Keith Jardine: The Hardest Working Man in MMA, Part Three

Tim Mann by Correspondent Written on March 31, 2009
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Jardine's latest fight was the result of the ever-chaotic LHW title picture. The title had already changed hands twice since his victory over Liddell, and earning a shot at the belt had become a crapshoot; almost as much a product of availability as it was of merit.

The timing of the division is another thing that never really seemed to favor Jardine, as his former KO victim Forrest Griffin had won the title from Quinton Jackson at a time when he had just lost to Silva, knocking him out of contention.

A month before his comeback fight against Vera, Keith's teammate Rashad Evans had scored a spectacular knockout over Chuck Liddell—due in no small part to help in preparation from Jardine himself—and scored himself a title shot.

Evans managed to repeat Keith's feat from years earlier, notching a technical knockout over Griffin, winning the strap, and effectively shutting Jardine out of the title picture yet again.

In a bizarre twist, Jardine then took on former champion Rampage Jackson, in a strange situation where Rampage would earn a title shot with a victory, but if Jardine pulled out a win, he would not, because he would not fight his teammate.

If you've been paying attention, you could probably describe the fight yourself by now. Jardine was resolute, and Rampage was shocked with his durability.

The former champ claimed he was overtrained for the fight, but for whatever reason, Jardine was wearing him down and even had the normally unflappable Jackson in trouble against the fence at one point.

As fate would have it, Rampage executed a beautiful parry and counter with 10 seconds left in the fight, knocking Jardine to the canvas. He scrambled back to his feet, but the look on his face told the story. In a fight as close as this one was, he had lost the round, and likely the decision.

And he would be correct, as the judges gave Jackson the unanimous decision win after three hard-fought rounds. According to Jardine, one judge told him after the fight that he had "lost the fight in the last ten seconds," which was gut-wrenching to the fighter.

The fact remains, however, that while Jardine may never be a champion—although he very well could be one—he has stood in the octagon with an incredibly high level of competition, and never once has he delivered any less than advertised: a hard-fought battle, with everything on the line.

He embodies the unpredictable nature of the sport we love. The man is practically a walking upset victory or loss waiting to happen. He's a decent person, a hard worker, and doesn't expect anything more than to be given what he's earned, and to fight the best competition available to him.

I'm sure Jardine is due to fight again in a month or two, and I'm sure of two things. He will probably not bring himself any closer to a title shot, and it will probably be a contender for the fight of the night.
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written on March 31, 2009 History

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