2008 Bloody Elbow Reader Awards: KO of the Year

KNOCKOUT OF THE YEAR: Rashad Evans vs. Chuck Liddell at UFC 88
"My coach Mike Winklejohn, we went over that overhand right over and over again. He said man that's the punch that's going to put Chuck down. He said it was going to hit and it happened just the way he said it would happen." - Rashad Evans
The UFC desperately wanted a Chuck Liddell victory. The company had a bonafide blockbuster on its hands following Forrest Griffin's upset victory over Quinton "Rampage" Jackson. All Chuck needed to do was get by "Sugar" Rashad Evans.
Evans exemplified the perfect style for Liddell - a wrestling-based fighter without significant knockout power in his hands. "The Iceman" perfected the art of staying on his feet and getting off his back if taken to the floor. The fight seemed to play itself out on paper; Evans would land takedowns throughout the fight, but over the course of fifteen minutes, Liddell would find a knockout blow.
Instead, Evans completed his transformation from lay 'n' pray wrestler to dangerous well-rounded mixed martial artist. The first round unfolded as everyone expected. Liddell stalked the younger Evans for the entire five minutes. Round two continued that pattern for the first minute and a half.
Then it happened.
Evans quit backpedaling, feinted a left hand, and blasted the UFC posterboy with an explosive overhand right. His lights turned off, Liddell's lifeless body crumpled to the canvas. A stunned Atlanta crowd fell silent in the wake of Evans' demolition job.
The beauty of the knockout can be found in the sheer violence of the imagery. In slow motion replay, we see Rashad goad Liddell into throwing his right hand, completely exposing his chin in the process. Your heart rate rises in anticipation as Evans loads his own right. The suspense builds to crescendo as Evans draws forward the punch that built Liddell's career.
It lands with picture perfect accuracy, whipping Liddell's head clear across his body. We're spared additional theatrics as Evans' followup left hook wistfully passes by Liddell's skull. Liddell had been knocked out just over a year earlier by Jackson, but the shot of his bruised and swollen face resting in the hands of officials adds a particular touch of brutality that escaped Jackson's triumph.
Evans launched himself into superstardom - all in one punch.
2nd PLACE: Quinton Jackson vs. Wanderlei Silva at UFC 92
3rd PLACE: Josh Koscheck vs. Yoshiyuki Yoshida at UFC Fight Night: Fight for the Troops
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Very few times have I watched a K.O. and felt queezy because of how violent the strike was and the way the receiving fighter fell.
This was one of those times.
Liddell had been knocked out just over a year earlier by Jackson, but the shot of his bruised and swollen face resting in the hands of officials adds a particular touch of brutality that escaped Jackson’s triumph.
Liddell was flash-KO’d by the ground and pound, he didn’t fall the way he did against Rashad, and he certainly never lay there unconscious, he was out for a split second. The Rashad knockout was more devastating in pretty much every way possible.
Even in the comments? I thought that was the loophole du jour
by Derek Suboticki on Feb 3, 2009 7:56 PM EST up reply actions
simply brutal
the crowd at the wild wings was subdued, many worried that Liddell might have been seriously injured.
However, I still think that if Forrest had more power he could (could) have gotten Rashad out of there in the second round. He was landing some flush shots
Everybody was subdued, really? That’s weird, because everybody and their moms were losing it at the Wild Wings we were at. It was insane.
"I see him beating Anderson Silva. I see him picking him apart. Him at a 131 years old...(trails off)." - Tito on Belfort at Affliction:DOR
What were 2nd and 3rd place?
"I see him beating Anderson Silva. I see him picking him apart. Him at a 131 years old...(trails off)." - Tito on Belfort at Affliction:DOR
Not as high profile,
but in terms of straight knock-out power, Anthony Johnson over Tommy Speer gets my vote for best of the year. That was brutal.
I wonder...
…what Tommy is thinking about while he’s down there.
But mom, I don’t wanna go to school tomorrow
by Derek Suboticki on Feb 3, 2009 7:57 PM EST up reply actions
Good choices.
The Rashad KO had me speechless. I would also put Silva’s KO of Jardine in the top three. It wasn’t a one punch KO, but just the sheer animosity of the attack with him holding Jardine down by the neck… just vicious.

I just hope people remember it as more than a one-punch knockout. In the second round, Evans clearly had Liddell’s timing down, and cut him off with punches over and over again. I remember watching live, I could tell he was taking over the fight.
left hand was coming hard too....
This looks like Fedor knocking AA out when the left hook was following but didn’t get a chance to connect as their opponent was already sleeping. I love that.
by I don't wear mma t-shirts on Feb 3, 2009 8:42 PM EST up reply actions
I like how he got his right arm straight to cushion his fall before he goes out completely. That is sheer reflexive instinct.
by Derek Suboticki on Feb 3, 2009 9:58 PM EST up reply actions
He was barely missing with some big rights early on in the second. At the time, there were alot of people saying that this was lucky, but Rashad marked up his face in the first and continued to put the heat on in the second – it was only a matter of time until Chuck got clocked. Luring Chuck to the fence was genius, and it takes a special fighter to control the range like that seeing how his reach isn’t exactly overwhelming.

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