Wednesday, April 30, 2008
MMA Friends Goes International!
Visitors from at least 22 countries have now visited MMA Friends. The top five countries, as you can see below, are the US, Canada, Brazil, the UK, and France. MMA is very popular in these countries, as well as Japan. We're not getting any Japanese traffic, but that's due to the fact that the site isn't in Japanese AND the Japanese mostly love Japanese MMA which I don't cover much (Dream, K1, Shooto, etc.).
Anyway, I just thought this might be of interest to you guys. Now if I could just get you to comment on a blog posting or two! (;
1. United States
2. Canada
3. Brazil
4. United Kingdom
5. France
6. Israel
7. Italy
8. Germany
9. Australia
10. Croatia
11. Finland
12. Peru
13. Unknown
14. Denmark
15. Philippines
16. Norway
17. Guatemala
18. Ireland
19. Romania
20. Mexico
21. Poland
22. Austria
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Penn and Sherk Heats Up
Quoteworthy:
“I think he needs to talk to a psychiatrist. That sounds pretty sick to me, but good luck. I’m sure there will be blood, both mine and his, so we’ll see what happens. I don’t know, that’s kind of a weird thing to say and I did hear that he said that. I was like, ‘What the hell is he talking about?’ What can you say. He’s got some issues, but I’m not going to let anything he says bother me.”
-Sean Sherk
Sherk is responding to comments that BJ Penn made about licking the blood off his gloves when he’s done pounding “The Muscle Shark’s” face in during their championship bout at UFC 84: “Ill Will” on May 24.
Monday, April 28, 2008
UFC 84, Fight rumors, Tito Ortiz being an idiot, and HDNet Fights Rankings
UFC 84 (May 24th) is going off! My friend Chris is throwing a party at his place for his graduation (congrats man!), as well as for the Penn v. Sherk match up. Unlike Wes and Ned who can't stand Penn, Chris is a big fan. I'm rooting for Penn in the fight too, by the way, for a number of reasons which I'll disclose later. For now suffice to say that Penn is just a joy to watch when he's at the top of his game and I hope he destroys Sherk in order to set up a more spectacular match up with a guy like Huerta, Florian, Maynard, the list goes on...just not a wrestler like Sherk! Eventually, if Penn can string together a few wins as the champ, I can see him avenging his losses at WW by fighting St. Pierre and Hughes (that would be drool worthy!).Anyway, looks like my dad wants to throw a little shin dig for the fight too at his house to break in his new TV which he plans on getting. From what Ned says, Rafael (in Ontario) is getting the fight too. So now the problem isn't who's getting the fight but deciding on where to watch it! Anyway, UFC 84 is going to be a big draw for a number of reasons and just know that if you want to see it, you can get a hold of me.
The rumor mill is always churning in the UFC and the possible bouts are very possibly on the horizon:
Roger Huerta vs. Kenny Florian: A highly intriguing contenders match that will likely determine who will face the winner of next months' Penn vs. Sherk title bout.
Huerta, the pretty boy who stands up for La Raza, has proven he's got a serious gas tank and plenty of striking power. His wrestling looks good but his BJJ looks just OK. He's on a meteoric rise and he's someone White would like to see do well since he wrangles in the ladies and Latino fans. Personally he annoys me and I'd like to see someone put some humility in his heart. If he beats Florian, however, I wouldn't mind see him take a crack at the champ (likely to be Penn at the time).
Florian putting a RNC on some little kid (OK Chris, I can actually hear your sarcastic comment, "Yeah, that's about the only person Florian can submit!"). I used to think Florian was a flash in the pan, but he's a tough dude who's been through some battles and shown he has what it takes to stand near, or even at the top of, the LW division. We'll see how he does against the crafty Roger Huerta.
-----------------
Rich Franklin vs. Dan Henderson: Both top contenders and both victims of the Spider. Very intriguing since these guys both like to stand and trade and use the clinch. This one likely goes the distance in my opinion but could end in (T)KO.
Franklin's a big middleweight and I think he's a great guy and a great fighter. He ruled the middleweight division in the UFC for some time after quitting his teaching job. I don't personally think he has what it takes to beat Henderson although it depends on who sets the pace of the fight and how long Franklin can keep the fight on the outside where he can use his striking most effectively. Rich, on a given night, could probably beat any MW in the world, but I'd have to give the edge to Dan in this one just because of his experience and wrestling background.
Don't let Henderson's recent loss to Anderson Silva deceive you: this dude is for real. He's the only guy to hold both the MW and LHW straps SIMULTANEOUSLY in PRIDE (no one has done that in the UFC). Just imagine if he had beaten Rampage (with whom he went the distance to lose a decision) and Silva? He would have held all FOUR belts! Woulda, coulda, shoulda...anyway, the next time he comes to fight don't worry, he'll be thinking about his legacy and in a way I feel sorry for Franklin.
