Nate
“The Great” Marquardt will headline the last Strikeforce event. |
Esther Lin/Showtime
When the “Smartest Guy at the Bar” series started dropping
knowledge with the hope that the information would win somebody
free drinks at their local watering hole,
Strikeforce
events seemed like inevitable additions to the usual pay-per-view
experience.
Sometimes things do not go according to plan in MMA, as it appears
Oklahoma City’s Chesapeake Energy Arena will host
Strikeforce’s 63rd and final show on Saturday, the promotion
following the
International Fight League,
Pride Fighting Championships,
Affliction
and the white buffalo into extinction. Ironically, the final
Strikeforce broadcast falls in line with Showtime’s free preview
weekend, giving viewers a chance to sample a fight promotion they
can never watch again. Somewhere, Strikeforce founder Scott Coker
is shuddering on the back nine. The man has had a lot of time on
his hands lately.
How We Got Here: The promotion’s swan song was
supposed to deliver a fight card worthy of Fourth of July
fireworks, but injuries turned this celebration into little more
than snakes and sparklers on your driveway. Originally dubbed
Strikeforce “Champions,” the show was to feature four title fights
on the main card. In the end, only
Nate
Marquardt’s welterweight strap will be up for grabs, as he
takes on
Team Quest’s
Tarec
Saffiedine. Journeyman-turned-contender
Pat Healy was
finally going to get his due in a title bout against 155-pound
champion
Gilbert
Melendez, until “El Nino” was bitten by the injury bug.
Luke
Rockhold was set to defend his middleweight championship
against
Lorenz
Larkin, but the oft-injured
American Kickboxing Academy standout was forced to bow out yet
again. Strikeforce heavyweight grand prix finalists
Daniel
Cormier and
Josh Barnett
will get, well, let’s just call them opponents.
File
Photo
Kennedy questions those who withdrew.
Say What: Injuries have become a polarizing topic
with some of those on the current Strikeforce roster. With the
Ultimate Fighting Championship set to absorb Strikeforce the
way Google engulfs startup tech companies, many fighters chose to
sit on their hands, rather than glove them up. Waiting for a call
from the UFC, it seems, is a far better option than sticking around
on a sinking ship.
Tim Kennedy,
who will lock horns with
Trevor
Smith at the event, does not share those sentiments and called
into question the legitimacy of some of the injuries. “Well, I
don’t know. Maybe they are, maybe they aren’t. It’s pathetic and
convenient for every single marquee fighter in all of Strikeforce
-- that we all know to be going over to the UFC -- are pulling out
of their fights two weeks before the final card. It’s like, ‘Are
you guys fighters or are you just a bunch of little vaginas?’”
Kennedy told BloodyElbow.com.
Magic Number: 147: the number of days between
Strikeforce events. The last time the six-sided cage made an
appearance was Aug. 18 in San Diego.
After
Ronda
Rousey got “Rowdy” with
Sarah
Kaufman’s arm, the San Jose, Calif.-based promotion found
itself on a roller coaster bound for nowhere. Twice Strikeforce
attempted to put on another show in 2012 and twice it failed, first
on Sept. 29 and again on Nov. 3.
File
Photo
Barnett has been away since 2002.
We Got There Eventually: The Strikeforce roster
became a sort of purgatory for fighters dropped by the UFC for one
reason or another -- a place to earn a paycheck and maybe, just
maybe, the opportunity to rejoin UFC again. Perhaps no fighter has
stood on the outside looking in based solely on the wrath of UFC
President Dana White longer than Barnett, who last fought in the
Octagon more than a decade ago at UFC 36. The catch wrestling
specialist has done just fine without the UFC for the last 10
years, but the MMA landscape is quite different now. Even though he
lost every round to Cormier on two judges’ scorecards in May, the
UFC needs talented heavyweights. Good big men are hard to come by
... Marquardt will likely become a beneficiary of luck, timing and
the fact that Zuffa’s working relationship with Showtime simply
could not be salvaged. “The Great” was cut in wake of UFC on Versus
4, where he was supposed to face
Rick Story in
the headliner. Due to elevated testosterone levels, Marquardt did
not meet the necessary medical qualifications at the 11th hour and
was pulled from the card and dropped from the promotion.
Hell hath no fury like White when he has a main event dropout on
his hands. Luckily for the former middleweight King of
Pancrase,
the UFC boss seems to be in a forgiving mood. Win or lose against
Saffiedine, Marquardt will likely get to hear Bruce Buffer call his
name again inside the Octagon.
Useless Fact: Ed Herman will
become the first and last active UFC fighter to compete in the
Strikeforce cage when he battles former Strikeforce middleweight
champion
Ronaldo
Souza. The UFC flirted with the idea of bringing over choice
pieces of its roster for Strikeforce champions unable to get
homegrown competition. Melendez has been twiddling his thumbs
waiting for a noteworthy challenger, while Zuffa had designs on
bringing over
Frank Mir to
face Cormier before a knee injury forced him to withdraw from a
scheduled Nov. 3 bout. In the end, the UFC was asking its fighters
to compete inside a smaller promotion in front of fewer fans with
no pay-per-view cut in a fight that would not advance their run at
UFC gold. Not difficult to turn down such a request.
File
Photo
Diaz established himself as one of
world’s best in Strikeforce.
Not All Doom and Gloom: History will be made in
Oklahoma City, as one of MMA’s most successful promotions turns its
final page. Every fighter on the card should take some level of
pride for his role in the process. The demise of Strikeforce was a
forgone conclusion the moment Zuffa purchased the company. That
does not erase the memories The Little Promotion That Could
delivered for us. It provided fighters like
Nick Diaz,
Jason
Miller and
Dan
Henderson an avenue through which to revitalize their careers.
One of the sport’s fiercest rivalries played out between Melendez
and
Josh
Thomson in a Strikeforce-exclusive trilogy. The promotion also
brought about the end of
Fedor
Emelianenko’s storied career and gave us tournaments, in-cage
brawls and
Frank
Shamrock’s braces. In short, Strikeforce’s role in the
development of modern MMA cannot be ignored. Now comes the fun
part. Strikeforce’s best and brightest will make their way into the
UFC’s Octagon, much like their
World Extreme Cagefighting counterparts before them, and
deliver the crossover matchups about which fans have dreamed. Is
Melendez the best lightweight in the world? Can Rockhold compete
with top-tier middleweights? In what weight class will Cormier ply
his trade? The answers are forthcoming.