Opinion: Guillard the Lightweight Antidote
Jason Probst Jul 4, 2011
Melvin Guillard is a changed man. | Photo: Sherdog.com
Once pegged as a frontrunner that fell apart when things got tough, Melvin Guillard is in a better place these days -- and fighting like a man reborn.
The gifted lightweight’s punishing first-round knockout of Shane Roller at UFC 132 on Saturday in Las Vegas was equal parts impressive and eye-popping. Technical expertise in MMA is often relegated to things the average fan finds boring, be it suffocating wrestling or ground work, but Guillard makes high-level skill one hell of a selling point.
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With the top tier of the division now comprised of champion Frankie Edgar and top contender Gray Maynard, along with stifling wrestlers like Jim Miller, Benson Henderson and Clay Guida, it will be interesting to see how the UFC matches its best lightweights. We saw in Guida-Pettis at “The Ultimate Fighter 13” Finale that a bout between top 155ers can produce a largely unsatisfying result, at least promotionally, as Guida took a decision without winning in a dominant fashion. That’s the promotional problem with good wrestlers; they can win without giving you much to build on in terms of their next fight. Miller and Henderson tend to be more exciting than Guida, but none of them can be faulted for doing what works to win fights.
However, any variation of matchups in the Pettis-Olivera-Barboza-Njokuani-Guillard group would likely provide solid, if not spectacular, entertainment. Barboza-Njokuani at UFC 128 was excellent fare, if you needed existing evidence. A “striker’s bracket” among the UFC lightweights might provide a nice counter-balance to the expectable procession of bouts like Guida-Pettis. Hey, I’m all for the better guy getting the decision, but the sport is also about entertainment and conclusive endings.
Jason Probst can be reached at Jason@jasonprobst.com or twitter.com/jasonprobst.
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