Maybe he's not the most handsome guy, but Lyoto "The Dragon" Machida proves a handful for any fighter, indeed, he's unbeaten in all of his mixed martial art fights. He faces ex-UFC champ, the Huntington Beach Bad Boy, Tito Ortiz at UFC 85.
Check out Tito's shameless self-promotion. I mean, he can't even get over his lackluster draw let alone really prepare himself for Machida. He'll be fighting for Elite XC before the end of 2008 I bet (with an additional loss from The Dragon on his record). After watching this video, stick around for an interview with Penn about the title fight with Sherk at UFC 85.
Check out the backlog of HDNet's Inside MMA episodes here (tons of fight coverage and fighters and analysts as guests):
http://www.hdnetfights.com/insidemma.php
Inside MMA's fighter rankings:
Top 25 Heavyweights
Rank | Fighter's Name |
---|---|
1 | Fedor Emelianenko |
2 | Randy Couture |
3 | Antonio Rodrigo Nogueria |
4 | Tim Sylvia |
5 | Fabricio Werdum |
6 | Josh Barnett |
7 | Andrei Arlovski |
8 | Gabriel Gonzaga |
9 | Ben Rothwell |
10 | Aleksander Emelianenko |
11 | Cheick Kongo |
12 | Mirko Filipovic |
13 | Brandon Vera |
14 | Frank Mir |
15 | Pedro Rizzo |
16 | Antonio Silva |
17 | Alistair Overeem |
18 | Roy Nelson |
19 | Heath Herring |
20 | Sergei Kharitonov |
21 | Jake O'Brien |
22 | Jeff Monson |
23 | Shane Carwin |
24 | Brock Lesnar |
25 | Kimbo Slice |
Top 25 Light Heavyweights
Rank | Fighter's Name |
---|---|
1 | Quinton Jackson |
2 | Chuck Liddell |
3 | Dan Henderson |
4 | Forrest Griffin |
5 | Keith Jardine |
6 | Lyoto Machida |
7 | Mauricio Rua |
8 | Wanderlei Silva |
9 | Rashad Evans |
10 | Thiago Silva |
11 | Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou |
12 | Antonio Rogerio Nogueira |
13 | Ricardo Arona |
14 | Tito Ortiz |
15 | Vladimir Matyushenko |
16 | Wilson Gouveia |
17 | Renato Sobral |
18 | Jason Lambert |
19 | Matt Hamill |
20 | Marvin Eastman |
21 | James Irvin |
22 | Brian Stann |
23 | Tim Boetsch |
24 | Kazuhiro Nakamura |
25 | Houston Alexander |
Top 25 Middleweights
Rank | Fighter's Name |
---|---|
1 | Anderson Silva |
2 | Paulo Filho |
3 | Dan Henderson |
4 | Rich Franklin |
5 | Matt Lindland |
6 | Robbie Lawler |
7 | Yushin Okami |
8 | Nathan Marquardt |
9 | Denis Kang |
10 | Frank Trigg |
11 | Jason Miller |
12 | Kazuo Misaki |
13 | Jorge Santiago |
14 | Cung Le |
15 | Yoshihiro Akiyama |
16 | Ryan McGivern |
17 | Frank Shamrock |
18 | Chael Sonnen |
19 | Michael Bisping |
20 | Thales Leites |
21 | Kala Kolohe Hose |
22 | Murilo Rua |
23 | Matt Horwich |
24 | Nate Quarry |
25 | Jason MacDonald |
Top 25 Welterweights
Rank | Fighter's Name |
---|---|
1 | Georges St. Pierre |
2 | Jon Fitch |
3 | Matt Hughes |
4 | Josh Koscheck |
5 | Jake Shields |
6 | Matt Serra |
7 | Diego Sanchez |
8 | Carlos Condit |
9 | Thiago Alves |
10 | Hayato Sakurai |
11 | Karo Parisyan |
12 | Marcus Davis |
13 | Jay Hieron |
14 | Nick Thompson |
15 | Drew Fickett |
16 | Akira Kikuchi |
17 | Akihiro Gono |
18 | Antonio McKee |
19 | Joey Villasenor |
20 | Eddie Alvarez |
21 | Chris Wilson |
22 | Chris Lytle |
23 | Delson Heleno |
24 | Brett Cooper |
25 | Rory Markham |
Top 25 Lightweights
Rank | Fighter's Name |
---|---|
1 | BJ Penn |
2 | Takanori Gomi |
3 | Gesias Calvancante |
4 | Gilbert Melendez |
5 | Mitsuhiro Ishida |
6 | Tatsuya Kawajiri |
7 | Sean Sherk |
8 | Shinya Aoki |
9 | Vitor Ribeiro |
10 | Joachim Hansen |
11 | Roger Huerta |
12 | Joe Stevenson |
13 | Kenny Florian |
14 | Clay Guida |
15 | Ryan Schultz |
16 | Nick Diaz |
17 | Tyson Griffin |
18 | Gray Maynard |
19 | Josh Thomson |
20 | Jamie Varner |
21 | Frank Edgar |
22 | Jorge Masvidal |
23 | Chris Horodecki |
24 | Jim Miller |
25 | Nate Diaz |
Top 100 fighters: http://www.hdnetfights.com/insidemma.php
Liddell responds to Kimbo's response
Liddell actually comes off as level headed and as having a better argument than Kimbo here:
"All I said is fight to someone real," Liddell said. "The only guy he lost to in his street-fight things came into the UFC and lost. Fight a guy that is real and fight a guy... who has a few wins in MMA, and then talk about it."
