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Around SBN: The Gift Of The 2003 Tigers

2008 Bloody Elbow Reader Awards: Breakout Fighter of the Year

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BREAKOUT FIGHTER OF THE YEAR: Brock Lesnar

The UFC never seemed to be able to sustain an entertaining and relevant heavyweight division.  With the resignation of Randy Couture and bust of Croation kickboxer Mirko Filipovic, the company decided to take a gamble.  In late 2007, they announced the signing of WWE superstar and NCAA Division 1 wrestling champion Brock Lesnar. Lesnar entered the UFC with a 1-0 record and his lone victory coming against scared Korean Min Soo Kim. President Dana White and matchmaker Joe Silva showed their brilliance when they inserted him in the co-main event of UFC 81 against Frank Mir. Mir provided a perfect opponent: a legitimate, but beatable name who would act as a perfect measuring stick for Lesnar's MMA progression.

The fight itself lasted a mere 90 seconds, but provided enough action and drama to fill a fifteen minute affair. Lesnar dropped Mir early and followed up with Donkey Kong hammerfists to Mir's skull. Referee Steve Mazzagatti controversially stood the fight up and deducted a point from Lesnar for strikes to the back of the head. When the bout restarted, the action quickly returned to the ground before Mir caught the behemoth in a kneebar.

Lesnar rebounded with authority when he fought Heath Herring at UFC 87 in front of his home state of Minnesota. "The Next Big Thing" landed a straight right that sent the "Texas Crazy Horse" flying across the Octagon. Herring, a wily veteran known for his ability to scramble back to his feet, had no answer for Lesnar's strength and positional wrestling throughout the bout's entire fiteen minutes. As the final seconds ticked off the clock, Lesnar showed off some of the showmanship he picked up as a pro wrestler, riding the battered and beaten Herring like a bronco.

In TK, Randy Couture returned to the UFC and signed on to fight Lesnar for the heavyweight title he had put on hold for nearly a year. The bout took place on November 15th at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas and was promoted as the biggest fight in UFC history. Could Lesnar, only 2-1 in his brief MMA career, use his size, speed, and strength to overcome the experienced two-time champ?

When the dust settled that night, it was clear that Brock Lesnar would be a force to be reckoned with. The champion looked formidable in the first period, but arguably lost a close round one to the challenger. Round two saw Lesnar continue his display of power as he dropped the legend with a right hook behind Couture's ear. Lesnar rained down a relentless assault of hammerfists before referee Mario Yamasaki had seen enough and stopped the contest.

In the year 2008, Brock Lesnar jumped into a pool of sharks and emerged from the dangerous waters of fight sport as heavyweight champion of the world. On his path to the top, the new champ brought in PPV buys hand-over-fist, became the sport's leading draw in the process, and almost single-handedly renewed interest in a dying division. He'll receive his chance for revenge at UFC 98 when he will square off with Frank Mir to unify the linear and interim belts. A dominant 2009 could see Lesnar replace Randy Couture as the man fans want to see battle the Russian enigma, Fedor Emelianenko. It's fair to say "The Next Big Thing" has arrived.

2nd PLACE: Rashad Evans
3rd PLACE: Gegard Mousasi

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Another great article in the series. The only thing I would say is that I thought that Mir caught Lesnar in a kneebar, not a heel hook.

by Rundownloser on Jan 22, 2009 9:59 PM EST reply actions  

Duly noted (and changed). I’m too lazy to check, but didn’t he originally catch him in a heel hook and transition to the kneebar?

by Mike Fagan on Jan 22, 2009 10:08 PM EST up reply actions  

I think you’re probably right.

by Rundownloser on Jan 22, 2009 10:08 PM EST up reply actions  

Gegard Mousasi is definitely #1.

In 2008 he has beaten: Evangelista Santos, Steve Mensing, Denis Kang, Dong Sik Yoon, Melvin Manhoef, Ronaldo Souza. As well as beat Musashi in a K1 fight in a dominating fashion. Only Steve Mensing is not a well known fighter.

As this is for breakout fighter of the year, I am not sure if K-1 accolades are taken into account, but his MMA ones are very impressive on their own.

