UFC 75! Rampage is Undisputed World Champion

Quinton JacksonReported by ufc.com, Sometimes history can occur in seconds. Tonight, before a sold-out crowd of 16, 235 at the O2 Arena, it took 25 minutes as Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson became the first man in mixed martial arts history to unify a major title, decisioning Dan Henderson over five hard-fought rounds to defend his UFC light heavyweight championship and take home Henderson’s PRIDE 205-pound belt in the process.

“A lot of people don’t know that I’ve got Jiu-Jitsu,” said Jackson, whose ability to fight on the ground with the two-time Olympic wrestler may have been the deciding factor in the bout, which was scored 48-47 and 49-46 twice for the native of Memphis, Tennessee.

There was no feeling out process in this one, as Jackson immediately tried swinging for the fences before pushing Henderson to the Octagon’s fence. Henderson responded well though, reversing position and scoring with knees to the leg as the two clinched. With 3:30 to go in the round, Henderson worked free and went in for the takedown, putting Jackson on his back and then moving into side control. From there, Henderson again fired away with knees to the leg, and while Jackson looked like he was having difficulty getting free, he suddenly escaped and stood up. Henderson got right back in his foe’s face, pushing ‘Rampage’ into the fence. The final 30 seconds of the opening frame saw Jackson rebound and land some strikes at close range, but Henderson had the last word with a knee to the head at the bell.

Henderson kept Jackson off balance with foot fakes in the beginning stages of round two, and he eventually made good on his feints with a solid takedown which was followed by his move du jour so far – knees. After a stay on the mat, the two rose and battled it out on the fence before Jackson got his own takedown and opened up with point-scoring punches and forearms.

The action was tense early in the third, with both fighters finally letting go with punches at close range. Soon, the bout again went to the mat, with Jackson controlling things from the side. Henderson kept busy though, locking Jackson’s left arm briefly until ‘Rampage’ was able to power his way out of trouble. Henderson kept his sights on the arm though, and as Jackson looked to escape from the submission attempt, he allowed the PRIDE champion to reverse position and eventually get Jackson’s back. But as the two stood and started to trade, the bell intervened.

In round four, Jackson hurt Henderson with a left and followed his foe to the mat. Henderson reacted quickly, going for Jackson’s arm. Within seconds, Jackson freed his arm and resumed his attack, but nothing seemed to be hurting the Temecula, California resident. Points were being scored by the UFC champion though, and in a war of attrition like this one, every strike counts. With 1:10 left in the round, a stalemate was reached and referee John McCarthy stood the fighters up, and Jackson pressed forward, scoring with a brief flurry that Henderson eagerly responded to moments before the bell.

With the fight perilously close, Henderson and Jackson traded punches to open up the fifth and final round, with ‘Rampage’ jarring Henderson briefly and holding the edge. The long-range bombing ended quickly though and the two champions grappled against the fence. When they emerged from the clinch they traded again, Jackson again getting to the target quicker than Henderson. An ill-advised kick gave Henderson the opening he needed though, and he took Jackson to the mat. On the ground, Henderson controlled matters, but Jackson worked his way up and then returned the favor on his foe, with the two firing away while standing until the fight was over.

With the win, Jackson improves to 30-6. Henderson falls to 22-6.

England’s own Michael Bisping kept his unbeaten record intact in the main undercard bout of the UFC 75 card at the O2 Arena, eking out a close three round split decision over Matt Hamill in a light heavyweight contest that finally pitted the two unbeaten stars of The Ultimate Fighter’s third season.

“Who’s the real winner of The Ultimate Fighter?” said Bisping (15-0), who was on course to face Hamill (5-1) on the reality series before ‘The Hammer’ was forced from the show due to injury.  Bisping went on to win the final of the show by stopping Josh Haynes.

Scores were 29-28 twice and 27-30 for Bisping.

Surprisingly, Hamill came out looking to bang, immediately putting Bisping on the defensive.  ‘The Hammer’ even gave up a chance to work Bisping over on the ground after a missed knee turned into a takedown.  And the strategy was apparently working as Bisping was soon cut under the left eye and sporting a mouse under the right eye.  In the final minute, Bisping started to open up with lefts and rights to the head, but a left punch seemed to stun the local hero just before the bell.