Liddell was referencing Sean Gannon, a former Boston police officer who answered Ferguson's open call for opponents to fight in bare-knuckle bouts. The chaotic fight ended in victory for Gannon. The notoriety he earned from the widely distributed video earned Gannon an invitation to the UFC, where he suffered a bloody first-round TKO loss to Brandon Lee Hinkle. Gannon hasn't fought professionally since the defeat.
"Before he talks about fighting me, he might want to think about beating somebody that has a winning record," Liddell said. "He's an Internet sensation who beat up guys at Taco Bell. Come on. How hard is that to do?"
Liddell also criticized Bo Cantrell, who was Ferguson's opponent in his second professional fight.
"That first fight they had on HDNet, he fought a guy that had been knocked out two times before in less than 30 seconds, and he tapped on his way down in [that] one," Liddell said. "That was three fights that he lost in less than 30 seconds. How many guys do you know who's done that?
"Talk about a tomato can."
----------
Source:
From an interview with the Dallas-based "Rear Naked Radio" radio show and again questioned Ferguson's body of work.
Friday, April 25, 2008
UFC 85: Forget Chuck, check out these fights...
Matt Hughes vs. Thiago Alves (the guy who just KO'd Karo Parisyan)
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Kimbo responds to Liddell
Props: KSBY 6 Action News
Quoteworthy:
“I think this is a huge setback for this fight, and it’s a huge setback for the UFC and this England show. But in the grand scheme of things for Chuck Liddell’s future, I think it’s just a minor setback because I think his hammy is going to heal up 110 percent and he’s going to be back stronger than ever.”
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Damian Maia vs. Ed Herman
The best jiu-jitsu I've seen in the UFC ever? Maybe!
Latest in the UFC
This picture is worth a thousands words for all the critics who incorrectly surmised that f
Word on the street is Bisping vs. Leben the same night to help make up for it, but that won't be a main event fight, they're looking into that still. Still, Leben, who always draws controversy and is usually on the winning or losing end of a KO, is a very exciting fighter and Bisping, who dishes it out on the feet, needs prove he's ready for a shot at Anderson Silva and this would be a good fight to showcase him and build up the cred required to take on the Spider.
Secondly, Din Thomas is dropping down to 145 to get out of the LW division which is so crowded with potential contenders that it just doesn't make sense to stick it out since a guy like him needs about four or five wins in a row just to climb back up (he's dropped two fights).
“The UFC’s lightweight division is the most complex division in the world. There’s like four different roads to a title shot going on right now and within any of the roads, no one can afford to lose. While I know I can win against any lightweight in the world on a given day, I fell twice in a row. Therefore, I’m going to bow out. Good luck to those guys. I’m going to drop down to 145 lbs and see if those guys down there will embrace me.”
Third, "big ups" to my bud Chris for letting me stop by to see the GSP fight and for going back and letting me watch the highlights of the card. UFC 83 was not the most spectacular card ever, but there was some very good fights and, most importantly, GSP is back on top and ready for Jon Fitch who is only the second fighter ever to go 8-0 in the UFC (he's won 15 in a row if you count his previous seven bouts before entering the UFC). Fitch poses a serious threat to GSP in all areas except striking which I think GSP has a clear advantage. Fitch has a strong wrestling background and has pulled off a few wins by submission in the UFC. He beat Diego Sanchez but not necessarily in a dominant fashion which leads me to believe GSP should be able to handle him. Fitch has been talking some $%&# lately about GSP because he wants to hype this up. His prediction about a fight with St. Pierre: "I'll take the strap [belt]."
