Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com
Brian Bowles.
Going into his WEC bantamweight title bout with
Miguel Torres, Bowles was thought to be a game challenger but not a major-league threat. In the cage, Bowles was far more than that, as he smashed Torres in the first round to snatch the 135-pound mantle.
Torres was heralded as one of the sport’s pound-for-pound stalwarts and the man to put the 135-pound division on the map. In his fourth defense of the WEC bantamweight title, he was flattened in the first round by impressive upstart
Brian Bowles, who handed Torres his first loss in 18 fights.
He had to overcome rope grabbing and eye gouging, but Ueda kept his unbeaten record and Shooto world title on July 19 by taking a well-appointed unanimous verdict over tough Brazilian youngster
Eduardo Dantas.
Coming off of his wildly entertaining 25-minute brawl with
Miguel Torres in April, Mizugaki was done no favors in his second bout in the promotion, as he faced off with veteran
Jeff Curran on Aug. 9. However, the Cage Force bantamweight champion survived a last-minute submission scare from Curran to take a hard-fought split decision win.
A healthy underdog heading into his Aug. 9 bout with
Urijah Faber understudy
Joseph Benavidez, Cruz was one step ahead throughout the entire bout, deftly outworking Benavidez on the feet and the floor en route to a unanimous decision win. He now figures to be the first title contender for newly minted champion
Brian Bowles.
Though he came into the bout as a considerable favorite to challenge for the WEC bantamweight title, Benavidez’s undefeated record came to an end at WEC 42. He was outworked in all facets of the game by the much longer and rangier
Dominick Cruz.
Following the delay and relocation of WEC 43, Tamura was a cruel victim of fate. He sustained a broken rib in training for his fight with
Damacio Page after extending his preparation for the postponed event.
It was not as competitive as a bout with
Akitoshi Tamura might have been, but Page took a quick and impressive rear-naked choke victory over previously unbeaten
Will Campuzano at WEC 43. It took the
Greg Jackson-trained wild child just 62 seconds to get the tap.
Against
John Hosman on Aug. 9, Yahya added another first-round submission to his resume. Three straight first-round tapouts have put the grappling all-star back in contention for another crack at the WEC bantamweight crown.
Following a 67-second submission loss to
Rani Yahya in his WEC return in April, the former WEC bantamweight champion earned himself a tidy unanimous verdict over
Manny Tapia on Oct. 10 to get back into the mix at 135 pounds.
Antonio Banuelos,
Mike Easton,
Marcos Galvao,
Scott Jorgensen,
Manny Tapia.
* With his loss to Eddie Wineland, formerly eighth-ranked Manny Tapia falls to the contenders list.