
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Cro Cop Talks...and TUF7 thoughts

Mirko Cro Cop — the Pride FC 2006 Open Weight Grand Prix Champion and three-fight UFC veteran — today held a live chat with fans over at MMA-ID.com.
He answered a ton of questions, including his plan to compete twice more under the DREAM banner and return to the Octagon to avenge losses to Gabriel Gonzaga and Cheick Kongo. In addition, the Croatian is set on rematching Fedor Emelianenko on New Year’s Eve — regardless of the promotion.
Cro Cop also shared his “positive” thoughts on the creepy Jean Claude Van Damme, his Indiana Jones complex (he hates snakes), his favorite movie (”HEAT”), as well as dares a chat participant who calls him a “pussy” to “come and say that in front of” him.
Good stuff … check it when you can.
-----------
We'll see about all that!
I just finished watching the second episode of TUF7 and it was pretty good. I am a lot more interested in the upcoming fights now that we've seen these guys bang it out. Some of the winners looked really impressive while others seem to have gotten by on raw energy and, perhaps, some luck. Anyway, I have something to look forward to on Wed. nights when Sarah goes to bed and it looks like the finale is going to have some crazy fights in addition to the guys from the reality show:Diego Sanchez vs. Luigi Fioravanti
Kendall Grove vs. Evan Tanner
Josh Burkeman vs. Dustin Hazelett
Marvin Eastman vs. Drew McFedries
Middleweight Tournament Finals
The fight between Eastman and McFedries will likely end in a KO.
Eastman "Beastman"

VS
McFedries (I don't like this dude but he's got KO power)

Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Kombo's next opponent: James Thompson
MAJOR NATIONAL NETWORK TV will be:
James Thompson (British)

Kimbo Slice (from the ghetto of the good ole fashion US of A)

James Thompson...he's a can. He looks cool...big, buff, mean...but he got KO'd by none other than fatty himself, Eric "Butterbean" Esch, just LAST YEAR!!! He's lost his last two fights by KO. So, are they trying to build up Kimbo Slice. . .absolutely. I don't have anything against Kimbo as a fighter, it's just frustrating to see all the smoke and mirrors being used to build up his image and persona. Also, I don't like street fighting and since that's where he was born as a fighter, they/he want to put forth that image and I think someday he'll have a rude awakening at the hands of a real mixed martial artist.

Get more pictures like this from SHERDOG.COM
More on Thompson:
Name | James Thompson |
Nick Name | The Colossus |
Record | 14 - 8 - 0 (Win - Loss - Draw) |
Wins | 9 (T)KOs (64.29%) 4 Submissions (28.57%) 1 Decisions (7.14%) |
Losses | 7 (T)KOs (87.50%) 1 Submissions (12.50%) |
Association | Team Trojan |
Height | 6'5 (196cm) |
Weight | 264lbs (120kg) |
Birth Date | 12/16/1978 |
Country | England |
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Friday, April 4, 2008
UFN 13 After thoughts

Ben Stiller? No, that's arguably one of the best lightweights in the world...and he just called out Roger Huerta.
UFN 13 was awesome! I have seen a lot of "free" MMA on TV and this was, by far, the best card that's ever been put out for free both on paper and as it played out.
SPOILER ALERT***
UFN 13 results:
Anthony Johnson def. Tommy Speer, TKO, 0:51 R1 <--this was really more of a KO IMHO George Sotiropolous def. Roman Mitchyan, TKO, 2:24 R2 <--televised Clay Guida def. Sammy Schiavo, TKO, 4:15 R1 <--also televised Manny Gamburyan def. Geoffrey Cox, submission (guillotine), 1:41 R1 <--televised Marcus Aurelio def. Ryan Roberts, submission (armbar), 0:16 R1 <-untelevised Josh Neer def. Din Thomas, unanimous decision <-untelevised
James Irvin def. Houston Alexander, TKO, 0:08 R1
Nate Diaz def. Kurt Pellegrino, submission (tiangle choke), 3:06 R2
Matt Hamill def. Tim Boetsch, TKO, 1:25 R2
Thiago Alves def. Karo Parisyan, TKO, 0:34 R2;
Gray Maynard def. Frank Edgar, unanimous decision <--great fight despite the fact that it went all three rounds. Maynard looked awesome! He slammed Edgar at least two times and he looked clean in the stand-up. Edgar definitely looked too small for the "Bully" Kenny Florian def. Joe Lauzon, TKO, 3:28 R2
------------------
What I learned from the fights:
Although I like Lauzon, I was rooting for Florian and I figured he'd pull this one out, although it wouldn't be easy. Well, it was easier than I thought and even though Florian didn't make it look easy, he did win decisively and punished Lauzon with dozens and dozens of strikes. To be fair, it almost looked like J-Lau could have lasted the whole round; that said, they had to stop it because you could tell he wasn't going to get out of the bad spot and no one wants to see someone get hurt. Now, I am not going to put money on Kenny against Penn if he can get that far, but I'll say he's got a great chance at to beat Huerta if that fight goes down.
One thing Florian does well is drop 'bows:

Poor, poor Karo. This is the third time he's been knocking at the door of a title shot and had it slip away. I felt bad, and still do, for the guy...but if he can't get past a fighter who is, arguably, fairly one dimensional in Alves, then does he really deserve to be in the cage with the likes of GSP and Fitch?
I love Matt Hamill. He's not the most technical fighter, but he's undefeated (don't count the controversial loss to Bisping) and he's freaking deaf! Although his stand up needs to improve drastically still, he avoided getting knocked senseless with the brutal strikes from Boestch (although his lip did nearly get torn from his face from what I assume was that knee that landed) and his wrestling looked solid, as always.
Watch the fight, or at least part of it, here but hurry, Dana will pull this soon:
http://ufcpreview.com/id97.html
Since when is Gray Maynard such a great fighter? I was stunned by his excellent performance. I watched him on the Ultimate Fighter and he was a great wrestler but I didn't think he'd improve as much as he did. Wow. I did miss his last fight, maybe if I had seen it I would have seen this coming. I guess training at Xtreme Couture is the way to go! I thought for sure little Frankie Edgar would pull this one off. Edgar, who is a phenomenal wrestler, got tossed around like a rag doll despite his good strikes. I will say that Maynard's face looked pretty red and bumpy after the fight.
I have to say that although I am not a Diaz fan, I do like to watch him fight. He reminds me of an old school Gracie fighter and rightly so, he trains under the Gracies. He was getting worked in the first round and I thought the ref was going to have to end it at one point since Pellegrino was dropping some serious hammer fists to Diaz's face which showed it afterward. It was classic Diaz style when Nate ended up pulling guard, locked in the triangle, and flipped off the camera when he knew he was going to tap the Batman. Diaz by submission. Now let's see him break into the top 5 of the LW division. I will say, however, that Pellegrino is no push over and Diaz is looking good. This was probably the best finish of the night since Diaz was in so much trouble but came back and pulled off the win.
Houston Alexander. We still don't know about him yet...or was this answer to our questions. Does an eight second knockout mean he sucks? Has no chin? We all wanted to see this fight go a few minutes but a superman punch to the face tends to end things REAL QUICK. I can't stand Irvin and I want to see him fight a top 10 LHW next.
I still remember watching Anthony Johnson KO some guy last year on a UFN undercard with Ned and Dave and we were shocked because he was a late replacement. Well, he did it again by knocking Tommy Speer into another time zone with not one, but a series of vicious strikes. His striking is really clean and crisp. Some people are clamoring to see him fight GSP...what are they smoking? Yes he's extremely athletic, but he wouldn't even get into the pocket with GSP before he would eat some jabs and straights. Sure he made a wreslter look bad, but he needs to try some of the actual top dues of the WW division first like Sanchez, Karo, Alves, etc. before he asks for a Kos or Fitch or St. Pierre.
All right, that's it for now. Looking forward to April 19th!
Watch of bunch of fights, past and present, (albeit illegally) here:
http://ufcpreview.com/
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Finally! I really don't care that he's gone. Too bad the HW division is weak in the UFC
Former UFC heavyweight champion, Tim Sylvia, and the organization have mutually agreed to part ways, according to a recent interview that just aired on “Inside MMA” on the HDNet network.
The “Maine-iac” had one fight remaining on his existing deal.
During the announcement, he also revealed that he has signed a non-exclusive contract with the former M-1 Global promotion, which has been renamed to “Adrenaline MMA” after a recent split with its Russian counterpart.
In addition, Monte Cox — the head of Adrenaline MMA and Sylvia’s long-time agent — broke news that former IFL heavyweight stand out, Ben Rothwell, has also been inked to a deal.
Adrenaline MMA has targeted its debut show for June 14 at the Sears Center in Chicago, Illinois.