Hamill switched things up in the second, quickly getting a takedown in an attempt to pound Bisping out.  ‘The Count’ worked his way back to his feet though, knowing that his best chance for victory was in the standup game.  Hamill would score another brief takedown with under two minutes left, but Bisping rose immediately, scoring with quick counterpunches as the New York resident stalked.

Bisping’s stick and move strategy finally looked to be gaining some speed in the final round, as he kept Hamill off balance while scoring with quick jabs, but ‘The Hammer’s forward match was relentless and he finally scored the takedown with under three minutes left.  Bisping struggled to rise, but with just over two minutes to go, he got up and just missed with a knee to the head.  Hamill used that opportunity to put Bisping on his back again, and while the American wasn’t scoring with anything of significance while the two were grounded, Bisping’s offense was just as nullified on the mat.

All three judges gave the first round to Hamill, with Bisping rebounding to win the next two on the cards of Jeff Mullen and Cecil Peoples.  Judge Chris Watts was the lone Hamill voter, awarding all three rounds to the American.

What was expected to be Armageddon turned out to be more of a chess match, but in the end, Paris, France’s Cheick Kongo was Garry Kasparov as he scored a three round unanimous decision win over Mirko Cro Cop in a heavyweight upset that saw the former PRIDE star lose two fights in a row for the first time in his mixed martial arts career.

All three judges scored the bout 29-28 for Kongo, whose record now stands at 21-3-1.  Cro Cop, who was knocked out in the first round by Gabriel Gonzaga in April, falls to 22-6-2 and 1-2 in the Octagon.

Cro Cop didn’t show any ill effects from the Gonzaga fight early, as he stalked forward confidently. But though Kongo let his foe lead, he wasn’t shy about letting his own strikes go, landing the occasional leg kick.  The two briefly locked up against the fence in the bout’s third minute, but were re-started by referee John McCarthy.  Moments later, Cro Cop put Kongo on the canvas and showed his new knowledge of the Octagon landscape, pushing the Frenchman against the fence and working his strikes from the mat, eventually getting into the mount position.  For his part, Kongo held Cro Cop close, looking to force a standup, but to no avail, as Cro Cop stayed active and even attempted a triangle choke when the two scrambled just before the bell.

Kongo took the role of aggressor in round two, keeping Cro Cop from getting too close with his strikes.  With under four minutes left, the two clinched, and Kongo scored a takedown, quickly moving into side control.  Cro Cop escaped serious danger quickly, but Kongo didn’t let his opponent get up, instead opting to fire kicks from a standing position on the prone Cro Cop before jumping back into the guard.  With just over a minute left, Cro Cop fired up with both legs, giving himself enough room to stand, but Kongo kept him pinned against the fence, and after a brief break by McCarthy, he finished the round by scoring with knees at close range.

With the fight apparently deadlocked, Kongo again pushed the pace in the final round in an attempt to score the upset.  But Kongo’s good early work was interrupted when the bout was halted briefly for Cro Cop to recover from low knees. When the bout resumed, Kongo kept the heat on, scoring with kicks and then pushing the Croatian to the fence.  After another re-start by McCarthy, Cro Cop tried to fire off his deadly left kick, but it had little effect on Kongo, who continued his forward march.  As the bout entered it’s final 1:30, Cro Cop, now sporting a mouse under his right eye, tried to pull the fight out, but Kongo was not to be denied.  And while his victory was not the most scintillating of wins, his rock solid gameplan worked like a charm in the final two rounds, in the process leaving Cro Cop’s future open to debate.

Houston Alexander is slowing down.  Following his 48 second UFC debut win over Keith Jardine in May, the light heavyweight pride of Nebraska was actually forced to fight 13 more seconds against Italy’s Alessio Sakara, but he was just as devastating, as he stopped the Italian in one minute and one second in the main card opener.

Perhaps presuming his chances were better on the ground, Sakara looked for an early takedown and briefly got one before Alexander jumped up and resumed his intention of repeating his star-making May win over Jardine.  Moments later he did, knocking Sakara down with a right knee to the head.  A finishing barrage on the mat followed, and referee Yves Lavigne stopped the bout.

“That’s good coaching, a lot of determination and a lot of time in the gym,” said Alexander, who improves to 8-1.  Sakara falls to 15-6 with 1 no contest.

Welterweight contender Marcus Davis continued on his hot streak against Walsall’s Paul Taylor, but not before “The Irish Hand Grenade” was put through a gut check from his British foe, who gave a spirited effort before being submitted late in the opening round.

