|
LAS VEGAS, July 5 In the days leading up to the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship bout between Forrest Griffin and Quinton Rampage Jackson,
fans
and pundits almost unanimously agreed that, on paper, the champion,
Jackson, should win. Yet those comments were always followed by the
word
and some way of describing how you could never count Griffin
out.
Tonight, at the sold out Mandalay Bay Events Center,
Griffin took all the ‘buts’ out of the equation, overturning the odds
and pounding out a thrilling unanimous five round decision win over
Jackson to win the 205-pound world championship and etch his name in
the history books.
“This is the greatest night of my life,” said
Griffin, the first winner of The Ultimate Fighter reality show and now
the second TUF winner to earn a world title, following former
welterweight boss Matt Serra. “I want to thank Quinton Jackson. It was
close and I think we’re gonna have to do it again.”
“He whupped my ass,” said a gracious Jackson. “Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. He deserves it.”
Scores were 48-46 twice and 49-46 for Griffin who engaged in the frontrunner for 2008 Fight of The Year with Jackson.
And this one will be tough to top.
Griffin
took the fight to the champion immediately, working behind his jab and
some quick kicks to the head and legs. The challenger’s handspeed was
impressive early, catching Jackson off guard. When the two would
exchange at close range though, Jackson was in his element and he was
able to land with more consistency, and with under three minutes left
he was able to jar Griffin briefly with a left hook. The challenger
recovered quickly and flurried back, but a right uppercut by Jackson
with a little over a minute left dropped Griffin. Jackson pounced on
his foe, but Griffin got his wits back and fought his way back up,
where he continued to move forward and engage until the bell rang.
Continuing to be the aggressor, Griffin opened the second with more leg kicks, this time buckling Jackson’s left leg.
“He jacked my leg up,” said Jackson. “I’m not that good at acting. He knew he hurt me.”
As
the champion staggered backward, Griffin moved in, clinching and
landing knees at close range before trying to sink in a guillotine.
Jackson escaped that trouble but wound up in more as the bout
subsequently moved to the mat, with Griffin working for submissions and
grounding and pounding Jackson steadily for the remainder of the round.
“You’ve got to make him fight you,” trainer Juanito Ibarra told
Jackson between rounds two and three as the champion’s left knee was
iced, and ‘Rampage’ showed his heart as he entered the fray again for
round three. Griffin, not getting overly aggressive, pecked away from
long range as Jackson concentrated on avoiding more leg kicks and on
catching the challenger with haymakers as he came into range. As the
round entered its final two minutes, Jackson appeared to
be
back in business as he scored with body shots and hard counters to the
head when Griffin tried to open up. By the end of the round Griffin was
landing his flurries though, and the crowd roared as the bell sounded.
As
the fight entered the championship rounds, Jackson’s urgency was
evident as he stalked Griffin and landed with heavy shots to the head.
“Every punch he threw hurt,” said Griffin.
Griffin
responded with a takedown, with Jackson ending up in his challenger’s
guard. With 3:40 left, Griffin, bow bleeding from over his right eye,
locked in a triangle choke, and the response from Jackson was what you
would expect – a slam that broke the hold and allowed Jackson to resume
his ground and pound attack. The two fighters rose with two minutes
remaining, and Jackson again jarred Griffin with shots to the side of
the head. Griffin didn’t shrink under the attack, and he fired back
with kicks and his own haymakers. Predictably, the round ended with a
toe-to-toe exchange.
Griffin opened the final round with more
leg kicks, hoping to repeat his second round success and 90 seconds in,
he added pinpoint strikes to the head. That seemed to wake Jackson back
up as he landed flush shots to the head and body, but Griffin took
everything in stride and kept moving forward, jarring the champion with
his own return fire. The final minute saw the packed house rise in
appreciation for the effort of both men, and neither stopped swinging
until the final bell ended, putting an exclamation point on an
unforgettable night.
With the win, Griffin improves to 16-4; Jackson falls to 28-7.
(ufc.com)
|