The UFC 84 official website is up and Gmail - Compose Mail - djtodd@gmail.comrunning CHECK IT OUT HERE. This is a card I am not going to miss. I think it's solid, top to bottom. Check it out:
Main Card
- Lightweight Championship bout: B.J. Penn vs. Sean Sherk[1]
- Light Heavyweight bout: Tito Ortiz vs. Lyoto Machida[1]
- Light Heavyweight bout: Wanderlei Silva vs. Keith Jardine[1]
- Light Heavyweight bout: Thiago Silva vs. Antonio Mendes[1]
- Light Heavyweight bout: Wilson Gouveia vs. Goran Reljic[1]
Preliminary Card
- Light Heavyweight bout: Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou vs. Kazuhiro Nakamura[1]
- Welterweight bout: Jon Koppenhaver vs Yoshiyuki Yoshida[1]
- Lightweight bout: Rich Clementi vs Terry Etim[1]
- Middleweight bout: Rousimar Palhares vs Ivan Salaverry[1]
- Welterweight bout: Jason Tan vs Dong Hyun Kim[1]
- Heavyweight bout: Christian Wellisch vs Shane Carwin[1]
Finally, Hughes still wants a piece of Serra which isn't suprising. I think it'd be a fairly easy fight for Hughes and come on! He hasn't forgotten all the crap Serra was spewing!
“GSP had a good game plan to take Matt Serra down and wear him out. I found myself rooting for Serra at the end of the second round, I wanted him to make it to the third round. I thought if it would get to the third round GSP would decide to stand up with him and possibly knock him out. I just wanted Matt to get beat on for five rounds, not just two; but I knew the ref was about ready to stop it. The UFC said that if Serra loses I get him, but I don’t know when that will be. I’m going to guess six to eight months, so I’ve found myself watching my diet and exercising more.” -Matt Hughes
--
A fool dreams of wealth; a wise man, of happiness.
Friday, April 18, 2008
UFC 83 Canadian MMAnia!
170 lbs.: Matt Serra (169.5) vs. Georges St. Pierre (169.5)
185 lbs.: Rich Franklin (185.5) vs. Travis Lutter (185)
185 lbs.: Michael Bisping (185.5) vs. Charles McCarthy (186)
155 lbs.: Mac Danzig (154.5) vs. Mark Bocek (154.5)
185 lbs.: Kalib Starnes (186) vs. Nate Quarry (185.5) — swing bout
185 lbs.: Jason MacDonald (185) vs. Joe Doerksen (184.5)
185 lbs.: Alan Belcher (185) vs. Jason Day (183.5)
185 lbs.: Ed Herman (185.5) vs. Demian Maia (184.5)
155 lbs.: Sam Stout (155.5) vs. Rich Clementi (155)
265 lbs.: Cain Velasquez (235.5) vs. Brad Morris (225.5)
170 lbs.: Jonathan Goulet (169.5) vs. Kuniyoshi Hironaka (170)
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
“We’ll see what is he going to say after my next fight with Serra if I’m afraid to get knocked out. Maybe he’s going to change his mind. Tell him to wait one more fight before saying stuff like that and maybe after that he’s going to change his mind.”
– Interim welterweight champion, Georges St. Pierre, shares his thoughts via MMAWeekly.com on what top 170-pound contender, Jon Fitch, said right here. St. Pierre will battle Matt Serra this weekend at UFC 83 for the undisputed welterweight crown. The winner of that bout will more than likely take on Fitch next because it is widely believe that he has earned the next title shot.
Jon Fitch: Georges St. Pierre is ‘afraid to get knocked out’ (Video)By: MMAmania
Props: UFC.com
How Dangerous is MMA?
MMA injuries report: A five-year review (2002-2007)By: MMAmania
Props: BJSM.BMJ.com
Quoteworthy:
“During the 635 professional MMA matches, 300 of the 1,270 athletes sustained documented injuries with an injury rate of 23.6 per 100 fight participations. Most common reported injuries were lacerations and upper extremity injuries. Severe concussion rate was 15.4 per 1,000 athlete exposures, or 3% of all matches. No deaths or critical sports-related injuries resulted from any of the regulated matches during the study period. Age, weight, and fight experience did not statistically increase the likelihood of injuries after controlling for other covariates.”
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine recently published a report of a five year study of injuries sustained during sanctioned mixed martial arts competition that took place in Nevada. The conclusion: the overall risk of critical sports-related injury appears low. Take that, haters.
Monday, April 14, 2008
Staph infections are a NASTY part of MMA!
Staph (pronounced "staff") is medical quick speak for staphylococcus aureus bacteria. This pesky little bacterium is very common (many people have some living on their skin all the time), but when it enters the human body, usually through an open cut or break in the skin, it can cause infection and trouble anywhere in the body. St
Pictures of Staph infection MMA-style
By: MMAmaniaNot too long ago former UFC heavyweight champion, Kevin Randleman, was the clear-cut winner when it came to the most gruesome-looking staph infection.