Taylor, living up to his nickname of ‘Relentless’, aggressively stood in the pocket against Davis, dropping him with a huge right kick to the head.

“I could have been stopped real quick,” said Davis.  “He’s a strong guy.  You don’t see me getting hurt like that.”

The end appeared to be near when Taylor pushed Davis to the fence while on the mat and opened up with both hands, but Davis weathered the storm and fought his way back, taking Taylor to the mat with a single leg takedown. 

From there, Davis took over, getting into side control and eventually a full mount, where he fired away with punches.  Taylor wouldn’t give in, but as he tried to escape from the mount, he was caught by a Davis armbar, and tapped out at the 4:14 mark.

Davis, who won his tenth fight in a row (five in the UFC), improves to 18-4.  Taylor drops to 8-2.

10 Responses to “UFC 75! Rampage is Undisputed World Champion”

  • TARA

    I JUST WANTED TO LEAVE A NOTE REGARDING THE BISPING AND HAMILL FIGHT, I THINK THOSE JUDGES SHOULD HANG THEIR HEADS IN SHAME FOR UNJUSTLY ROBBING HAMILL OF A WIN THAT HE SO OBVIOUSLY DESERVED. I THINK THAT THE UFC NEEDS TO BE MORE CRITICAL IN WHO THEY ALLOW TO JUDGE THEIR FIGHTS, AS I HAVE LOST A LOT OF RESPECT FOR THE UFC BECAUSE OF THIS. MAYBE IN THE FUTURE THERE WON’T BE THIS KIND OF UPSET AS THE POLL IS SHOWING THAT 89% OF PEOPLE SHARE MY OPINION!!!!

  • Patrick

    My feelings (as well as many I have talked to) exactly. What fight were those judges watching??!!! Don’t let the UFC become like boxing.. it would be a shame especially for all the hard work and effort the UFC had to endure to get where they are. I remember back in 1995 where we were signing petitions just to get the fights on pay per view and to lobby to the general public that it is a sport and not “human cock fighting”!

    Matt Hamill is a class act and great sportsman. He accepted the loss in the post interview “fair and square” where as Bisbig undeservingly gloated in the win. Bisbig.. take a look in the mirror. Matt F’d you up! Hamill deserves a rematch.

  • Jerry

    I changed the channel after Hamill was robbed. So glad I didn’t pay for the event and pretty damn sure I won’t be doing any more pay per views with the UFC.

    Suddenly boxing doesn’t seem so crooked.

  • Jerry

    This isn’t the first time judges have been called to the carpet. WHO picks these people?

    I remember a similar bout when Dana White stated that a particular judge would NOT be allowed back, so it’s been an issue before and has come to the front again.

    Of course Dana White will be right on top of a rematch *rolleyes* there is more money to be made from this error. I have seen fights in the past that just didn’t add up but the Hamill fight left me with no respect for the UFC.

  • Burn

    I’m not giving up on the UFC or anything goofy like that but Jeff Cullen and Cecil Peoples should be fired. The only thing anyone has heard since this history making event happened was about how they screwed up an undercard fight. Give us the rematch and give them their walking papers…

  • Neil Almond

    Are you guys having a laugh, Hamill won the first round easily but after that I was not so sure, Bisping was hitting him all over the place. I actually think it was going to be given as a draw, to say that one judge scored all the rounds to Hamill was crooked. Plus Bisping has the right to brag Hamill had been telling everyone he is the Ultimate Fighter.

    Jerry - you missed the best fight of the evening Jackson - Henderson, so that was a bit silly really.

  • Roger

    The ppv was ok, I guess, everybody I was going for lost expect Hamill. Without a doubt Hamill won or it should have been a draw, the judges sucked. Jackson looked better then he ever did & I think Hendo took him lighty but non the less it was a good fight & could have gone either way & the results…PRIDE has the best fighters in the world. Dana White makes me sick everytime he says UFC vs Pride when he knows damn well UFC 75 was Pride vs Pride. But congrats to Rampage, never forget about Pride, & Shogun or Silva is going to take that title away from you. PRIDE FOREVER!

  • dre

    No one will ever beat Rampage again !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    I guarantee it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • dre

    Rampage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Kemp

    guaranteeing rampage aint going to lose again?..dont be that stupid..im pretty sure you said that about Chuck The Iceman too..