Sylvia mentioned that the split was amicable and that he intends to return to the Octagon later in his career.
The Miletich-trained fighter first debuted with the organization back in 2002, stopping Wesley “Cabbage” Correira via technical knockout at UFC 39: “The Warriors Return.”
Sylvia later went on to capture the heavyweight title on two different occasions when he stopped Ricco Rodriguez in 2003 and later Andrei Arlovski in 2006.
Monday, March 17, 2008
OK guys...
April 2, 2008 | ||
7:00 pm |
Event: UFC Fight Night 13
Date: Wednesday, April 2, 2008, at 7 p.m. ET on SpikeTV
Location: Broomfield Event Center in Broomfield, Colorado
Main event:
155 lbs.: Kenny Florian (7-3) vs. Joe Lauzon (16-3)
Main card (televised):
170 lbs.: Karo Parisyan (18-4) vs. Thiago Alves (13-3)
205 lbs.: Matt Hamill (the DEAF GUY we love) (3-1) vs. Tim Boetsch (7-1)
155 lbs.: Nate Diaz (8-2) vs. Kurt Pellegrino (11-3)
155 lbs.: Frank Edgar (8-0) vs. Gray Maynard (4-0)
205 lbs.: Houston Alexander (8-2) vs. James Irvin (13-4)
Under card (may not be broadcast):
155 lbs.: Marcus Aurelio (15-5) vs. Jim Miller (10-1)*
155 lbs.: Din Thomas (20-7) vs. Josh Neer (23-6-1)
155 lbs.: Manny Gamburyan (7-2) vs. Jeff Cox (9-4)
155 lbs.: Clay Guida (22-9) vs. Samy Schiavo (10-4)
170 lbs.: George Sotiropoulos (8-2) vs. Roman Mitichyan (5-1)
170 lbs.: Tommy Speer (9-2) vs. Anthony Johnson (4-1)
“I’m more ready than I ever have been in any MMA fight. I’m a lot stronger. I’m a lot faster. It might be scary.”
– Houston Alexander tells MMAWeekly.com to expect a scary good performance against James Irvin at UFC Fight Night 13 at the Broomfield Event Center in Broomfield, Colo. “The Nebraskan Assassin” will look to redeem himself after a loss to Thiago Silva, which he attributes to making a mistake.
Props: EvanTanner.net
Quoteworthy:
“Just talked with Joe Silva, the UFC matchmaker. He gave me a date and an opponent. Looks like I’ll be back in the Octagon this summer. It’s good to have a fight scheduled. The last two weeks have been really rough. I’ll tell the story on that in the next few days.”
Former UFC middleweight champion Evan Tanner is ready to get back in the saddle in the next few months after a knockout loss to Yushin Okami at UFC 82: “Pride of a Champion” earlier this month. Should be interesting to see who he’s matched up against — the list of notables is short with 12 185-pound fighters slated to compete in April alone.
Welterweights Jess Liaudin (12-9) and Paul Taylor (8-3-1) are booked to scrap on the UFC 85 fight card, which takes place at the O2 Arena in London, England, on June 7, according to a recent MySpace message from “The Joker.”
The 170-pound match up is actually a rematch — the two went toe-to-toe under the Cage Rage banner back in 2003 with Taylor pulling out a decision win.
Here’s a snip from Liaudin:
“On the 7th of June i will be doing my 4th fight in the UFC and will be fighting against Paul Taylor at UFC 85. I fought Paul about 6 years ago and lost a controversial decision (the fight is available on youtube) so it s a rematch. Paul is a well rounded fighter with good cardio, strength and a big heart. This fight is very important for me as my actual record in the UFC is 2-1 so another loss may mean that i can get booted out.”
Liaudin will look to rebound after a first round knockout loss to Marcus Davis at UFC 80: “Rapid Fire” earlier this year. Prior to the defeat he was on a five-fight win streak that included two victories inside the Octagon.
His upcoming opponent, Taylor, also has a loss to Davis on his record — a first round submission via armbar in a sensational fight. He followed up that performance with another loss to Paul Kelly via unanimous decision at UFC 80.
It’s safe to say that this fight is also extremely important to Taylor if he wants to remain a UFC fighter.
UFC 85 features the main even between former light heavyweight champion, Chuck Liddell, and undefeated challenger, Rashad Evans. To check out the remaining UFC 85 card click here.
Friday, March 14, 2008
Check out the schedule
UFC Fight Night 13
Time Wednesday, April 2, 2008, at 7 p.m. ET on SpikeTV
Broomfield Event Center in Broomfield, Colorado
Main Event:
Kenny Florian (7-3) vs. Joe Lauzon (16-3)
