Jones' Response
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Jon Jones apologizes to fighters and fans for UFC 151 cancellation, stands by refusal of Chael Sonnen bout
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                                 Aug 23, 2012 - 11:50:39 PM
          
                               
By: Jamie Penick, MMATorch Editor-in-Chief
   
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                         </td>          </tr>       </tbody></table>  UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Jon Jones received tons of backlash on  Thursday following the UFC's decision to cancel UFC 151 next week. With  Dan Henderson forced out of their Championship bout on the card, the UFC  went into desperation mode in trying to get first Lyoto Machida and  then Chael Sonnen into the fight against Jones on nine day's notice, but  Machida wasn't prepared for the fight and Jones turned down a bout with  Sonnen.
It's that move by Jones that has gotten the brunt of the blame in this  situation, despite the fact that he would have had a very different  opponent to prepare for in very little time. But it was White who got to  make the first statement on the matter, with Jones staying quiet  through most of the day. That led to one side being pushed very heavily,  backed by vitriolic responses such as the following:
"When you are a champion, much less one of the guys who is supposed to  be one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world, you are  supposed to step up. Jon Jones is a guy a lot of fans don't like, and I  don't think this is going to make him any more popular. Lorenzo Fertitta  (UFC chairman and CEO) and I are disgusted with Jon Jones and Greg  Jackson... UFC 151 will be remembered as the event Jon Jones and Greg  Jackson murdered."
Jones has finally opened up about his decision in an interview with 
MMAJunkie.com, and he made it clear that there simply wasn't enough time to prepare for the change in opponent.
"Dan Henderson got hurt, and the fight was canceled," Jones said. "I  signed a contract a long time ago to fight Dan Henderson. That's what I  studied for, and that's what I prepared myself for. To take a fight with  a different opponent in which I would basically have three days of  training before traveling and then starting to cut weight I just thought  would be the dumbest idea ever. I wouldn't have been properly  prepared."
One of the other heavy criticisms revolved around the fact that the rest  of the fighters on the event now don't have a payday on Sept. 1.  Indeed, that's another issue White laid at Jones' feet.
"One thing that you really have to think about are the fighters on the  undercard," White said. "Sure, Jon Jones is rich what does he care if he  cancels the fight? But 20 other fighters on the card added up to almost  a half a million dollars in purse money that Jones and Greg Jackson?s  decision stole from them. No champion or headliner in UFC history has  ever done that. As difficult as Tito Ortiz could be... even Tito never  bailed on a fight.?
?Many people, from fans to PPV distributors, TV networks, sponsors, and  more importantly fighters who are working hard to support their families  and build their careers are hurt badly by this selfish decision."
While Jones certainly feels for his fellow fighters, and is disappointed  in the way he's been portrayed throughout the day, he also wanted to  make the point that it wasn't him that made the decision to cancel the  entire card.
"I definitely apologize to the other fighters on the card," Jones said.  "I feel terrible, but it also wasn't my decision to cancel the whole  card. I don't make those decisions. I take a lot of pride in the way I  perform, and I want to put on the best performance possible every time I  fight. I don't want to go out there just to win the fight. I want to go  out there to dominate. I want to make it look effortless. I want it to  be a beautiful thing."
That desire to be fully prepared didn't translate well with the time  period he had standing in front of him for the fight, and though he does  remain remorseful, he felt it was a decision that had to be made.
"Chael is completely different fighter [than Henderson]," Jones said.  "This is war. This is strategy. You have to go in there prepared and  know that you did your homework. I wouldn't be the same warrior if I  just jumped in there blindly and was cutting weight while I was trying  to prepare for the fight. Greg Jackson wasn't going to show up until  Friday. Coach [Mike] Winkeljohn wasn't going to be there until Wednesday  or Thursday. I would have been pretty much on my own trying to prepare  for a new opponent. That's just not the best way to prepare."
"If this was my first fight in the UFC and I really didn't have a choice  and they needed somebody to step in last-minute, if it was that type of  scenario, then I'd probably more open to it," Jones continued. "But I'm  a UFC champion, and I need to perform that way. If I would have taken  this fight, that would have been letting my ego get in the way and not  using my intellect. This is war, and you have to go in there prepared."
"The criticism does bother me, but I have to stand by my decision. I  have to be the man that I am. With such large audiences comes great  criticism. There will be a lot of scrutiny, but I've got to do what  makes me happy and feels right to me. At the end of the day, I have to  make the best choice for me and my family."
The last group affected by this entire situation are the fans, writers,  and more who had booked travel, hotel rooms, and had bought tickets to  an event that will now not take place. Jones again is sorry for that,  but there wasn't a realistic reason in his mind to take a switch in  opponents like that on as short of notice as he had.
"I apologize to the people that lost money on tickets and travel and  things like that," Jones said. "I don't apologize for my decision, but I  do apologize for the way it affected people. I hope people can  understand I was just trying to do the best thing for my career."
"Dan Henderson got hurt, and our fight was canceled. As difficult as it  is to deal with everything that's happened, I just didn't feel like I  had enough time to prepare both physically and mentally for a fight with  a new opponent. I just didn't feel I had enough to prepare properly and  perform at my best. Whether Chael Sonnen actually deserves a title shot  really isn't my place to say. But if he wants to fight on Sept. 22,  then I'm fine with that."
Penick's Analysis: Jones could have taken the fight. He could  have hopped in the cage with zero preparation against Chael Sonnen, and  he may win in that scenario nine times out of ten. But Sonnen is a very  different style of fighter than Dan Henderson, making it a completely  different fight for Jones to prepare for, and leaving the possibility  that a Matt Serra vs. GSP type result happens. That's a disastrous, hard  to rebound from situation that didn't make sense to risk for Jones, and  that's ok. It's disappointing, but it's ok. Jones didn't make the  decision to cancel the event next week, and it's not fair to hold it all  against him. The UFC was faced with that choice because they didn't  have any other viable options than trying to strong-arm Jones into a  bout he wasn't comfortable with on a week's notice. It's not his  responsibility to make sure the rest of the card is getting their  paycheck. Would he have been getting this same type of vitriol sent his  way if he would have gotten injured? Of course not. This was an  impossible spot he was put in, and the UFC throwing him under the bus  hasn't helped anything. Does he have his share of the blame? Absolutely.  But it's not all on him, and it's not fair to hold it against him with  as much vitriol as has been thrown on Thursday. One more note, it's been  pointed out on Twitter that this isn't even the first time this  situation has happened this year, just the first time it's happened this  close to an event. The UFC was supposed to head to Montreal in March,  but in an ironic twist, it was reportedly Dan Henderson refusing to step  into a fight in that main event that caused the UFC to scrap it and  move the fights for that card to Atlanta. Regardless, there is plenty of  blame to spread around, and it doesn't all need to be aimed at a  Champion making a decision that makes sense for himself.
[Jon Jones art by Grant Gould (c) MMATorch.com]