Well, I’m nauseated to report that “The Monster” could have some competition thanks to grapefruit-sized lesion that recently grew in the hamstring area of Drew McFedries.
Check out the gore after the jump if you dare. Both fighters, for what it’s worth, made full recoveries.
I, however, have not.
Note that McFedries is on the left and Randleman is on the right (it was located just under his armpit.)
MMA Weekly World MMA Rankings
We take into consideration a fighter's performance in addition to his win-loss record, head-to-head and common opponents, difficulty of opponents, and numerous other factors in what is the most comprehensive rankings system in the sport.
Fighters who are currently serving drug-related suspensions are not eligible for Top 10 consideration until they have fought one time after the completion of their suspension.
Fighters must also have competed within the past 12 months in order to be eligible for Top 10 consideration.
Below are the current MMAWeekly World MMA Rankings, which are up-to-date as of April 2.
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION (over 205 pounds)
#1 Heavyweight Fighter in the World: Fedor Emelianenko
2. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
3. Randy Couture
4. Josh Barnett
5. Tim Sylvia
6. Andrei Arlovski
7. Fabricio Werdum
8. Gabriel Gonzaga
9. Mirko Cro Cop Filipovic
10. Aleksander Emelianenko
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION (205-pound limit)
#1 Light Heavyweight Fighter in the World: Quinton Jackson
2. Mauricio "Shogun" Rua
3. Chuck Liddell
4. Lyoto Machida
5. Keith Jardine
6. Forrest Griffin
7. Wanderlei Silva
8. Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou
9. Ricardo Arona
10. Antonio Rogerio Nogueira
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
MIDDLEWEIGHT DIVISION (185-pound limit)
#1 Middleweight Fighter in the World: Anderson Silva
2. Paulo Filho
3. Rich Franklin
4. Denis Kang
5. Robbie Lawler
6. Nathan Marquardt
7. Kazuo Misaki
8. Yushin Okami
9. Dan Henderson
10. Frank Trigg
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
WELTERWEIGHT DIVISION (170-pound limit)
#1 Welterweight Fighter in the World: Georges St. Pierre
2. Matt Serra
3. Jon Fitch
4. Matt Hughes
5. Josh Koscheck
6. Karo Parisyan
7. Jake Shields
8. Diego Sanchez
9. Carlos Condit
10. Marcus Davis
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
LIGHTWEIGHT DIVISION (160-pound limit)
#1 Lightweight Fighter in the World: Takanori Gomi
2. Tatsuya Kawajiri
3. Shinya Aoki
4. Gesias "JZ" Calvancante
5. Mitsuhiro Ishida
6. Gilbert Melendez
7. B.J. Penn
8. Vitor "Shaolin" Ribeiro
9. Joe Stevenson
10. Joachim Hansen
Kimbo vs. Chuck...it's possible!
Props: DeadSpin.com
Quoteworthy:
“If he [Kimbo] fought anybody that mattered, I would book [Chuck Liddell] tomorrow…. The fact is, Kimbo’s not there yet. He would get destroyed. I heard he just got knocked out by Forrest Griffin last week in a sparring match after a kick to the head.”
UFC President Dana White admits that he’s open to the possibility of setting up a fight between former UFC light heavyweight champion, Chuck Liddell, and EliteXC star — and former Miami streetbrawler — Kimbo Slice. Two things have to happen first, however: Kimbo has to become a better fighter and he has to sign with promotion — White no longer cross promotes. That day might not be too far away. Sam Caplan reminds us that Slice inked a four-fight deal and his next bout against James Thompson in May will be the third under the existing contract. We know that Chuck will be down … Kimbo bothers him.
Great Article on GSP
By Thomas Gerbasi
It’s easy to be jealous of Georges St-Pierre. In a land full of smashed noses, scar tissue, and missing teeth, he’s old Hollywood in style and demeanor. His effortless grace also translates to his day job, where he’s seemingly the one who always gets things right the first time, with his repeated drilling only to benefit muscle memory, not the search for a perfection in execution he’s apparently reached already.
That’s why your girlfriend or wife, who can’t recall any fighters not named Chuck Liddell, knows who St-Pierre is; it’s why your nephews, who haven’t been up to speed on fighting since Mike Tyson was wrecking the heavyweight division, will throw out a sidekick and blurt “GSP baby”; and why 22,000 people will be packing the Bell Centre in Montreal for St-Pierre’s challenge of UFC welterweight champion Matt Serra this Saturday.
He’s who you wanted to be when you were a kid and thought it would be cool to be a professional prizefighter. You didn’t want to be the one buried on the undercard, grinding out decisions; you wanted to be the guy with the fantastic finishes in the main event, the guy who got the girl when it was all over.
