2016 may have been a shitty year for the world at large, but for MMA it's been pretty great. The year was filled with spectacular knockouts, shocking submissions, suplexes, and blood spilled on the canvas for our amusement New stars emerged for Bellator, and 2017 looks to be their biggest yet. But with last nights show in Dublin being their last for the year, we can take a look back and pick out the moments, the fighters, and the fights that stood out as the best of 2016.
Submission of the year:
Joe "Baby Juggernaut" Taimanglo's guillotine choke vs Darrion Caldwell
(Bellator 159)
It came out of nowhere and derailed Caldwell's rise in the bantamweight division. 1 fight previous, Darrion had completely decimated former 2 division champion Joe Warren. Rounds 1 and 2 vs Taimanglo looked to be more of the same. Jiu jitsu is an amazing martial art, in that it can save you from certain defeat if your opponent makes even the slightest mistake. Caldwell did, and Joe shocked the MMA community.
Knockout of the year:
Michael Venom Page's knee from hell vs Evangelista "Cyborg" Santos
(Bellator 158)
It almost looked like he had been figured out. Cyborg weathered the early storm in Round 1, gotten him to the ground, and although he didn't attack with much, he did manage to keep Venom grounded (something no fighter who stepped in the cage with him could claim). Round 2 didn't go as well. After absorbing a hard kick to the liver, Cyborg, visibly hurt, lunged forward attempting to respond with some offense of his own. He was hit with one of the best flying knees I've ever seen (certainly the most devastating, as Cyborg's X-ray after the fact will attest to). Vicious.
Fight of the year:
Benson Henerson vs Michael Chandler
(Bellator 165)
I remember thinking this was a risky fight for Bellator, because an early finish would set critics off either way. If Chandler finished Benson early, then it just meant 'Benson was on the decline'. If Benson finished Chandler, then Bellator just 'wasn't good enough'. So for it to be a success, it needed to be a war. They must have sent an email, because Chandler and Benson delivered. Definately a fight that I hope has a sequel sometime in the next few years.
Fighter of the year:
Douglas 'Phenom' Lima
After spoiling Benson Henderson's Bellator debut 1 fight after taking the title from Douglas Lima, Andrey Koreshkov looked to be well on his way to a dominant run in Bellator's best division. Lima shattered that image. He began his year with a dominant win over Paul Daley on Daley's home turf, and in doing so Lima got the chance to win back the title he lost last year and didn't disappoint. He battered Koreshkov's legs with the nastiest leg kicks from anyone in the WW division and forced the champion into desperation. In doing so, he found his moment to strike and unloaded a bomb on Koreshkov's chin. Now he's set to take on Rory MacDonald next year in unquestionably the biggest fight of his career.
Story of the year:
Free agency
Bellator used to be something akin to the island of misfit toys- a place where fighters past their prime or not yet big enough to catch the UFC's eyes could try to fight and change their fortune or make a name for themselves. But the times, they are a changing Benson signing was a big deal- a fighter on a win streak chosing Bellator over the UFC. But maybe a one time thing, like people thought Phil Davis signing was, right? Wrong. It hasn't stopped yet, and with Ryan Bader and Lorenz Larkin on the market now and fighters like Fabricio Werdum and Joe Duffy deciding to fight out their contracts instead of taking whatever the UFC offers, it doesn't appear to be stopping anytime in the near future. Fighters now have a legit option to choose outside of the UFC, and MMA as a sport will be better for it.
Submission of the year:
Joe "Baby Juggernaut" Taimanglo's guillotine choke vs Darrion Caldwell
(Bellator 159)
It came out of nowhere and derailed Caldwell's rise in the bantamweight division. 1 fight previous, Darrion had completely decimated former 2 division champion Joe Warren. Rounds 1 and 2 vs Taimanglo looked to be more of the same. Jiu jitsu is an amazing martial art, in that it can save you from certain defeat if your opponent makes even the slightest mistake. Caldwell did, and Joe shocked the MMA community.
Knockout of the year:
Michael Venom Page's knee from hell vs Evangelista "Cyborg" Santos
(Bellator 158)
It almost looked like he had been figured out. Cyborg weathered the early storm in Round 1, gotten him to the ground, and although he didn't attack with much, he did manage to keep Venom grounded (something no fighter who stepped in the cage with him could claim). Round 2 didn't go as well. After absorbing a hard kick to the liver, Cyborg, visibly hurt, lunged forward attempting to respond with some offense of his own. He was hit with one of the best flying knees I've ever seen (certainly the most devastating, as Cyborg's X-ray after the fact will attest to). Vicious.
Fight of the year:
Benson Henerson vs Michael Chandler
(Bellator 165)
I remember thinking this was a risky fight for Bellator, because an early finish would set critics off either way. If Chandler finished Benson early, then it just meant 'Benson was on the decline'. If Benson finished Chandler, then Bellator just 'wasn't good enough'. So for it to be a success, it needed to be a war. They must have sent an email, because Chandler and Benson delivered. Definately a fight that I hope has a sequel sometime in the next few years.
Fighter of the year:
Douglas 'Phenom' Lima
After spoiling Benson Henderson's Bellator debut 1 fight after taking the title from Douglas Lima, Andrey Koreshkov looked to be well on his way to a dominant run in Bellator's best division. Lima shattered that image. He began his year with a dominant win over Paul Daley on Daley's home turf, and in doing so Lima got the chance to win back the title he lost last year and didn't disappoint. He battered Koreshkov's legs with the nastiest leg kicks from anyone in the WW division and forced the champion into desperation. In doing so, he found his moment to strike and unloaded a bomb on Koreshkov's chin. Now he's set to take on Rory MacDonald next year in unquestionably the biggest fight of his career.
Story of the year:
Free agency
Bellator used to be something akin to the island of misfit toys- a place where fighters past their prime or not yet big enough to catch the UFC's eyes could try to fight and change their fortune or make a name for themselves. But the times, they are a changing Benson signing was a big deal- a fighter on a win streak chosing Bellator over the UFC. But maybe a one time thing, like people thought Phil Davis signing was, right? Wrong. It hasn't stopped yet, and with Ryan Bader and Lorenz Larkin on the market now and fighters like Fabricio Werdum and Joe Duffy deciding to fight out their contracts instead of taking whatever the UFC offers, it doesn't appear to be stopping anytime in the near future. Fighters now have a legit option to choose outside of the UFC, and MMA as a sport will be better for it.
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