GeNioS wrote:
p.s. is anyone wondering why one side of the bracket is stacked? Why in the hell would you have Werdum fight Overeem and Fedor fight Silva in the first round?! There is a good chance that none of the guys on the right side of the bracket could beat any of the guys on the left. To put Silva, Fedor, Werdum, and Overeem all on one side of the bracket is ridiculously stupid.
It's not stupid, it's called marketing. It's no secret that the real marketable fight is Fedor-Overeem, and there's no way they could justify having it in the first round.
If they are due to meet in the semis, as they were, there's a 25% chance (0.5x0.5) that the match-up will happen, if they both win their first round matches. (Of course, it's only 25% in purely mathematical terms for possible outcomes, considering Overeem and Fedor were/are rightfully big favourites Coker considered the chances would be much higher than 25%).
If they were separated so that they would only meet in the finals then there's only a 6.25% mathematical chance (0.5x0.5x0.5x0.5) as they need to win two matches each rather than one. Strikeforce was simply trying to ensure the match-up happens without opening it up to too much in the way of tournament-style risk.
They had to find the balance between keeping decent chances of them fighting (hence not matching them up for the finals) and also ensuring one of their two majority prized possessions doesn't get knocked out too early (by having them face off in round one).Hope that helps. Besides, because the winner of the tournament doesn't win Overeem's belt, they get a shot at it, if things go tits up and Fedor-Overeem doesn't happen in the tournament, they figured not having it in the final would be an extra opportunity to have it as the eventual showdown, if say Werdum shocks Overeem and Fedor won it.