Lost in the Shuffle: Where Does Luis Cane Fit in the UFC Light Heavyweight Picture?
The "sniper" has been a sports' metaphor used to describe an athlete that usually performs in an outstanding manner while staying under the radar. Specifically, athletes who have been labeled snipers normally come up with big plays in the clinch or put up huge numbers quietly while mainstream media and other analysts focus on the bigger stars. We've usually come accustomed to hearing this moniker in sports like soccer, hockey, or basketball due to the "shooting" abilities of players within those sports, but the moniker can also be placed on UFC light heavyweight fighter Luis Cane.
Luis Arthur Cane (10-1-0-1) made his UFC debut back at UFC 79 with a 7-0-0-1 record. The UFC was likely impressed with his undefeated record that saw almost every single one of his fights end via a technical knockout in the first round. Matching him up with James Irvin probably seemed like a sure-fire way to either give Cane some much needed attention or put Irvin on the comeback trail, but Cane ended the fight via an illegal knee that resulted in his first loss.
To bounce back from the defeat, Cane rattled off three straight wins in the Octagon. He gave us a textbook counter to Jason Lambert's deficient striking technique at UFC 85, a solid striking performance against Rameau Sokoudjou at UFC 89, and a gutsy decision win over Steve Cantwell in his latest matchup at UFC 97. In true sniper form, he's managed to quietly climb into the #8 spot on our USA Today/SB Nation Consensus Rankings, just below the top of the division. He's also managed to do this by using calculated strikes and a patient gameplan, another attribute of a true sniper in sports.
Now, it seems that Luis Cane is lost in the shuffle. The top of the pack consists of matchups between Lyoto Machida vs. Mauricio "Shogun" Rua, Forrest Griffin vs. Anderson Silva, Rashad Evans vs. Quinton "Rampage" Jackson, Keith Jardine vs. Thiago Silva and even Stephan Bonnar vs Mark Coleman. Below Cane sits a few more matchups that crush any hope of a new matchup any time soon in a rumored bout between Rich Franklin and Chuck Liddell, Dan Henderson vs. Michael Bisping, and Matt Hamill vs. Brandon Vera. This leaves Wanderlei Silva as the only truly legitimate opponent that could help Cane's exposure in defeating a man who has quite the following from his historical fights in PRIDE.
While Cane has only been off since April, it seems that all of his UFC light heavyweight division counterparts have been quickly grabbing up fights. Where and who will Luis Cane face next? Since Franklin vs. Liddell is purely rumor at this point, I'd be more inclined to believe Franklin may be the test that Cane is looking for. Not only does he provide the name recognition to boost Cane's stock, but he also provides a formidable test in the skill set department. Wanderlei is stylistically a bad matchup considering Cane has a solid chin, great striking skills, and the technical acumen to strike with straight blows to Wanderlei's looping aggression.
Other options exist in Krzysztof Soszynski and Jason Brilz. Brilz seems highly unlikely at this point, but Soszynski is an interesting idea. He has the exposure from the reality series to give Cane a slight boost if the fight was broadcast, but he's also rattled off a couple of solid wins to boost his own stock. The only problem I forsee is that the fight is probably beneath Cane at this point considering Soszynski is barely breaking the top 20. Cane may take that fight considering his hiatus right now.
If we look at some of the upcoming fights, there are some much more interesting fights for Cane if he can wait. My favorite is the potential for Brandon Vera to beat Matt Hamill and be thrust into a battle with Luis Cane. Both fighters have solid striking ability, but I'd give the edge to Cane in terms of calculated strikes and timing. Vera's dynamic kicking ability and punching would be on even ground against Cane's striking in my opinion. We haven't seen much of Cane on the floor, but his Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt probably doesn't sit too well with Vera's chances of submitting Cane on the floor.
Dan Henderson in a losing effort against Michael Bisping is another possibility, but I particularly like Keith Jardine as a matchup to move Cane up into the heap. I think he has a solid chance at defeating Jardine's unorthodox striking style. The outcomes of the matchups at the top will take some time to materialize, and if Cane wins, those matchup losers will likely be a bout for Cane by the end of the year or into early 2010.
