The World Extreme Cagefighting organization will be LIVE from Las Vegas, Nevada at the Joint Hard Rock Hotel on September 5th. The event will feature two title bouts and one featherweight contender bout. The WEC, as of late, has had a boom in viewership and attention as the UFC grows, and the WEC gains more popular fighters, sponsors, and access to cable television. All WEC events are featured on the Versus television network as well, appealing fans because there is no PPV events on the WEC schedule. MMA-Analyst.com will have previews, predictions, and coverage of all of the upcoming WEC events. We will provide in-depth analysis of each fight card just as we have for UFC 74. Please keep an eye here for more upcoming events. Now, let's get into the fight card for WEC 30:
WEC 30 Fight Card:
Rob "Razor" McCullough vs. Richard "Cleat" Crunkilton
Chase Beebe vs. Rani Yahya
Jens "Little Evil" Pulver vs. Cub Swanson
This fight card is shaping up to be a pretty damn good one, featuring two title bouts and a featherweight contender bout. Let's go inside each matchup.
Rob "Razor" McCullough vs. Richard "Cleat" Crunkilton
WEC Lightweight Championship Bout
Let's start off with the current WEC Lightweight Champion, Rob McCullough. Rob is a straight Muay Thai standup fighter who has won 5 World Muay Thai championships in his fighting career. He fights out of Huntington Beach, California, so he's a Team Punishment fighter out of Tito Ortiz's camp. Rob just recently won the Lightweight title at WEC 25 with a victory over Kit Cope, another champion Muay Thai fighter. Rob's main strenght is his kicks. Since he is a Muay Thai Champion, he has great form and is able to get kicks off fairly quickly and with some power. He also uses very crisp combinations with his kicks and hands as seen when he fought
| Olaf Alfonso at WEC 19. He was able to lay a kick into Olaf's midsection and
then deliver a tremendous right that broke Olaf's jaw. He has a very good sprawl that he uses as his takedown defense. He is able to avoid wrestlers and grapplers with the sprawl. He also has tremendous cardio, but who expects anything less coming out of Team Punishment? His chin is very strong. In a number of fights, he has shown that he can take a punch and deliver a counter almost always landing.
Here is a highlight reel of fights McCullough has fought, mainly showing some of his technique.
Richard "Cleat" Crunkilton is a submission wrestling fighter fighting out of the American Kickboxing Academy. His only blemish on his record was a decision loss to Hermes Franca at UFC 42 - Sudden Impact. After that loss, he rattled off 6 straight victories, 3 by TKO/KO and 3 by Submission victory. Crunkilton has excellent ground and pound game, along with a very good kicking game up top, much like McCullough. Crunkilton's main trait is his takedowns and wrestling. In most of his fights, he aims to catch kicks or fake his own kick into a takedown. He uses fakes to flinch opponents and then shoots the opponent's legs for the takedown. In most of his fights, he uses this technique within the first 30 seconds of the fight. He has a very good transition game on the ground in which he can move from full guard to side mount rather quickly. He has a tremendous ground and pound style that will be the key to winning this matchup.
For this matchup, McCullough won't have too many weaknesses at all that Crunkilton can expose. The only real blemish I can see in McCullough's game right now is his record. He has fought a lot of sub .500 fighters. Kit Cope is 1-4, granted he's fought some top guys in the WEC and Kenny Florian who is in the UFC. His opponents who aren't sub .500 are barely above a .500 winning percentage. Ryan Healy is the only recent win that is considerably above the 50% mark. McCullough will also be fighting against a wrestler in Crunkilton who is very used to catching kicks and taking down his opponent. He also has devastating elbows and with his transition game on the ground, has a very effective ground and pound that McCullough will have trouble with. McCullough's cardio comes into play here tremendously. If McCullough can avoid the takedown with his great defense, look for a 1st or 2nd round KO/TKO from McCullough. I believe Crunkilton will be able to take down McCullough, and possibly ground and pound him. Crunkilton has beaten bigger and stronger fighters before in convincing fashion. Both fighters have padded records though. Crunkilton has fought a majority of sub .500 fighters, more than McCullough. He did manage to decision a surging Hermes Franca, the only fighter on both fighter's records that has any real skill to gauge this fight on besides McCullough losing to Josh Thomson back in 2002 by decision. So, who will win this battle of the unprovens? I call them unprovens because with as many sub .500 fighters as they have fought, this is really their first real competition for both of them in a long time. If McCullough's takedown defense prevails, look for McCullough to win this in the 1st or 2nd round by TKO/KO. I believe Crunkilton will get the takedown though, he has some dynamic ways of doing so. Look for Crunkilton to take it into the later rounds, it's a stretch, but Crunkilton has more experience dealing with aggressive fighters such as McCullough, and stronger fighters as well. All scenarios aside, McCullough has a superb takedown defense, great cardio, strength, and speed on his feet. Look for a McCullough TKO win in the 1st or 2nd round.
Final Prediction: Tough Decision. I'm taking.... Rob McCullough, 2nd round TKO/KO.