Funny, even St-Pierre wanted to be Georges St-Pierre when growing up in St. Isidore.
“I started karate when I was seven years old, and at the time I was inspired by Jean Claude Van Damme in Bloodsport, Arnold Schwarzenegger and those kinds of actors,” St-Pierre told UFC.com. “I always wanted to be like the guy in Bloodsport, someone who was a champion in martial arts.”
And he was good, very good, at whatever he chose to do when it came to athletics.
“Even growing up when I was a kid, I always was the best,” he said in the most modest tone you can when making a statement like that. “I’m a very athletic guy and very competitive and I was the best runner, the best in the jumping competition, and the best in hockey and basketball.”
It was then that St-Pierre was cursed, destined to always be followed by the tag “natural”, as if he was able to roll out of bed and onto the ice, court, or mat and just win. To those who categorized him as simply a gifted athlete, there was no work involved in his exploits, no strategizing, no effort. They were wrong, and early on, St-Pierre found out just what it took to be the best on a consistent basis.
“There is something to have the skill, but I think you have to have more because skill is not enough,” he said. “You need to be ready to sacrifice. I think that’s what helped me – I was very skilled and athletic, but I’m also ready to make the sacrifices that it takes to reach the top.”
As he got older, those sacrifices entailed being left behind on Friday and Saturday nights by friends who thought that better company could be found at the clubs in Montreal than in a sweat-soaked gym.
“I’m in the prime of my life, and normally people my age go out a lot, they drink, and a lot of them take drugs, I’m not gonna lie,” he said. “I know that’s not something good for me. When I’m training for a fight and my friends are calling me to go out, I have to stay home. That’s one of the sacrifices I have to make and it’s pretty hard sometimes.”
It brought to mind the Muhammad Ali quote that has since been immortalized on motivational posters: “The fight is won or lost, far away from witnesses. It is won behind the lines, in the gym and out there on the road, long before I dance under those lights.”
There were no autograph signings or photo shoots in the gym in those days, no endless ringing of his cell phone for interview requests. In fact, by the time St-Pierre made his pro debut in 2002 at the age of 20, he wasn’t whisked into press conferences and given astronomical signing bonuses like other athletic prodigies. He was a gifted young athlete competing in what was then perceived as an outlaw sport, since the MMA scene in Canada was promising, but not yet showing the signs of mainstream acceptance that were cropping up in the United States.
“Especially where I come from, hockey is the number one sport, but I knew it was a question of time before fighting was going to be big here,” he said. “Montreal has always been a fight town. People love boxing and wrestling here and I think they’re going to like the UFC even more.”
But when you’re in an ‘outlaw’ sport, you’re perceived to be an outlaw yourself. That’s good when you’re looking to supplement your income with jobs as a bouncer at local clubs, but not when trying to convince people that you’re not only a serious athlete, but one who competes in a real sport, not a bloody spectacle.
“Back in the day, people thought I was crazy,” said St-Pierre. “Now, people know that it’s a real sport and that I’m training just as much as somebody who’s training for the Olympic Games or any other professional sport. I always knew that it was only a matter of time. And I don’t blame those people because I understand it. I can put myself in their position and try to see my sport from the outside. I know it’s violent, but when you don’t understand it, it makes it look even worse.”
Eventually though, mixed martial arts, and the UFC in particular, broke out - not only in the States, but in Canada, where the posterboy for the movement was St-Pierre: gifted, good-looking, and a gentleman. Not that he would take credit for that.
“I’m not going to say that I’m THE guy in Canada,” he says almost sheepishly. “There are a lot of very good fighters here in Canada, and one of the reasons why I think I’m so successful is because I have great training partners. Of course a lot of them are from the United States, but a lot of them are from Montreal and other parts of Canada. I feel that I’m lucky that I grew up in a fight town where boxing is very popular, and we have a lot of great boxers, great wrestlers, and great martial artists, and when you mix everything together, you have a good mixed martial arts fighter.”
‘Good’ wouldn’t be the adjective most would use for St-Pierre as he put together a 7-1 record in his first eight UFC fights. Included on his ledger were victories over BJ Penn, Karo Parisyan, Sean Sherk, Frank Trigg, and Jason ‘Mayhem’ Miller. The only loss – in 2004 to Matt Hughes – was avenged in emphatic fashion at UFC 65 in November of 2006. Georges St-Pierre – ‘The Natural’ – was a world champion and everything was going according to the Hollywood script. Questions of his longevity as champion weren’t addressed in terms of title defenses, but in years. You don’t knock a future Hall of Famer like Hughes out if you’re average; you don’t survive a five minute onslaught from Penn and come back to win the next two rounds and the fight; and you don’t walk through guys like Sherk and Trigg if you’re just another fighter.
