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  • January 18, 2019
    导出博客文章SEATTLE -- Little-known middleweight Trevor (Hot Sauce) Smith lost but left
    Seattle with a US$50,000 bonus cheque in his pocket and praise from UFC
    president Dana White. "I told Smith I didnt even know your name yesterday,"
    White told reporters after Smith and Ed (Short Fuse) Herman won fight of the
    night honours Saturday with a wild, bone-rattling 15 minutes of action. "I know
    your name today." In contrast, Canadian welterweight contender Rory (Ares)
    MacDonald won comfortably but drew a tongue-lashing from his boss and boos from
    the KeyArena crowd of 7,816 after a methodical co-main event victory over Jake
    (The Juggernaut) Ellenberger. Such is life in the UFC, where winning often isnt
    enough. The organization is set up to reward performance, with most fight
    contracts carrying an automatic matching win bonus. So an undercard fighter on a
    basic purse of $8,000 can double his pay with a victory. Each card carries
    $50,000 bonuses for fight of the night (for the winner and loser) and for
    submission and knockout of the night. The UFC is coy about the rest of its bonus
    structure but is known for cutting discretionary cheques for outstanding
    performances. "You want more money? Go get it," said White, who has been under
    fire in recent months over fighter pay. "Go get it. Believe me, guys who deserve
    more money, we pay them. We pay the guys who make a difference." Smith (10-4)
    and Herman (21-7 with one no contest) are not likely to win any titles but they
    put on a show, connecting on a combined 160 significant strikes in three rounds,
    according to FightMetric. Both fighters were repeatedly wobbled throughout the
    free-swinging fight, which drew oohs and aahs from the crowd. Hermans post-fight
    celebration was interrupted by a precautionary trip to hospital where he was
    given a clean bill of health -- at least as clean as it can be after such a
    beating. In a fight where defence seemed optional, Smith was good on 87-of-108
    significant strike attempts while Herman connected on 73 of 129. In contrast,
    MacDonald connected on just 46-of-118 significant strike attempts. Ellenbergers
    figures were even worse, 19 of 97. Still Ellenberger looked like he had been in
    a fight, his face marked with bumps and bruises. In the UFC, which is driven by
    pay-per-view buys and TV ratings, winning is not the only gauge of success.
    There has to be entertainment as well. MacDonald, ranked second among
    170-pounders, clearly did not do himself any favours with his boss. "That fight
    sucked so bad," said White, who said his Twitter "was insane tonight with people
    blowing up" over the bout. "If people are going to stay home Saturday,
    especially if theyre going to spend money (on a pay-per-view), you better
    fight," he said. "I dont think he moved down the (rankings) ladder but do you
    think anybodys screaming to see him in a fight again? ... We live in a business
    unfortunately where youre as good as your last fight," he added. Lose with
    panache in the UFC and you may still have some job security. Boring wins can get
    you a pink slip, as welterweight Jon Fitch learned. Fitch fought Georges
    St-Pierre for the welterweight title in 2008 and went 14-3-1 in the UFC but was
    cut after a 1-2-1 run. Whites rationale was that Fitch was expensive and on the
    downside of his career. It didnt help that 13 of his UFC fights went to a
    decision. One can argue MacDonalds win over Ellenberger in a key welterweight
    contender showdown was a triumph of strategy if not entertainment. Ellenberger
    (29-7) could not find a way to close the distance and the taller MacDonald
    (15-1) punched away from the outside. It was effective if not enthralling. Still
    the bout may go down as one of the worst received UFC co-main events, judging
    from the fan response throughout. The 30-27, 29-28, 30-27 decision was greeted
    by even more boos. Firas Zahabi, who trains MacDonald, called it "a great
    fight." And while respectful of Ellenbergers talents, he said it was up to the
    American to escalate his attack when he was down two rounds. "It would be
    foolish to be leading and then take a risk," he said. "If you lose a fight like
    that, people will tell us were dummies." The strategy was to use the jab and
    have Ellenberger, a powerful counter-puncher, face the risk/reward of closing
    the gap. If he slipped a punch, MacDonald looked to elbow him -- something that
    worked in the first round and made Ellenberger more cautious as a result,
    according to Zahabi. Straight kicks were another tool in the MacDonald arsenal,
    to discourage the shorter Ellenberger from slipping underneath. "You cant slip a
    push kick," Zahabi said. While the renowned trainer acknowledges that
    entertainment is part of the puzzle, he pointed to former light-heavyweight
    champion Lyoto Machida and boxing star Floyd Mayweather as examples of fighters
    who dont always manage to put on a show. "Youve got to take the good with the
    bad," Zahabi said. "Some days were going to be entertaining, some days were
    going to be a little less. Believe me, we always want to be entertaining. But
    Jake Ellenberger is a very dangerous guy and he hits incredibly hard. "And hes
    known to break jaws and faces, literally. So I wanted Rory to be careful and not
    get hit hard." White saw it differently. "I dont think he did anything," White
    said. "He threw a few jabs and some front kicks. Thats all he did." White also
    brought up Machida, ranking MacDonald-Ellenberger alongside the UFC 157
    snoozefest between Dan Henderson and Machida, "another fight in the co-main
    event slot that overshadowed the main event and stunk the place out." UFC
    co-owner Lorenzo Fertitta was also down on the Seattle co-main event. "Lorenzo
    texted me and said This is terrible. And I texted him back and said Ellenbergers
    freezing." "And when he froze, Rory did nothing," he added. Adding to Whites
    displeasure was that Ellenberger, an accomplished fighter who had won eight of
    his last nine bouts, had failed to deliver after talking trash in the buildup to
    the fight. "Hard to describe the emotions of adversity," Ellenberger tweeted
    when the dust had settled. "Never an easy road to the top. Just disappointed in
    my performance. Didnt perform close to how I can. No excuses." For his part, a
    stony-faced MacDonald said: "I think I did exactly what I was supposed to do. I
    kept up my end." It doesnt help that MacDonald has a hard time getting his story
    across. A native of Kelowna, B.C., who fights out of Montreal, the 24-year-old
    MacDonald is a man on a fighting mission. He may be a personable type away from
    the cameras but he has the personality of a boulder at the podium. It has taken
    him time to get used to the media, he has acknowledged, and he clearly has a
    ways to go. He was received with cheers and boos at the weigh-in Friday. But
    there were far fewer cheers Saturday. Asked why MacDonald should change a
    winning strategy, White replied: "because we live in a world where people want
    to see guys who actually put on exciting fights." So will that performance
    impact the kind of fighters MacDonald is matched against? "No. Rorys one of the
    best in the world," said White. "He didnt look it tonight but the fact of the
    matter is he is. ... This will be a learning experience for him, hopefully.
