Sadollah (1-0) has not appeared since his submission victory against CB Dollaway at “The Ultimate Fighter 7” Finale in June. The 28-year-old surprised almost everyone with his success on the show, since he had no previous professional mixed martial arts experience. He defeated Steve Byrnes, International Fight League veteran Gerald Harris and Dollaway en route to the final. Sadollah has since pulled out of fights at UFC 91 and UFC Fight Night 17 with injuries.
A four-time All-American wrestler and two-time national champion at Oklahoma State University, Hendricks (5-0) was part of the welterweight, middleweight and light heavyweight exodus from World Extreme Cagefighting. He last competed at WEC 39 in March, when he defeated Alex Serdyukov by unanimous decision. None of Hendricks’ previous four bouts went the distance.
Middleweights will also be in the limelight at UFC 101.
Former middleweight King of Pancrase Ricardo Almeida, although he has hinted at a possible move to welterweight, will remain at 185 pounds to lock horns with Kendall Grove in a pivotal bout for both men.
A decorated Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt under Renzo Gracie, Almeida (10-3) has produced mixed results since he returned to the UFC in February 2008. Wins over Rob Yundt and former International Fight League champion Matt Horwich were largely overshadowed by a dreary split decision loss to Patrick Cote at UFC 86. The 33-year-old Almeida holds victories against top middleweight contender Nate Marquardt, 2006 Pride welterweight grand prix winner Kazuo Misaki and Japanese veteran Ryo Chonan.
Grove (10-5, 1 NC), whose stock seems to be in constant flux, followed consecutive knockout losses to Cote and Jorge Rivera with back-to-back wins against the late Evan Tanner and Jason Day. He finished Day with punches and elbows in a cool 92 seconds at UFC 96 two months ago. A 6-foot-6 Hawaiian with well-rounded skills, the 26-year-old Grove burst on the scene in 2006 when he won the middleweight competition on season three of “The Ultimate Fighter” reality series.
Meanwhile, Josh Neer and Kurt Pellegrino will collide in a lightweight showdown at UFC 101.
A Pat Miletich protégé, Neer (25-7-1) has posted four wins in five fights, losing only to “The Ultimate Fighter 5” winner Nate Diaz in that stretch. The iron-chinned 26-year-old has not competed since he submitted Mac Danzig with a second-round triangle choke at UFC Fight Night 17 in February. Neer -- who holds victories against Din Thomas, Joe Stevenson and Melvin Guillard, among others -- has delivered 21 of his 25 career wins by knockout, technical knockout or submission.
Pellegrino (13-4) will carry a two-fight winning streak into the match. A Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt who has never been knocked out, the 29-year-old New Jersey native last appeared at UFC Fight Night 17 in February, when he submitted Robert Emerson with a second-round rear-naked choke.
A lightweight title bout between champion B.J. Penn and Kenny Florian will headline UFC 101, along with a 205-pound super-fight pairing reigning middleweight kingpin Anderson Silva with former light heavyweight titleholder Forrest Griffin.
UFC Lightweight Championship
B.J.
Penn vs. Kenny
Florian
Anderson
Silva vs. Forrest
Griffin
Amir
Sadollah vs. Johny
Hendricks
Kendall
Grove vs. Ricardo
Almeida
Kurt
Pellegrino vs. Josh Neer
Tamdan
McCrory vs. John
Howard
Jesse
Lennox vs. Danillo
Villefort
Matt
Riddle vs. Dan
Cramer
George
Sotiropoulos vs. Robert
Emerson