One Man’s View: Red Light for Cruz-Faber 3
Jason Probst Jul 4, 2011
Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber provided a jumpstart to the UFC’s
135-pound class. | AP Photo/Eric Jamison
When the Ultimate Fighting Championship announced late last year that it was absorbing the WEC and its two additional weight classes, it took on a few challenges in the process.
First, it had the task of creating viable attractions out of small fighters -- never an easy undertaking. Second, it had to make initial matchups in the 135- and 145-pound divisions and showcase those matchups as test cases to justify the expansion of existing weight classes from five to seven.
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The fight also had the effect of allowing Cruz to defend his belt while establishing Faber as a likely future challenger. In a match that was competitive and intensely contested, Faber could have readily taken the title from Cruz’s capable hands with a couple swings of momentum. That was a positive development because the UFC’s 135-pound roster is already thin and will take a significant hit when the 125-pound division arrives, poaching two top bantamweights: Joseph Benavidez and Demetrious Johnson.
Branding and marketing appeal do not happen overnight, and building
these around a fighter is a long-term process that occurs over
multiple appearances. A fighter’s body of work gives the public a
fair expectation of what to expect from him and therefore heavily
influences where he will be placed on a card. With Cruz’s style in
recent bouts trending toward one-sided decisions in which opponents
barely lay a hand on him, the Faber challenge showed a far more
exciting side to “The Dominator,” as he was pushed down the stretch
and ultimately responded with a strong finishing round.
The guess here is that Cruz-Faber 3 happens but with a defense for Cruz in between, likely against Brian Bowles, who decisioned Takeya Mizugaki on the UFC 132 undercard. Cruz’s timing and technical acumen are top-notch, and he was as exciting as he has looked in a long time, mainly because Faber was the only guy with the goods to present the threat of danger.
Brian
Bowles File Photo
According to Probst, Bowles should
get the next crack at the champion.
Meanwhile, pit Faber against fellow former WEC star Miguel Torres. That is an exciting fight, especially since Torres could be forced to do battle with Faber on the ground, and his submission game and tenacity would make it a must-watch event. It also serves as the kind of style matchup in which the winner is going to be exciting, thereby developing a natural challenger for Cruz. It is also the kind of style matchup I think Faber wins nine times out of 10, but, hey, you could have said that about Tito Ortiz-Ryan Bader, right? That’s why they fight.
In six months, rematch the winners of Cruz-Bowles and Faber-Torres. No matter how the permutations shake it, it’s champion against a former champion.
If you get Cruz-Faber 3, you can also make Bowles-Torres 2 -- a rematch of their first fight, which saw Bowles knock out Torres and take his crown.
In the process, the UFC will have time to bring along the younger bantamweights and get them some key exposure, building their profiles in the process. Renan “Barao” do Nascimento Mota Pegado (26-1, 1 NC) is wildly talented and 3-0 in the WEC and UFC. Brad Pickett and Michael MacDonald are exciting and aggressive. There are also mid-level contenders like Scott Jorgenson and Eddie Wineland, who faces Benavidez on Aug. 14. The bantamweight division remains somewhat top-heavy, with two new UFC stars in Cruz and Faber. A significant drop off exists after them in terms of name recognition and marketability, but given some time to stir the pot and let the goods simmer, it will fill out and develop a deep roster of talent. None of these cogitations include future signees and hot prospects not currently with the organization.
What the bantamweight division sorely needed was a jumpstart, and interesting future matchups people would want to see. Cruz-Faber surely supplied these. Moving forward with proper care and handling, the UFC bantamweights could earn some long-deserved limelight for the little guys.
Jason Probst can be reached at Jason@jasonprobst.com or twitter.com/jasonprobst.
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