Photo by Sherdog.com
Mike Thomas Brown
Brown had a coming-out party with his championship clobbering of featherweight poster boy
Urijah Faber in November, but now he will need to cement his place atop the 145-pound world. He'll be able to take the first step toward that goal in March, when he'll likely defend his WEC title in his adopted backyard of Florida against
Leonard Garcia.
As "The California Kid" looks to rebound following his November drubbing at the hands of
Mike Thomas Brown, he'll meet a very familiar face. On Jan. 25, he takes on
Jens Pulver, whom he defeated just this past June in a fantastic five-round bout.
Garcia beat
Hiroyuki Takaya and federal drug trafficking charges in a resurgent 2008. Then he stepped into the cage with
Jens Pulver in November and blew out the former UFC champion in just 72 seconds. Now Garcia is the No. 1 contender to the WEC featherweight crown and will likely meet Mike Thomas Brown in March.
It took him nearly the full 15 minutes, but Fabiano finished off former Shooto world champ
Akitoshi Tamura after a dominating performance. With a Mike Thomas Brown-
Leonard Garcia bout on the horizon, Fabiano could be a bout away from meeting the winner and trying to add to his mantle.
Mishima impressively finished off the tough
Toshiaki Kitada on Dec. 22 in a bout in which his Deep featherweight crown was not at stake. He will likely make his first title defense in the first half of 2009.
Hioki absolutely blew the doors off of Shooto icon
Rumina Sato on Nov. 29, which should put the lanky Nagoyan on course to tangle with Shooto world champion "Lion Takeshi"
Takeshi Inoue in the new year. That is, not barring any upsets from the often-flaky Hioki.
Having decided to cut to bantamweight, it was expected that Curran would make his 135-pound debut at the WEC's Dec. 3 card. However, an injured hand will postpone his divisional debut, as the "Big Frog" will likely make his bantamweight debut in the new year.
Imanari dropped to bantamweight in August and needed only 29 seconds to heel hook
Hiroshi Umemura to win Deep's bantamweight title. His future has been uncertain, though, as there have been talks of him heading to Dream to compete as a featherweight.
It was hard work, but "Lion Takeshi" became the first man to lose and regain a Shooto world title on Nov. 29 when he took a one-point unanimous decision over
Hideki Kadowaki to recapture his 143-pound crown. However, if Lion is to finally be the champion Shooto promoters want him to be, he'll need some consistency in the new year.
The 22-year-old Nova Uniao product earned another impressive stoppage in the WEC cage, punching out
Jonathan Brookins in November. Now, the potential featherweight star will finally get some airtime come Jan. 25 when he meets fellow Brazilian
Fredson Paixao.
*Following his Dec. 3 loss to Cub Swanson, formerly eighth-ranked Hiroyuki Takaya falls beyond the top 10.