Cane deserves a matchup that could potentially move him into the upper-echelon of the division. Hopefully, UFC 100 will provide the answer to who will be facing Luis Cane soon. I'm hoping I'm not in the minority when it comes to enjoying what Cane brings to the table in every fight in the Octagon.
The FanPosts are solely the subjective opinions of Bloody Elbow readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Bloody Elbow editors or staff.
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I think he's the guy nobody wants to fight
The winner of Vera-Hamill ought to fight Cane, with the winner of that propelled to a #1 contender’s match.
I’m glad Luiz is getting some love – I was really surprised that he took Sok’s best punishment for a full round and came into the second looking like a fresh fighter. Cantwell earned a lot of respect from me just for hanging – maybe he gets K-Sos next.
by Derek Suboticki on Jun 25, 2009 4:03 PM EDT reply actions
Ideally, Cane gets Vera/Hamill, but K-Sos isn’t a bad matchup. I think Cane would feel that’s beneath him much like Kampmann felt Grant was beneath him.
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"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
by Leland Roling on Jun 25, 2009 4:21 PM EDT up reply actions
Cane would destroy K-sos
Which is why that would be a good fight for him at the moment. Sonzcynski has no defense and moves straight forward. Bad idea against Cane`s straight punches.
Remember, this is a job, and not everyone can be champt at the same time. Cane is in no risk of getting cut (unless he`s Werdums bastard cousin), so what he needs now is some more wins in order to secure his place in the roster.
Brilz on the other hand, would be a bad fight. High risk, almost no reward.
"Marcus Davis is a plastic paddy"-Dan Hardy
by BlueberryMuffin on Jun 25, 2009 4:57 PM EDT up reply actions
I think Soszynski is a great fight in terms of exposure and getting him another solid win, but in terms of where he stands, Cane himself may feel its beneath him.
Follow me on Twitter @lelandroling
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
by Leland Roling on Jun 25, 2009 5:09 PM EDT up reply actions
But I would bet that many of the casual follower actually believes that Soszynski is the favourite in that fight… If you forget rankings and just look at risk/reward, I think it would be a great fight for him. Gettin layed and prayed by Brilz though, not so hot.
"Marcus Davis is a plastic paddy"-Dan Hardy
by BlueberryMuffin on Jun 25, 2009 5:19 PM EDT up reply actions
I’m not sure I agree. Cane has been featured as well, in much bigger fights. I think overall, it’s a solid matchup though. Cane could see it as a risk/reward fight if he can finish K-Sos quickly.
Follow me on Twitter @lelandroling
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
by Leland Roling on Jun 26, 2009 9:20 AM EDT up reply actions
He’ll emerge eventually, kind of the same way that Machida did.
Keep firing Assholes!
Out out, you demons of stupidity!
One big difference though… Cane takes a helluva lot of punishment. Both Sokodjou and Cantwell tagged him repeatedly. You may get away with that kind of behaviour at LW, but at LHW? Not good in the long run.
"Marcus Davis is a plastic paddy"-Dan Hardy
by BlueberryMuffin on Jun 25, 2009 5:00 PM EDT up reply actions
Well, Sokoudjou threw a whole lot, but honestly didn’t hurt him much cause Cane was covering up pretty well.
"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
by Rundownloser on Jun 25, 2009 5:02 PM EDT up reply actions
Hmm. Are you sure about that? I seem to remember Sokodjou landing some power-punches flush on his chin. Before soko gassed that is..
"Marcus Davis is a plastic paddy"-Dan Hardy
by BlueberryMuffin on Jun 25, 2009 5:21 PM EDT up reply actions
And Cantwell taggwd him. A lot.
"Marcus Davis is a plastic paddy"-Dan Hardy
by BlueberryMuffin on Jun 25, 2009 5:21 PM EDT up reply actions
I can’t believe that fight went the way it did. Anyone who watched the first couple of minutes only would swear that Cantwell was going to get unplugged no later than the early 2nd round. Cane damn near gave that one away, if you ask me. He should have absolutely owned Cantwell.
