Sunday, March 28, 2010

Results. UFC 111 results: Georges St. Pierre dominates Dan Hardy, Shane Carwin steamrolls Frank Mir Think.




After what was a very stalwart accumulation of premonitory bouts, we absolutely got down to the denominate fights. With not one, but two belts on the formation at UFC 111, there's no miss to hype this issue up. It was musical much guaranteed to be fearful and the two co-main events delivered. Shane Carwin TKO'd Frank Mir in the blue ribbon blunt to gain a victory the UFC Interim Heavyweight Championship.



Although I characterize the sound interim district passion is pretty lame, I was very predisposed to see how this fight went. Carwin's finishing ability, along with the incident that he's finished every one one of his fights by outset round KO, has been heavily publicized, but Mir is an peerless submission fighter and has reinvented himself as a harmful striker within the model year or so. Carwin pushed Mir into the restrict early in the earliest round, but they ended up getting separated. Carwin took it hand back, though, and started doing some grave damage with strikes. Mir was literatim crumpling under the change of Carwin's punches and ended up on the ground.






Carwin kept up the deprecate until Mir perfectly quit defending himself. I kindliness that if anyone was going to at the end of the day push Carwin past the leading round, it would be Mir, but the engineer from Colorado kept his awesome streak alive. Brock Lesnar will be the next to contradict Carwin and will incontestably present the toughest defiance of his career, but for now I'll just say that I'm extremely impressed. Georges St. Pierre defeated Dan Hardy by unanimous finding to engage the UFC Welterweight Championship.



At eat one's heart out last, we got to spot the fight we'd all been waiting for. Georges St. Pierre was set to preserve his welterweight thrash against Dan Hardy. Everyone was wise of Hardy's stunner power, but. St. Pierre has become such a well-rounded fighter, that he can rival anyone at their strengths or manoeuvre their weaknesses.



It's deep down just a matter of what heroic plan he decides to go with. A lot of critics bemoan about St. Pierre not finishing more fights, but I've always maintained that whereas a flatly masterful and main five round performance is just as impressive. As expected, St. Pierre was able to infer Hardy down almost immediately.



He took his back, then mounted and commonly dominated him for the without a scratch round. He had an arm but that looked fellow it should have false Hardy to tap, but he was able to tossing out right at the end of the round. St. Pierre got another speedy take down in the second on all sides and proceeded to dominate for another five minutes.



He was able to authorize guard, inhale the back and look good on his feet when they were standing. St. Pierre definitely started working on the ground-and-pound in the third round.



He postured up inside of Hardy's security and started to thrash him with punches. Hardy was able to continue the round, but was too ornate defending to mount any big-hearted of offense at all. St. PIerre had another coarse looking submittal locked up in the fourth round. This one was a kimura and once again, Hardy refused to knock when he presumably should have.



He escaped, but remained altogether unthreatening to St. Pierre. There were a combine more kimura attempts in the unchangeable round, but the one activity Hardy showed some aptitude at was survival.



His denial to tap while in pain was impressive, but he really posed no threat during the entire fight. I already discern that people will beef about St. Pierre not finishing Hardy in this fight, but I don't conscious what else the gink has to do to impress people. The mastery he showed in this especial fight was incredible.



He took another boy that the whole world said could knock him out with one punch and and barrel dominated him. He looked better than Hardy when they were on their feet and then unequivocal out red-faced him on the mat. As soon as this fight was announced, I wrote that I didn't expect Hardy had earned a privilege shot.



He hadn't fought the same au fait of contest as guys go for Jon Fitch, Josh Koscheck and Thiago Alves yet and I didn't be conscious of that he even belonged in the pen with St. Pierre. That question was proven at UFC 111 and even though GSP voiced his own failure at not finishing the fight, I don't note he has anything to justify for.

ufc 111 results




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