Chase Beebe vs. Rani Yahya
WEC Bantamweight Championship Bout
Chase Beebe is essentially a "choke" artist, winning nearly all of his fight by Rear Naked Choke. He sports a record of 11-1. Chase Beebe's background is extensively in wrestling. He is a four-time Illinois State Wrestling Champion. He is primarily a ground fighter, but he does have some standup and a small amount of submission skill. There is little video of Chase Beebe online, and I haven't seen enough of him to justify a good review of his skill then what I have already stated. I do believe that this is a very bad matchup for Chase Beebe. Let's move on to his opponent.
Rani Yahya is a different story. He is a well-known black belt in ju-jitsu in the WEC. He is the 2007 Abu Dhabi grappling champion in his weight class of 65kg. He recently submitted Mark Hominick at WEC 28 in the 1st round by rear naked choke. Rani has also fought in such events as
| K-1 HERO'S in Japan, and participated in numerous ju-jitsu competitions and serves as an instructor in ju-jitsu.
Chase is an aggressive fighter on the ground, but if we've learned anything from great ju-jitsu, it counters wrestling very well if used properly. I'm looking for Rani to take advantage of Beebe's wrestling game and pull off a submission victory in the 1st or 2nd round. Rani is very aggressive in his submission game. He literally transitions from one submission to the other with very quick movements. In his matchup with
|
| Kazuya Yasuhiro in K-1, he tried to pull a submission off in the first 10 seconds of the fight, and then transitioned from legs to chokes and so forth until he sunk in a
Brabo Choke. Very skilled, and for as small as he is, very aggressive. I'm looking for Rani to win this via 1st round submission victory.
Final Prediction: Rani Yahya via 1st round submission
Jens "Little Evil" Pulver vs. Cub Swanson
This is probably the most anticipated fight on the card for me. Jens Pulver is coming off a horrible loss to BJ Penn at TUF Finale 5 via submission in which Pulver looked horrible against the ground attack. Pulver has had two straight losses in his last two fights, one to Penn and the other by KO in the 1st round by TUF veteran Joe Lauzon. Pulver is trained out of Miletich Martial Arts in Bettendorf, Iowa. He's a world class boxer with some wrestling skills for body control. He is most notably known for holding the first Lightweight UFC Championship belt and defending that belt against BJ Penn at UFC 35 in a much publicized bout in which Pulver was considered a huge underdog. Pulver went the distance proved he was the champion by defeating Penn by decision. Of course, in the eventual rematch, Penn dominated him. What most people don't know about Pulver is that he won two state wrestling championships in Idaho and wrestling briefly for Boise State University. He does have a prominent wrestling background to supplement his superb boxing skills. Pulver is known to have pioneered the technique of "Sprawl and Brawl" and is known for his defensive wrestling/striking skills.
Cub Swanson is an interesting fighter. He is on an unbelievable winning streak, compiling 10 straight wins. His most recent against Micah Miller, who had much better ju-jitsu than Swanson, was impressive in that Swanson was able to avoid every submission attempt Micah had to offer. He also convincingly won the standup and ground and pound battles during the matchup. Swanson has a brown-belt in ju-jitsu and a Muay Thai background. Swanson has above average ground skills, but not nearly as good as some of the better ju-jitsu guys in the game. He has above average striking and mixes in kicks and punches for combinations.
The lowdown on this fighter is that Swanson is the underdog, and a lot of people inside the MMA community think Pulver is just old and out of the game. A lot of fans believe Swanson will do away with Pulver fairly quickly. I am going to take the opposite view here. Pulver is dropping to a base 145 lbs. He has stated in the past he feels great at 145 and feels it's his best fight weight. Swanson is by no means an incredible striker. He is by no means an incredible ground fighter either. He tends to scramble on the ground, and it doesn't work to his advantage. Pulver is a defensive wrestler, much like some notable UFC fighter like Chuck Liddell. He uses his wrestling to counter submission attempts and then body control his opponent to a ground and pound position. The most notable difference in their styles in Pulver's striking ability is world renowned. He has heavy hands and they will only grow faster and more powerful as he drops to 145. Pulver also has plenty of wrestlers to train with at MFS in Iowa, and will have more ability to train against Swason-like opponents during his camp. I believe in the MMA community, Swanson is favored. I'm going to go ahead and pick Pulver to win via TKO/KO in the 2nd round. I think Pulver is going to show us one last flurry before his career is over.
Final Prediction: A "Little Evil" knockout win in the 2nd round
That concludes our WEC 30 preview, predictions, and analysis. I hope this gives a little bit of insight into the WEC fight card and fighters. These predictions, I feel, are a bit off the norm of what most of the community is expecting from this event. The McCullough vs. Crunkilton matchup is also a very tough fight that I believe Crunkilton has a great chance to win as well. The fact that a lot of these fighters have great records against a lot of bad fighters doesn't help in analyzing a fighter's skillset. Video helps tremendously, and fortunately, I do have some of these fights here in my possession. I hope you enjoy these, and it gives you some insight.
Check out the rest of the predictions here.