But the fall, like all great falls in hindsight, seemed to be inevitable. Matt Serra, a veteran fighter whose shining attribute may be his tenacity, never got the press St-Pierre got, never got the pats on the back, and never got the marketing push. He’s a New Yawker through and through whose infectious personality endears him to everyone, even his opponents. But when the bell rings, it’s all business for the 30-something Serra, a true believer in the adage that old age (well, relatively) and treachery will overcome youth and skill. Translated to MMA terms, Serra’s experience and gameplan on April 7, 2007 took apart a St-Pierre who found out in Texas, of all places, that he was human just like everyone else. Maybe he was even
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more human than most of us, as a maelstrom of personal issues leading up to the fight took his focus off what most believed to be a routine first title defense.
“After my loss with Serra I’ve been accused of not being mentally tough, but a lot of things happened to me, and it’s really personal stuff,” said St-Pierre, who gracefully addressed perhaps the most asked question of him these days. “People read some stuff, but they have no idea what happened to me. The reason why I don’t want to talk about it is because a lot of it concerns people in my family. I have a public life because I’m a professional fighter and I accept the fact that people talk about my personal life. But I don’t want people to talk about the personal lives of people in my family who don’t have a public life, who don’t ask to have their personal lives written about. I think if any person went through what I went through last time, it would affect them. But I will never let that happen again.”
Suddenly, no one was jealous of Georges St-Pierre any more.
“If I was more experienced in fighting and in life, I would not have made the same mistakes I made,” he said. “I don’t think it’s a mental weakness, it’s more a lack of experience in life. I’m 26 years old and I’ve learned from the mistakes I’ve made. I only have 17 fights and I’m almost always fighting guys who are over 30 years old and most of the time have over 30 fights. Of course those people have the edge in experience on me. So I have to be smart and use my athleticism and my skills to beat those people because in experience, I always come short because they have more fight and more life experience.”
What didn’t help St-Pierre’s cause were a series of post-fight interviews that changed his tone from congratulatory towards Serra to one where he was painted as a sore loser. Serra, who was cordial with his opponent before and immediately after the bout, fired back in the press, and it has subsequently gotten ugly at times between the two, and when it’s not, it’s frosty at best. St-Pierre has had enough of the talk.
“After the fight, no matter what happens, I’m gonna shake Matt Serra’s hand,” he said. “A lot of things have been said, some stuff crossed the line a little bit, but I think Matt Serra is a good person and I want to fight the best Matt Serra for my honor. I want to be the real champion, and I want to beat the champion when he’s at his best, and I’m sure it’s the same thing for him. After the fight, win, lose, no matter, I’m gonna shake his hand and maybe we can have a drink together.”
Following what will one day be deemed the ‘dark days’ of his fighting career, St-Pierre cleaned house in his personal and professional life, and having survived the slings and arrows of his detractors, from both in and out of the fight game, he has become a different, and maybe even better, fighter. A dominant decision win over Josh Koscheck last August and a submission win over Hughes in their December rubber match have served to again make St-Pierre a favorite over Serra leading into their Saturday rematch.
But St-Pierre is not the same man or fighter he was a year ago. He’s not invincible, and he knows that talent – natural or otherwise – won’t always get it done. The list of otherworldly talents who have failed in spectacular fashion in all sports is nearly endless; it’s the ones who rise from adversity that are truly special. St-Pierre believes he’s one of those special ones. On April 19th, he gets the chance to show the rest of us.
Half wits abound...
St. Pierre responds to Sell's "mental midget" comments
St. Piere has now issued a response to those and other accusations made by Sell.
Back in April 2007, St. Pierre lost his title to Serra in one of the sport's biggest upsets. After the loss, St. Pierre mentioned a few reasons for the loss, which didn't go over well with Serra and his camp.
"GSP is an awesome athlete," Sell originally told fightticker.com. "He has all the tools to dominate, but he is a mental midget. His mentality is very weak."
Sell specifically mentioned that St. Pierre "flip-flopped" after the fight. St. Pierre first had nothing in the way of an excuse for the loss, but in later interviews, he said he didn't train properly and had been dealing with an injury.
"I don't like how his story changed," Sell said.
In a recent interview with the Winnipeg Sun, St. Pierre was asked about Sell's comments, which included a him saying that St. Pierre was the type of guy who would back down from a bar-room fight.
St. Pierre agreed with the claim.
"Of course I'm not going to fight in a club," St. Pierre said. "It's just not my thing. If it doesn't involve me personally or my family, I will avoid it. I believe if you're a good person and treat people nicely, that incident wouldn't arise. I think those situations happen to people who are uncomfortable with themselves or try to look tough or act like fighters. You attract what you look like. I don't have anything to prove. When I fight, I do it for a living."