  • Leave a Reply

    UFC 75! Rampage is Undisputed World Champion

    Quinton JacksonReported by ufc.com, Sometimes history can occur in seconds. Tonight, before a sold-out crowd of 16, 235 at the O2 Arena, it took 25 minutes as Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson became the first man in mixed martial arts history to unify a major title, decisioning Dan Henderson over five hard-fought rounds to defend his UFC light heavyweight championship and take home Henderson’s PRIDE 205-pound belt in the process.

    “A lot of people don’t know that I’ve got Jiu-Jitsu,” said Jackson, whose ability to fight on the ground with the two-time Olympic wrestler may have been the deciding factor in the bout, which was scored 48-47 and 49-46 twice for the native of Memphis, Tennessee.

    There was no feeling out process in this one, as Jackson immediately tried swinging for the fences before pushing Henderson to the Octagon’s fence. Henderson responded well though, reversing position and scoring with knees to the leg as the two clinched. With 3:30 to go in the round, Henderson worked free and went in for the takedown, putting Jackson on his back and then moving into side control. From there, Henderson again fired away with knees to the leg, and while Jackson looked like he was having difficulty getting free, he suddenly escaped and stood up. Henderson got right back in his foe’s face, pushing ‘Rampage’ into the fence. The final 30 seconds of the opening frame saw Jackson rebound and land some strikes at close range, but Henderson had the last word with a knee to the head at the bell.

    Henderson kept Jackson off balance with foot fakes in the beginning stages of round two, and he eventually made good on his feints with a solid takedown which was followed by his move du jour so far – knees. After a stay on the mat, the two rose and battled it out on the fence before Jackson got his own takedown and opened up with point-scoring punches and forearms.

    The action was tense early in the third, with both fighters finally letting go with punches at close range. Soon, the bout again went to the mat, with Jackson controlling things from the side. Henderson kept busy though, locking Jackson’s left arm briefly until ‘Rampage’ was able to power his way out of trouble. Henderson kept his sights on the arm though, and as Jackson looked to escape from the submission attempt, he allowed the PRIDE champion to reverse position and eventually get Jackson’s back. But as the two stood and started to trade, the bell intervened.

    In round four, Jackson hurt Henderson with a left and followed his foe to the mat. Henderson reacted quickly, going for Jackson’s arm. Within seconds, Jackson freed his arm and resumed his attack, but nothing seemed to be hurting the Temecula, California resident. Points were being scored by the UFC champion though, and in a war of attrition like this one, every strike counts. With 1:10 left in the round, a stalemate was reached and referee John McCarthy stood the fighters up, and Jackson pressed forward, scoring with a brief flurry that Henderson eagerly responded to moments before the bell.

    With the fight perilously close, Henderson and Jackson traded punches to open up the fifth and final round, with ‘Rampage’ jarring Henderson briefly and holding the edge. The long-range bombing ended quickly though and the two champions grappled against the fence. When they emerged from the clinch they traded again, Jackson again getting to the target quicker than Henderson. An ill-advised kick gave Henderson the opening he needed though, and he took Jackson to the mat. On the ground, Henderson controlled matters, but Jackson worked his way up and then returned the favor on his foe, with the two firing away while standing until the fight was over.

    With the win, Jackson improves to 30-6. Henderson falls to 22-6.

    England’s own Michael Bisping kept his unbeaten record intact in the main undercard bout of the UFC 75 card at the O2 Arena, eking out a close three round split decision over Matt Hamill in a light heavyweight contest that finally pitted the two unbeaten stars of The Ultimate Fighter’s third season.

    “Who’s the real winner of The Ultimate Fighter?” said Bisping (15-0), who was on course to face Hamill (5-1) on the reality series before ‘The Hammer’ was forced from the show due to injury.  Bisping went on to win the final of the show by stopping Josh Haynes.

    Scores were 29-28 twice and 27-30 for Bisping.

    Surprisingly, Hamill came out looking to bang, immediately putting Bisping on the defensive.  ‘The Hammer’ even gave up a chance to work Bisping over on the ground after a missed knee turned into a takedown.  And the strategy was apparently working as Bisping was soon cut under the left eye and sporting a mouse under the right eye.  In the final minute, Bisping started to open up with lefts and rights to the head, but a left punch seemed to stun the local hero just before the bell.