6-0 on the year in mixed martial arts, as well as capturing the Dream MW tournament victory, this is why he has my vote. Hoping to see him continue his impressive fighting into 09 at 205 lbs.

by DirtyML on Jan 22, 2009 10:22 PM EST reply actions  

Mousasi had my vote, though winning the HW crown does a lot for Brock.

by Mike Fagan on Jan 22, 2009 10:24 PM EST up reply actions  

Considering where Brock started the year,

he’s pretty much the definition of Breakout Fighter.

I think I put Mousasi on my list, but #3?

Rashad was worthy of mention because he literally BROKE OUT…but it was more that he broke out of himself, rather than he exploded onto the scene.

There is no such thing as innocence, only degrees of guilt.

by misterjonez on Jan 22, 2009 10:26 PM EST up reply actions  

Brock went from brand-new spectacle to champion in less than a year. Mousasi also just landed on everyone’s radar, but he had quite a nice career going before the year.

Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better. -Samuel Beckett

by Scott C. Broussard on Jan 23, 2009 12:15 AM EST up reply actions  

Mousasi also didn’t help PPV records for a major MMA company.

by Mike Fagan on Jan 23, 2009 10:30 AM EST up reply actions  

Just going by Fightmatrix’s rankings, Mousasi went from #30 to #3. Lesnar is ranked #3 in the HW division, and he wasn’t even ranked at the start of the year.

by Michaelthebox on Jan 22, 2009 11:07 PM EST up reply actions  

Its hard to deny Lesnar

at this point.

Whats more, I think is the impact Lesnar is going to have on the HW division inside and out of the UFC. If he wins his fight with Mir, I think you will see the HW division start to migrate steadily toward guys who fight at around 265, instead of LHWs that don’t like to cut.

Pretty soon, guys like Randy will by necessity be forced to pick LHW as their division of choice because of the difficulty of competing with guys much, much larger than them on a regular basis.

by Razreshat on Jan 23, 2009 9:02 AM EST reply actions  

Sylvia fights at 265 as well and nobody switched divisions to get away from him when he was champion. You mention Couture but he actually came back from retirement to fight a guy that was much larger and heavier than him. And won. So that oviously wans’t a problem for him before.

Over and over I see people making the case for big HWs versus smaller HWs. But there have been big HWs and small HWs forever but just now this is coming to light because some people can’t cope with Lesnar beating Couture. If size alone meant anything, look at Hong Man Choi and Fedor..

Kuwabara Kuwabara

by J. B. Maddox on Jan 23, 2009 10:20 AM EST up reply actions  

Sylvia and Lesnar are different animals though. If you have a division packed with Lesnar, Carwin, and Antonio Silva types, it’s not going to behoove you to fight at 230 lbs as most of your advantages (speed and conditioning) are probably going to be lost. Since size matters less, you’ll always have special cases like Fedor, but as the sport progresses, I expect to see more dynamic guys right around the 265 cutoff and less below that.

by Mike Fagan on Jan 23, 2009 10:33 AM EST up reply actions  

Yes Sylvia and Lesnar are different, no doubts there. What I mean is I’m not so sure I share the view that the HW division is leaning more today towards big guys then it was before. Fedor is still top dog and Mir who fights at 250 belly and all just beat Nogueira and has beaten Lesnar already (wich is not to say I don’t think Lesnar will win the rematch). You mentioned Carwin but I will mention two guys who are hot prospects in their own right without being that heavy: Kongo (240) and Junior dos Santos (238).

The point I’m trying to make is the disparity in the HW division is still the same and Lesnar didn’t wave a magic wand to change that. Guys like Lesnar and Carwin give the impression of dominating with size because they’re wrestlers.

As the sport garners more attention and more people star to train for it, yes we might se more talented big guys coming in, and in that aspect I agree with you. What I was trying to say with my first post was that Lesnar alone wouldn’t be the cause of that.

Kuwabara Kuwabara

by J. B. Maddox on Jan 23, 2009 10:57 AM EST up reply actions  

Easiest answer ever. 0-0 in the UFC to HW champ in one year. Wow.

by Derek Suboticki on Jan 23, 2009 4:40 PM EST reply actions  

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