St. Pierre, who won the UFC's interim title with a victory over Matt Hughes in December, meets Serra in the main event of Saturday's UFC 83 event, which takes place at the Bell Centre in Montreal.
(Touch of gloves: TKO Xtreme)
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Coming down the pipe
UPCOMING UFC EVENTS:
UFC 83: “Serra vs. St. Pierre II”
Saturday, April 19, 2008, at 10 p.m. ET on pay-per-view (PPV)
The Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada
Main Event: |
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UFC Welterweight Champion Matt Serra vs. Interim UFC Welterweight Champion Georges St. Pierre |
Undercard:
185 lbs. | Rich Franklin (22-3) vs. Travis Lutter (9-4) |
---|---|
185 lbs. | Kalib Starnes (8-2-1) vs. Nate Quarry (9-2) |
185 lbs. | Michael Bisping (15-1) vs. Charles McCarthy (10-4) |
155 lbs. | Mac Danzig (17-4-1) vs. Mark Bocek (5-1) |
185 lbs. | Alan Belcher (12-4) vs. Jason Day (15-5) |
185 lbs. | Jason MacDonald (19-9) vs. Joe Doerksen (39-11) |
155 lbs. | Sam Stout (13-3-1) vs. Rich Clementi (30-12-1) |
185 lbs. | Ed Herman (14-5) vs. Demian Maia (6-0) |
265 lbs. | Cain Velasquez (2-0) vs. Brad Morris (10-2) |
170 lbs. | Jonathan Goulet (21-9) vs. Kuniyoshi Hironaka (11-4) |
*Fight not yet officially confirmed by UFC.com.
UFC 84
Saturday, May 24, 2008, at 10 p.m. ET on pay-per-view (PPV)
MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada
Main Event: |
---|
UFC Lightweight Champion B.J. Penn (12-4-1) vs. Sean Sherk (32-2-1)* |
Undercard:
205 lbs. | Tito Ortiz (15-5-1) vs. Lyoto Machida (12-0) |
---|---|
205 lbs. | Thiago Silva (12-0) vs. Antonio Mendes (14-2) |
205 lbs. | Wanderlei Silva (31-8-1) vs. Keith Jardine (13-3-1) |
205 lbs. | Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou (4-2) vs. Kazuhiro Nakamura (11-7) |
185 lbs. | Rousimar Palhares (7-1) vs. Ivan Salaverry (12-5)* |
205 lbs. | Goran Reljic (7-0) vs. Wilson Gouveia (10-4)* |
170 lbs. | Jon Koppenhaver (5-1) vs. Yoshiyuki Yoshida (9-2) |
170 lbs. | Dong Hyun Kim (9-1-1) vs. Jason Tan (5-2) |
155 lbs. | Terry Etim (10-1) vs. Jeremy Stephens (13-2)* |
265 lbs. | Shane Carwin (8-0) vs. Christian Wellisch (8-3)* |
*Fight not yet officially confirmed by UFC.com.
UFC 85
Saturday, June 7, 2008, on pay-per-view (PPV)
The O2 Arena in London, England
Main Event: |
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Chuck Liddell (21-5) vs. Rashad Evans (11-0-1) |
Undercard:
265 lbs. | Brandon Vera (8-1) vs. Fabricio Werdum (10-3-1) |
---|---|
170 lbs | Mike Swick (11-2) vs. Marcus Davis (14-3) |
185 lbs. | Martin Kampmann (15-2) vs. Jorge Rivera (15-6) |
185 lbs. | Nate Marquardt (26-7) vs. Thales Leites (12-1) |
205 lbs. | Jason Lambert (23-7) vs. Luis Arthur Cane (7-1) |
170 lbs. | Roan Carneiro (12-6) vs. Ryo Chonan (14-8)* |
155 lbs | Thiago Tavares (13-1) vs. Matt Wiman (9-3) |
170 lbs | Jess Liaudin (12-9) vs. Paul Taylor (8-3-1)* |
*Fight not yet officially confirmed by UFC.com.
UFC 86
Saturday, July 5, 2008, at 10 p.m. ET on pay-per-view (PPV)
Las Vegas, Nevada
Main Event: |
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UFC Light Heavyweight Quinton “Rampage” Jackson vs. Forrest Griffin |
Undercard:
155 lbs | Joe Stevenson (28-8) vs. Gleison Tibau (15-5)* |
---|---|
170 lbs | Josh Koscheck (10-2) vs. Chris Lytle (25-15)* |
155 lbs | Cole Miller (13-3) vs. TBA* |
170 lbs | Ben Saunders (5-0-2) vs. TBA* |
155 lbs | Steve Bruno (11-3) vs. TBA* |