Rampage Dominates Matt Hamill in UFC 130 Main Event

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UFC 130 had already lost a lot before the show kicked off this evening. The original main event, UFC Lightweight Champion Frankie Edgar vs. Gray Maynard, was cancelled due to injuries to both fighters. This fight, which was originally the third fight from the top of the card, was promoted to the top based solely on the weight that Quinton “Rampage” Jackson’s name carries. Sadly his opponent, Matt Hamill, a veteran of “The Ultimate Fighter,” didn’t have the same notoriety. As we also found out this evening, he didn’t have the skills to hang with Rampage either.

In the weeks leading up to this bout, the fight was billed as an opportunity for Hamill to prove that he was capable of wearing down and defeating the top competition in UFC. Before tonight’s encounter with Jackson, Hamill had converted on 72% of his takedown attempts in his UFC fights. That would be impressive if he had only a handful of fights, certainly, but Hamill has had a total of 10 bouts in the “upper echelon,” including a match with the current UFC Light Heavyweight champion Jon Jones.

Jackson has grown substantially in his time in not only the Octagon, but over his career as a whole. No longer is he the fighter that only head hunts for a knockout or TKO. Jackson has learned to do something that all champions need to be successful against the new generation of mixed martial artists, He’s learned to create a gameplan with his team coming into a contest and has stuck to what works for him. Tonight, by connecting with 60 power strikes, Jackson was able to keep Hamill outside the range that he needed to make the impact he needed with his wrestling. Hamill was unable to connect on a single takedown during the main event. He wasn’t 0-4 or 0-5. Matt Hamill, who has silver and gold medals in international wrestling competition, was unable to land any of his sixteen takedown attempts. Hamill was frustrated and confused and his inexperience against top-flight competition was evident.

With his last two wins coming over Tito Ortiz and Keith Jardine via decision, Hamill was given this chance to show how much he’s evolved since his debut in March of 2007. Instead, this bout was about how feared a striker Rampage is by the fighters emerging with the Light Heavyweight division. With career knockouts against Ricardo Arona, Chuck Liddell and Wanderlei Silva, Rampage has the power to win any fight. His counter striking ability is among the top 3 in his division, if not world class. Tonight, Hamill took 60 total power shots and was able to withstand them, but took few chances that would have exposed him to the kind of danger you need for a stoppage.

With an exciting finish tonight, Rampage could have earned himself a title shot at Jones. Instead, the first title defense for “Bones” could very well be against Lyoto Machida, who disposed of Randy Couture in exciting fashion just one month ago. Would Rampage have a better shot against the young champion? We might not ever know now, but Strikeforce Light Heavyweight champion, and PRIDE and UFC veteran Dan Henderson, has stated recently that he would rather fight Jones now than in the years to come. Whichever way Joe Silva and the UFC decide to go now, you can’t fault Rampage. He’s shown growth and maturity as a fighter. He doesn’t just bang anymore. He’s evolved and shown that the highlight knockout isn’t his primary purpose. Rampage has learned to win pretty and win ugly. But he’s learned to win at any cost. Hopefully UFC will give him the shot he deserves.

An Inside Pulse "original", SMS is one of the founding members of Inside Pulse and serves as the Chief Marketing Officer on the Executive Board. Smith is a fan of mixed martial arts and runs two sections of IP as Editor in Chief, RadioExile.com and InsideFights.com. Having covered music festivals around the world as well as conducting interviews with top-class professional wrestlers and musicians, he switched gears from music coverage at Radio Exile to MMA after the first The Ultimate Fighter Finale. He resides with his wife in New York City.