The UFC 164 main event on 8/31 in Milwaukee is now Benson Henderson vs.
Anthony Pettis for the lightweight title in a rematch of one of the best
fights of the past five years. Pettis, who is from Milwaukee, replaces
T.J. Grant, who suffered a concussion training BJJ one month back, had
stopped training, and when he didn’t feel his brain was ready to start
back this week, which would give him six weeks of training before the
title fight, he pulled out. A lot of guys would have still fought.
Grant said he himself would have fought the fight on a knee injury, but
not on a brain injury. Guys like him who get title shots that fall
apart are never guaranteed getting another one when they recover,
particularly with guys like Gilbert Melendez and Josh Thomson in the
division. Pettis hit Henderson with the “Showtime kick,” running up the
cage, springing off and nailing a back pedaling Henderson with a kick
to the side of the head, which knocked Henderson down. The fight was
even going into the fifth round, and while Pettis probably would have
won the round either way, the kick clinched it and gave Pettis the WEC
lightweight title. It was Henderson’s only loss in his last 18 fights.
Well, at least only loss on his record, because he was very lucky to
get decisions in fights with Frankie Edgar (the second one where I had
Edgar), Gilbert Melendez (I had Melendez) and the first Donald Cerrone
fight. Both have improved significantly since that fight, on December
16, 2010, in the final WEC show, held in Glendale, AZ, where Henderson
lives. Now Henderson has a chance to avenge the defeat in Pettis’ home
town. This was one of those occasions where a main event falling out
leads to a stronger fight, at least for most of North America. Grant as
challenger was clearly stronger in Canada, although I don’t know that
either fight was going to do significantly different business on PPV.
In theory, Pettis should sell tickets in Milwaukee going for the title
in his home town. I’d think Pettis would be a stronger contender on PPV
than Grant because he’s been a star longer and a lot of people know
about the first fight. I think it’s just a little over a baseline
fight, but we’ll see if two straight title fights on FOX have helped
Henderson as a PPV draw. His lone PPV defense against Franke Edgar did
not do well.
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