A pair of newer faces in the bantamweight class will adorn the main card of Friday night's UFC on FX show. Mike Easton, a training partner of divisional monarch Dominick Cruz, will collide with Jared Papazian, who's making his Octagon debut.
Jared "The Jackhammer" Papazian (14-6) is a representative of California's Hayastan Top Team, which was founded by the great Gokor Chivichyan -- a virtual phenom in the arts of Sambo and Judo. The squad is well known for churning out a stable of fiercely aggressive Armenians with a Judo base, the most notable of which are Karo Parisyan, who still stands as MMA's best Judoka, and his cousin Manny Gamburyan. As many are unfamiliar with Papazian, here's a passage from an interview on RattlingTheCage.com about his very Daniel Larusso-like initiation to the sport.
I was a sophomore playing football for El Camino Real high school. One day after practice I was taking a shower and I saw one of my teammates going through our lockers and stealing. I confronted him on the situation and he didn't like what I had to say. We got into a fight that day. About month later he was still upset about the fight, so he decided to get a bunch of his older brother's friends to jump me. I was at the AMC Promenade in Woodland Hills, California with my brother, waiting on some friends to arrive. Within 10 minutes I was approached by 12 guys that were much older than I was. They were about 17 to 19 years old. I was 15 years old at the time. I was fighting for my life.
They threw my brother into a storage room so he couldn't help me. We were fighting for about 5 minutes and there was about 30 people watching this happen. People from the crowd were helping them jump me. After the fight I felt really embarrassed and felt like I was a bitch that couldn't fight. It really messed me up mentally. I decided I really wanted to do something about this. I walked in to a Muay Thai gym by my house and started training. My goal was to fight every one of the guys that who jumped me one on one. But after I started training I started learning that I was in love with the sport.
The embryonic stage of Papazian's career was quite pedestrian. In his first twelve, he'd won half with one No Contest and five defeats. One of those losses was to future Hayastan compadre Karen Darabedyan and the last was to Felony Fights participant -- and genuine felon -- Shad Smith, who tapped him with a triangle. This sparked a noticeable turnaround for Papazian, who knocked out Smith in the rematch to ignite a nine-fight clip where he won eight and beat Abel Cullum to become the King of the Cage flyweight (135-pounds) champion.
More UFC on FX Dissections
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Touted as a member of Alliance MMA, Mike "The Hulk" Easton (11-1) led us to believe he was going to emulate teammate Dominick Cruz's signature hoppity-skippity style of striking in the opening moments of his debut at UFC Live 6. It was inevitably a false alarm, as the constant shift in stance and awkward head-bobbing that parallels intoxicated night-club dancing gave way to a more traditional offensive approach.
After an understandably tentative first round showing, Easton overcame the Octagon jitters and pelted Byron Bloodworth with a set of knees and punches for a finish in the second. Despite coming off a two-year hiatus, the TKO was Easton's fourth strike-stoppage overall (2 subs, 5 decisions) and extended his streak, which is punctuated by wins over Chase Beebe and John Dodson, to six in a row.
Gifs and analysis in the full entry.

Easton spent the majority of his time walking Bloodworth down and plugging in a stiff right counter.
Lloyd Irvin has been overseeing Easton's martial arts training since the age of seventeen and the end result is a very diverse set of skills that's applied intelligently. Easton is a capable wrestler, he was a bronze medalist at the 2008 BJJ Mundials as a brown belt and he's a decent kickboxer. Most of his offerings on the feet are delivered with his crisp hands but Easton will also throw in an occasional low kick or spinning back-kick.
Easton's predatory tactics finally paid off in the second when he cornered Bloodworth, tied him up in the clinch and unleashed a volley of knees to the melon. His finishing instincts were on-point and he pounced with some concluding strikes to cap off a successful UFC debut.
In addition to his variety of well-layered skills, Easton is a physical specimen with considerable strength and explosiveness. This entire package plus his methodical intensity will make Easton quite a handful for the pack of UFC bantamweights.
The highlight reel above is Papazian's career-defining victory over Cullum to win the King of the Cage strap, which he said was the one fight he wished all the fans could see.
Fitting the mold for many of the Hayastan fighters, Papazian is highly aggressive and hurls a ruthless series of wide-arcing punches with constant forward movement. Though kicking off his training with Muay Thai, he's more of a high-paced brawler than a kickboxing technician. Like Easton, he's a strong bantamweight with a sturdy clinch who comes from a reputable team, and will be looking to make a lasting impression in his first foray on the big stage.