    "Because you dont want to put on a bunch of performances like that. Its not good
    for anybody. Its not good for him, its not good for us, its not good for the
    sport. Its not good for Fox (TV). Its definitely not good for pay-per-view."
    St-Pierre, who also works under Zahabi in the same Montreal gym as MacDonald,
    has also been criticized for playing it safe in his fights. But he remains a
    popular champion so he can do what he wants. Plus he keeps winning. GSP was
    likely nodding in appreciation from his viewing position Saturday. St-Pierre --
    who takes on No. 1 contender Johny Hendricks in November -- and MacDonald have
    said they wont fight each other but the day of reckoning is approaching. Carlos
    (Natural Born Killer) Condit and Martin (The Hitman) Kampmann meet next month in
    another welterweight fight with title contender implications. Ever the promoter,
    White dismisses talk that GSP and MacDonald wont fight. But he warned that
    performances like Saturdays wont accelerate such a championship showdown. "If
    youre Rory and youre that good and that talented, then you impose your will on
    him (Ellenberger) and you show the rest of the world Not only do I belong in the
    top five but I should be fighting Georges St-Pierre. "He should have people
    screaming for him to fight Georges St-Pierre. Thats how it all works."
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    . The catch: It needs a lot of money, and it needs it fast. OTTAWA,
    Ontario -- The Ottawa Senators found another way to win a close game -- at the
    Carolina Hurricanes expense.Kyle Turris scored his team-leading 10th goal to
    help Ottawa beat Carolina 2-1 on Saturday night.Turris broke a tie with 3:32
    left, beating goalie Cam Ward high to the stick side. The Hurricanes challenged
    the goal, asserting that it was offside, but it stood after a review.Dion
    Phaneuf also scored, and Craig Anderson made 32 saves. The Senators have won
    three straight to improve to 13-7-1. They are 9-1-1 in one-goal games.I think we
    believe in the way that we play, Phaneuf said. When we play that way we dont
    give up a lot and when you dont give up a lot youre going to be in a lot of
    tight games. We found a way to stick around, found a way to come back and found
    a way to play tight games and the bottom line is we continue to stick with our
    game and again (Saturday) we come through with winning it late and theyre big
    points. It might be early, but theyre big points.Sebastian Aho scored for
    Carolina, and Ward stopped 22 shots.The effort was good, Carolina coach Bill
    Peters said. You cant fault the effort. Its not frustrating. Its reality. They
    won 2-1 so we have to find a way to score. You have to get to three in this
    league, typically. Three is the number. We didnt do that in either of our last
    two ggames.dddddddddddd We have to find a way to score more.Phaneuf tied it at 1
    at 6:15 of the second with his second goal of the season. Ryan Dzingel did some
    great work, was patient and found Phaneuf who stepped into the slot and buried
    it past Ward.For the 11th straight game Ottawa gave up the first goal. Carolina
    opened the scoring at 11:24 of the first. Aho put a shot on goal, Anderson made
    the stop and the rebound went in off Ottawas Tom Pyatt.I dont know how many
    games it is that weve given up the first goal and it makes absolutely no
    difference to us, Senators coach Guy Boucher said. We expect tight games, were
    going to be good in tight games and I know it was an issue last year, but I
    wasnt here, but I know as a team there were things to change and that was one of
    them.Its a mental approach and players have really grown. Theres no panic on the
    bench, theres no panic when the other team scores first, no panic if we take a
    penalty or we miss some chances.Game notes Carolina was 1-2 on its three-game
    trip. ... Erik Karlsson played his 500th NHL game, all with the Senators.UP
    NEXT:Hurricanes: Return home to face Florida on Sunday night.Senators: At New
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