    Hamill switched things up in the second, quickly getting a takedown in an attempt to pound Bisping out.  ‘The Count’ worked his way back to his feet though, knowing that his best chance for victory was in the standup game.  Hamill would score another brief takedown with under two minutes left, but Bisping rose immediately, scoring with quick counterpunches as the New York resident stalked.

    Bisping’s stick and move strategy finally looked to be gaining some speed in the final round, as he kept Hamill off balance while scoring with quick jabs, but ‘The Hammer’s forward match was relentless and he finally scored the takedown with under three minutes left.  Bisping struggled to rise, but with just over two minutes to go, he got up and just missed with a knee to the head.  Hamill used that opportunity to put Bisping on his back again, and while the American wasn’t scoring with anything of significance while the two were grounded, Bisping’s offense was just as nullified on the mat.

    All three judges gave the first round to Hamill, with Bisping rebounding to win the next two on the cards of Jeff Mullen and Cecil Peoples.  Judge Chris Watts was the lone Hamill voter, awarding all three rounds to the American.

    What was expected to be Armageddon turned out to be more of a chess match, but in the end, Paris, France’s Cheick Kongo was Garry Kasparov as he scored a three round unanimous decision win over Mirko Cro Cop in a heavyweight upset that saw the former PRIDE star lose two fights in a row for the first time in his mixed martial arts career.

    All three judges scored the bout 29-28 for Kongo, whose record now stands at 21-3-1.  Cro Cop, who was knocked out in the first round by Gabriel Gonzaga in April, falls to 22-6-2 and 1-2 in the Octagon.

    Cro Cop didn’t show any ill effects from the Gonzaga fight early, as he stalked forward confidently. But though Kongo let his foe lead, he wasn’t shy about letting his own strikes go, landing the occasional leg kick.  The two briefly locked up against the fence in the bout’s third minute, but were re-started by referee John McCarthy.  Moments later, Cro Cop put Kongo on the canvas and showed his new knowledge of the Octagon landscape, pushing the Frenchman against the fence and working his strikes from the mat, eventually getting into the mount position.  For his part, Kongo held Cro Cop close, looking to force a standup, but to no avail, as Cro Cop stayed active and even attempted a triangle choke when the two scrambled just before the bell.

    Kongo took the role of aggressor in round two, keeping Cro Cop from getting too close with his strikes.  With under four minutes left, the two clinched, and Kongo scored a takedown, quickly moving into side control.  Cro Cop escaped serious danger quickly, but Kongo didn’t let his opponent get up, instead opting to fire kicks from a standing position on the prone Cro Cop before jumping back into the guard.  With just over a minute left, Cro Cop fired up with both legs, giving himself enough room to stand, but Kongo kept him pinned against the fence, and after a brief break by McCarthy, he finished the round by scoring with knees at close range.

    With the fight apparently deadlocked, Kongo again pushed the pace in the final round in an attempt to score the upset.  But Kongo’s good early work was interrupted when the bout was halted briefly for Cro Cop to recover from low knees. When the bout resumed, Kongo kept the heat on, scoring with kicks and then pushing the Croatian to the fence.  After another re-start by McCarthy, Cro Cop tried to fire off his deadly left kick, but it had little effect on Kongo, who continued his forward march.  As the bout entered it’s final 1:30, Cro Cop, now sporting a mouse under his right eye, tried to pull the fight out, but Kongo was not to be denied.  And while his victory was not the most scintillating of wins, his rock solid gameplan worked like a charm in the final two rounds, in the process leaving Cro Cop’s future open to debate.

    Houston Alexander is slowing down.  Following his 48 second UFC debut win over Keith Jardine in May, the light heavyweight pride of Nebraska was actually forced to fight 13 more seconds against Italy’s Alessio Sakara, but he was just as devastating, as he stopped the Italian in one minute and one second in the main card opener.

    Perhaps presuming his chances were better on the ground, Sakara looked for an early takedown and briefly got one before Alexander jumped up and resumed his intention of repeating his star-making May win over Jardine.  Moments later he did, knocking Sakara down with a right knee to the head.  A finishing barrage on the mat followed, and referee Yves Lavigne stopped the bout.

    “That’s good coaching, a lot of determination and a lot of time in the gym,” said Alexander, who improves to 8-1.  Sakara falls to 15-6 with 1 no contest.

    Welterweight contender Marcus Davis continued on his hot streak against Walsall’s Paul Taylor, but not before “The Irish Hand Grenade” was put through a gut check from his British foe, who gave a spirited effort before being submitted late in the opening round.