I have to include a juicy snipped from the aforementioned interview with Papazian, which could be the source of some bad blood between the two. Papazian was asked, regardless of weight class, who he'd like to fight the most. Here's the applicable part of his answer:
Dominick Cruz has amazing cardio and awkward style, but I'm not a big fan of his because I believe he could do more to be the champion. I find his fighting style and personality boring. I believe that as a champion you need to be exciting and demonstrate to the fans why you are the champion.
I won't claim to have a firm grasp on the finite details of either fighter nor what their ceiling might be in the UFC. Papazian has reaped the benefits of tightening up his game, seems to be hitting his stride in the latter half of his career and, at only age twenty-three, has plenty of time to bloom. Easton, however, should take this one. Despite having fewer fights, his level of competition is superior and he's a bit more polished and mature.
My Prediction: Mike Easton by submission.
All gifs via Zombie Prophet of IronForgesIron.com
0 recs | 14 comments
Point of order.
Easton’s “win” over Beebe was possibly the worst robbery in the history of MMA. Certainly on the east coast of the US.
gzl5000 - January 19, 2012
IIRC, Luke Thomas, a supporter of Easton
even called it the worst robbery he’d ever seen. Again, IIRC, Thomas was either in crowd or was commentating his fight because both are in the D.C area.
It was a blatant gift for the hometown fighter.
Ricardo Arguello - January 19, 2012
Commentating the fight
Luke Thomas - January 19, 2012
Congrats Luke
You almost have as many Twitter followers as I do.
Dallas Winston - January 19, 2012
Fully aware
Mentioned it in my last breakdown but figure Easton deserves a break from having it brought up every time.
Dallas Winston - January 19, 2012
Link to Luke's piece
http://www.bloodyelbow.com/2009/10/5/1070871/the-robbery-of-chase-beebe-and-the
Dallas Winston - January 19, 2012
Nice breakdown
I agree that it’s tough to say much about Papazian but I’m still surprised everyone and their granny is picking Easton. I think he’s the (slight) favourite, but Papazian’s win over Abel Cullum is not to be scoffed at.
I’ve been reading up on Easton’s win against Chase Beebe and apparently that was a blatant robbery that led to an appeal after Beebe had back mount on Easton for three full rounds. Easton’s win over John Dodson was another contentious decision.
I dunno. I’m just not entirely convinced Easton is the bantamweight phenom some have touted him as, at least not until I see him face solid opposition.
wonderfulspam - January 19, 2012
Don't think he's a "phenom" what so ever
But he is a solid bantamweight and BJJ BB with good striking, and much better than your typical UFC new guy.
I agree on Papazian’s win over Cullum, but he also has some really grotesque losses, Shad Smith being one. Thus my distinction between the two halves of his career. I also think the Hayastan label carries a ton of weight as well.
Dallas Winston - January 19, 2012
I realise you’re not one of those guys, I was more referring to, say, Tim Burke when he says “both guys are talented. Easton’s at a different level, though”.
And I guess I was just surprised to see 10 out of 10 BE staff members pick him while 90% of the 1600 on MMA Playground who picked the fight went with Easton. That normally signifies something close to a mismatch which I don’t think this is.
wonderfulspam - January 19, 2012
I don't know if Easton is going to win
But if Papazian fights flat-footed, swinging hooks in the pocket, he’s going to get knocked clean the fuck out. That is the absolute worst way to fight Easton.
Luke Thomas - January 19, 2012
I would actually agree with Tim's assessment
And didn’t take it as excessively praising Easton. I think he’s just acknowledging that Papazian is a worthy newcomer but Easton has more proven skills and experience.
I was a bit surprised at some of the landslide staff picks too, just because it always seems like someone hangs their neck out for the dog.
Dallas Winston - January 19, 2012
Fair enough
Tim’s quote was the only one that was readily available but of course, he isn’t saying Easton is a blue chip prospect or anything. I just remember Easton’s debut being highly, highly anticipated with lots of people raving about him and I just haven’t been all that impressed.
I think I’m just surprised that Schilling – Pineda is being billed as a really close encounter when that’s also a case of a more experienced guy taking on someone who may or may not be cut out for the UFC (50/50 split on MMA Playground, 6 out of 10 BE staff members picking Schilling).
wonderfulspam - January 20, 2012
EASTON will earn the respect
People still on the fence about easton will quickly join the beastwagon after seeing him face a game opponent(papazian) and win easy…just sayin
The KO Kid - January 19, 2012 via iPhone app
Good breakdown, I think. I’m still baffled as to why this is on the main card, but then again it’s not a very strong card overall. A curios choice for their first event on FX.
Horselover Fat - January 20, 2012
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