More than a year after losing a decision to
Kenny Florian, Huerta has avoided press attention; instead of signing a new UFC deal, he opted to concentrate on an acting career. Swell if he can make a go of it -- though most can’t -- but where’s his head? Fighting requires a certain clinical mentality that’s absent from the casting call/manicured world of performing. You couldn’t ask for two more disparate lifestyles.
Gray Maynard does not care about his headshot.
Against
Gleison Tibau in a controversial spring ’09 bout -- one in which he took a contested decision -- Guillard struggled mightily to avoid being placed on his back, but expended a lot of energy doing it. Diaz is a few inches taller and has a spider-like relationship to anyone he’s trying to plant on the ground: draw them in, contain, and smother. If Guillard can stay off of his back, Diaz may soon join his brother in Strikeforce.
Larson is 32-years-old. He has only two losses in 28 fights. Nobody has made it out of the first round against him in over two years.
So where’s the attention? Larson’s muscular attack makes him one of the more formidable athletes in the welterweight division. After contending for the WEC title in 2007 -- a loss to
Carlos Condit -- he hasn’t yet been granted an opportunity to show whether or not he belongs in the same discussion as
Mike Swick,
Martin Kampmann or the rest for
Georges St. Pierre’s title. Fighting the nameless
Mike Pierce isn’t going to do much to push him in that direction. For a division as barren as this one -- GSP has beaten virtually everyone of note -- Larson’s UFC run has been on a treadmill.