    Taylor, living up to his nickname of ‘Relentless’, aggressively stood in the pocket against Davis, dropping him with a huge right kick to the head.

    “I could have been stopped real quick,” said Davis.  “He’s a strong guy.  You don’t see me getting hurt like that.”

    The end appeared to be near when Taylor pushed Davis to the fence while on the mat and opened up with both hands, but Davis weathered the storm and fought his way back, taking Taylor to the mat with a single leg takedown. 

    From there, Davis took over, getting into side control and eventually a full mount, where he fired away with punches.  Taylor wouldn’t give in, but as he tried to escape from the mount, he was caught by a Davis armbar, and tapped out at the 4:14 mark.

    Davis, who won his tenth fight in a row (five in the UFC), improves to 18-4.  Taylor drops to 8-2.

    10 Responses to “UFC 75! Rampage is Undisputed World Champion”

  • TARA

    I JUST WANTED TO LEAVE A NOTE REGARDING THE BISPING AND HAMILL FIGHT, I THINK THOSE JUDGES SHOULD HANG THEIR HEADS IN SHAME FOR UNJUSTLY ROBBING HAMILL OF A WIN THAT HE SO OBVIOUSLY DESERVED. I THINK THAT THE UFC NEEDS TO BE MORE CRITICAL IN WHO THEY ALLOW TO JUDGE THEIR FIGHTS, AS I HAVE LOST A LOT OF RESPECT FOR THE UFC BECAUSE OF THIS. MAYBE IN THE FUTURE THERE WON’T BE THIS KIND OF UPSET AS THE POLL IS SHOWING THAT 89% OF PEOPLE SHARE MY OPINION!!!!

  • Patrick

    My feelings (as well as many I have talked to) exactly. What fight were those judges watching??!!! Don’t let the UFC become like boxing.. it would be a shame especially for all the hard work and effort the UFC had to endure to get where they are. I remember back in 1995 where we were signing petitions just to get the fights on pay per view and to lobby to the general public that it is a sport and not “human cock fighting”!

    Matt Hamill is a class act and great sportsman. He accepted the loss in the post interview “fair and square” where as Bisbig undeservingly gloated in the win. Bisbig.. take a look in the mirror. Matt F’d you up! Hamill deserves a rematch.

  • Jerry

    I changed the channel after Hamill was robbed. So glad I didn’t pay for the event and pretty damn sure I won’t be doing any more pay per views with the UFC.

    Suddenly boxing doesn’t seem so crooked.

  • Jerry

    This isn’t the first time judges have been called to the carpet. WHO picks these people?

    I remember a similar bout when Dana White stated that a particular judge would NOT be allowed back, so it’s been an issue before and has come to the front again.

    Of course Dana White will be right on top of a rematch *rolleyes* there is more money to be made from this error. I have seen fights in the past that just didn’t add up but the Hamill fight left me with no respect for the UFC.

  • Burn

    I’m not giving up on the UFC or anything goofy like that but Jeff Cullen and Cecil Peoples should be fired. The only thing anyone has heard since this history making event happened was about how they screwed up an undercard fight. Give us the rematch and give them their walking papers…

  • Neil Almond

    Are you guys having a laugh, Hamill won the first round easily but after that I was not so sure, Bisping was hitting him all over the place. I actually think it was going to be given as a draw, to say that one judge scored all the rounds to Hamill was crooked. Plus Bisping has the right to brag Hamill had been telling everyone he is the Ultimate Fighter.

    Jerry - you missed the best fight of the evening Jackson - Henderson, so that was a bit silly really.

  • Roger

    The ppv was ok, I guess, everybody I was going for lost expect Hamill. Without a doubt Hamill won or it should have been a draw, the judges sucked. Jackson looked better then he ever did & I think Hendo took him lighty but non the less it was a good fight & could have gone either way & the results…PRIDE has the best fighters in the world. Dana White makes me sick everytime he says UFC vs Pride when he knows damn well UFC 75 was Pride vs Pride. But congrats to Rampage, never forget about Pride, & Shogun or Silva is going to take that title away from you. PRIDE FOREVER!

  • dre

    No one will ever beat Rampage again !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    I guarantee it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • dre

    Rampage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Kemp

    guaranteeing rampage aint going to lose again?..dont be that stupid..im pretty sure you said that about Chuck The Iceman too..

  • Leave a Reply