"I'm AJB and I endorse this nut-puncher."
Yeah I agree, I tink he was kind of suprised that Cantwell managed to hit him in the second round. I was a bit disappointed in that fight, I think Cane gassed a little, but he was the agressor for most of the fight.
The guy has a great chin though, he just kept comin forward at Sokodjou and took all his power shots
Cantwell impressed me – he’s super duper young, only going to get better.
by Derek Suboticki on Jun 25, 2009 6:09 PM EDT up reply actions
My Nuggets need nothing but to get a year older and a year wiser.
by Derek Suboticki on Jun 25, 2009 6:10 PM EDT up reply actions
No offense
But you’ve got 5 too many headcases. You need 3 fewer than that.
by begottenson on Jun 26, 2009 12:46 PM EDT up reply actions
I’m definitely on the Cane Train as well- and I agree that Jardine is looking like the best matchup for him right now for lots of reasons: styles, rankings, contendership status, etc.
I think the real question is how did he not make it into 2009 Unleashed?
"The wise have something to say, the foolish have to say something."
Enter........
Tito Ortiz. Great name recognition, good match up for Cane, and Dana gets to see Tito get his ass beat. Enough said.
by SouthAlaBamaRampage on Jun 26, 2009 4:05 AM EDT reply actions
Dana already got to see Tito get his ass beat; I don’t think he’d jump at the chance to give Tito a bag of money just to see it again… and risk a loss for a rising star.
"The wise have something to say, the foolish have to say something."
by PistonHyundai on Jun 26, 2009 7:24 AM EDT up reply actions
I’m not sure I would bet on Cain in that fight. He has yet to fight a guy who is bound and determined to take him down and keep him there. Tito has only lost to the elite of the elite, and I am not sure Cain is there yet.
I think it is highly possible that Tito would take him down and feed him elbows for 15 minutes.
Maybe in years past, but I don’t think this version of Tito would be able to take him down and punish him. Cane would be able to hit him, hit him hard, and knock him out.
Just the same, it’s a fight that doesn’t make much sense for the UFC, as they have a staced LHW division and don’t need to throw money at Tito.
Although it would be nice to see Jenna as an Octagon girl…
I agree that the fight makes no sense for the UFC. I just think the rumors of Tito’s decline are greatly exaggerated.
His only losses were to the #1 LHW at the time (Chuck) and the current #1 LHW (Machida) and even with a balky back, he managed to knock off one current top five LHW (Griffin) and was well on his way to knocking off another (Evans) until a point deduction cost him the win. Hell, he even came close to beating Machida with that triangle at the end of the fight.
IMO, a healthy Tito is still a handful for anyone.
by Steve4192 on Jun 26, 2009 12:59 PM EDT up reply actions 1 recs
Although it would be nice to see Jenna as an Octagon girl…
No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
Keep firing Assholes!
Out out, you demons of stupidity!
by Ubernoober on Jun 26, 2009 2:14 PM EDT up reply actions 2 recs
Methinks Ryjo hasn’t seen Miss Jameson in over a decade.
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by Richard Wade on Jun 26, 2009 4:36 PM EDT up reply actions
I know this is kind of a “what if” scenario, but I thought that Cane should have faced Shogun around UFC 102 or 103. It would have been a good fight against a well known guy for Cane and would have answered some questions about Shogun.
As for who he should actually face, how about Jon Jones? He’s fighting at UFC 100, so a fight in October or November isn’t out of the question. Jones also has name recognition because of the Bonnar fight.
by Nogoodnameideas on Jun 27, 2009 2:15 AM EDT reply actions
I honestly wish
that the UFC had held off on giving Shogun the title shot, and had matched him up w/ Cane. Win/ Win for the UFC- If Shogun wins, then there’s a serious contender for the belt, and within months, they can set up Rua/ Machida (while Evans/ Page plays out); if Cane wins, then it’s probably true that Shogun isn’t ready for a title shot after all, and they get a credible challenger in Luis.
But yeah, Banha is kind of getting the short end of the stick in this whole situation.
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