months all needing starpower and the high expectations of UFC 100, the UFC has little to go with to headline UFC 98 that is actually sellable.
UFC 98 is in danger of being just like UFC 96. Not only are there no belts on the line this Saturday in Columbus, OH there is also no matchups that really define #1 contender status. The only fight that comes close is Gabriel Gonzaga vs. Shane Carwin and the argument that fight is possibly to define a #1 contender status is destroyed when another contender is matched against Lesnar while Mir recuperates.
And with Fedor, Josh Barnett, Andrei Arlovski, Paul Buentello, and so many of the world’s top Heavyweight fighters not fighting in the UFC it is tough to take the UFC Heavyweight belt, and the man with the 2-1 record holding it, very seriously.
For UFC 98, Matt Hughes vs. Matt Serra is a matchup fans have been waiting for a long time for but is simply no more than a grudge match - neither will be anxious to fight Georges St. Pierre again. The only other interesting fight on the card is Dan Miller vs. Yushin Okami, a fight that pits a guy who already should have gotten his second chance against Anderson Silva (Okami beat Silva due to DQ a few years ago) versus a guy who has to be taken very seriously at Middleweight but doesn’t yet have the rungs on the ladder to be seriously sold as a #1 contender even with a win versus Okami.
These cards are fragile and when a single injury cripples the marketability of a PPV it makes the lack of star parity and the inevitable talent dissolution as a result of so many fight cards much more apparent. Reaching 1,000,000 PPV buys now seems unapproachable for most UFC cards and the 300,000-400,000 sales something much more difficult to attain.
Pat Barry Knows How to Sell PPVs
UFC’s Heavyweight Division is in one of its weirdest phases - second only to a short period a few years ago where the division was so anemic, and so outclassed by Japan’s Pride, some people were calling for the division to be folded altogether.
Times have changed, but they’re weird. Cro Cop was exposed as a one-legged man, Frank Mir is a #1 contender despite yet being able to show the commitment and strength he had before his motorcycle accident when Heavyweight Champion, and Brock Lesnar is the current Heavyweight Champion - with a record of 3 and 1. He may be a Paper Champion but that’s one damn big piece of paper.
Meanwhile the division is stacked with great talent. Antonio Nogueira is arguable the second greatest Heavyweight in the world, Gabriel Gonzaga continues to impress after losing to Randy Couture a year and a half ago, Couture is around now to be gatekeeper until he gets bored, and we have a buddy who can’t wait for B.J. Penn to start kicking Heavyweight butt. But he’s crazy. Shane Carwin, Cheick Kongo, and Cain Velasquez are all hanging around waiting for that one fight or knockout that will launch them into a title fight.
In comes Pat Barry, who will have me buying the next Pay Per View just for the CHANCE to see “the best pure striker in the UFC heavyweight division.” This dude talks in exclamation points at all times and if there is one thing that gets us excited for a fight, it’s exclamation points.
“If you aint gonna give it 2000% what’s the point!” Exactly. We gave something 110%, as usual, a week ago and it just didn’t work out for us. 2000 seems like the right number.
Fightlinker.com is similarly anticipating Barry’s arrival. Great minds…
Look for Barry’s dance moves, amazing abs, and “pure” striking on UFC 92. Good luck, Pat!

















