Champion stood before challenger, muscles tensed, eyes locked. The scene has become as familiar as the Octagon itself.
Light heavyweight champion Jon Jones tipped the scales at 204 pounds for his first title defense against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson (204) in the UFC 135 main event on Saturday at the Pepsi Center in Denver. The eight other men booked for main card duty, including co-headliners Matt Hughes (170) and Josh Koscheck (170.5), also met their contracted weight requirements at Friday’s official weigh-in.
Jones became the youngest champion in Ultimate Fighting Championship history at UFC 128 in March, when he throttled Mauricio “Shogun” Rua en route to a third-round technical knockout at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. The 24-year-old Jackson’s Mixed Martial Arts representative has rattled off four consecutive wins since his series of illegal 12-to-6 elbows on Matt Hamill ended in his disqualification two years ago. It remains the lone blemish on an otherwise spotless record. Jones has secured 11 of his 13 career victories by knockout, technical knockout or submission, six of them inside one round. Wins over “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 1 finalist Stephan Bonnar, former International Fight League light heavyweight champion Vladimir Matyushenko and “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 8 winner Ryan Bader buoy his resume. A decorated amateur wrestler, he won a junior college national championship at Iowa Central Community College. Jones will enter the cage with a three-inch height and 11.5-inch reach advantage.
In Jackson, he faces a seasoned veteran and a proven commodity on center stage. A finalist in the 2003 Pride Fighting Championships middleweight grand prix, the 33-year-old Memphis, Tenn., native stands as one of the most accomplished 205-pound fighters in MMA history. Jackson owns noteworthy victories over former two-division Pride champion Dan Henderson, Brazilian icon Wanderlei Silva, onetime UFC light heavyweight champion Lyoto Machida, 2000 Olympic silver medalist Matt Lindland, former UFC middleweight champion Murilo Bustamante and ex-UFC heavyweight titleholder Kevin Randleman. He remains the only man to defeat UFC hall of famer Chuck Liddell twice. Jackson last appeared at UFC 130 in May, when he outpointed Hamill en route to a unanimous decision at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. In nearly 12 years as a professional, he has never lost two fights in a row.
UFC 135 “Jones vs. Rampage” -- which airs live on pay-per-view at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT -- will also feature a heavyweight duel pairing the undefeated Travis Browne (255) against British import Rob Broughton (261), a lightweight bout pitting “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 5 winner Nate Diaz (156) against former Pride champion Takanori Gomi (155) and a heavyweight tilt matching Ben Rothwell (263) with Mark Hunt (261). An hour prior, Spike TV will carry a pair of preliminary fights, as “The Ultimate Fighter” Season 13 winner Tony Ferguson (155) meets Aaron Riley (156) and Tim Boetsch (186) squares off with the unbeaten Nick Ring (185).
Meanwhile, the three remaining undercard matchups on the UFC’s Facebook page at 6 p.m. ET/3 p.m. PT: Junior Assuncao (145) vs. Eddie Yagin (145), Takeya Mizugaki (135) vs. Cole Escovedo (135) and James Te Huna (205) vs. Ricardo Romero (205).
Jon
Jones (204) vs. Quinton
“Rampage” Jackson (204)
Matt
Hughes (170) vs. Josh
Koscheck (170.5)
Travis
Browne (255) vs. Rob
Broughton (261)
Nate
Diaz (156) vs. Takanori
Gomi (155)
Ben
Rothwell (263) vs. Mark Hunt
(261)
Tony
Ferguson (155) vs. Aaron Riley
(156)
Tim
Boetsch (186) vs. Nick Ring
(185)
Junior
Assuncao (145) vs. Eddie Yagin
(145)
Takeya
Mizugaki (135) vs. Cole
Escovedo (135)
James
Te Huna (205) vs. Ricardo
Romero (205)