Undercard:
170 lbs. Karo Parisyan (18-4) vs. Thiago Alves (13-3)
205 lbs. Matt Hamill (3-1) vs. Tim Boetsch (7-1)
205 lbs. Houston Alexander (8-2) vs. James Irvin (13-4)
155 lbs. Nate Diaz (8-2) vs. Kurt Pellegrino (11-3)
155 lbs. Frank Edgar (8-0) vs. Gray Maynard (4-0)
155 lbs. Spencer Fisher (20-4) vs. Marcus Aurelio (15-5)
155 lbs. Din Thomas (20-7) vs. Josh Neer (23-6-1)
155 lbs. Clay Guida (22-9) vs. Samy Schiavo (10-4)
155 lbs. Manny Gamburyan (7-2) vs. Jeff Cox (9-4)
170 lbs. George Sotiropoulos (8-2) vs. Roman Mitichyan (5-1)
170 lbs. Tommy Speer (9-2) vs. Anthony Johnson (4-1)
*Fight not yet officially confirmed by UFC.com.
UFC 83: “Serra vs. St. Pierre II”
Time Saturday, April 19, 2008, at 10 p.m. ET on pay-per-view (PPV)
The Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada
Main Event:
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
Time 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. TBA*
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
Time Saturday, June 7, 2008, on pay-per-view (PPV)
The O2 Arena in London, England
Main Event:
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)*
170 lbs. Roan Carneiro (12-6) vs. Ryo Chonan (14-8)*
155 lbs Thiago Tavares (13-1) vs. Matt Wiman (9-3)*
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Important for the future of the Sport and of the UFC
by Dave Meltzer [dave-meltzer] on Mar 13, 2008 at 11:18 am in - News -
The May 24 match between Tito Ortiz and Lyoto Machida at UFC 84 from Las Vegas is among the most important matches of 2008.
Ortiz is a key component of a battle that ends with the last man left standing.
That battle isn't in a ring or a cage, but a business war for supremacy of the mixed martial arts industry.
Ortiz is the biggest of a host of name fighters whose UFC contracts will be expiring at a time in which a slew of new rival promotions are in desperate need of big-name fighters.
For groups such as EliteXC, which debuts soon on CBS, and Mark Cuban's HDNet Fights, the key to challenging the UFC's supremacy in the marketplace is having the right television exposure, the right stars, the right business sense and a degree of long-term planning and patience.
It is generally believed that barring a miracle reconciliation, Ortiz and UFC will part company when his contract expires. UFC will be gambling by airing Ortiz's match live on pay-per-view. Ortiz is a big enough name to help sell orders. The former UFC light heavyweight champion's contract calls for bonuses far beyond his $210,000 reported per-match figure, so the feeling is it's too much to pay without getting market value through heavily promoting his fight.
Machida should be favored to win the fight, but it's hardly a lock. It's a win the undefeated Machida needs if he's going to work into position for a shot at the light heavyweight title, and connect with an audience that has seen him win many times against lesser-known fighters, but has yet to react to him as a star.
But if Ortiz wins, he'll be a free agent at a time he's at the top of the list of the most famous mixed martial artists in the country, in a business with many potential suitors who are all in need of a recognizable star.
By himself, no one fighter is going to make a difference in a promotional war. But Ortiz, former heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski, Josh Koscheck, Mike Swick and two-time former heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia all have contracts that have either run out or are close to expiration. Losing most at the same time will give the public the impression the UFC must not be the be-all and end-all of the industry, particularly if several are seen shortly on a major television station with a competing promotion.
Ortiz, if he can pull off the right kind of a win, and then walk, is as strong a name to build around from a marquee standpoint as is out there, having headlined the two biggest pay-per-view events in history. He's been plagued by back problems for nearly five years, and Machida will be a real test of what he still has in the tank.
There may be plenty of fighters as good as Ortiz, but only two current fighters, Chuck Liddell and Randy Couture, have his star power and name value. When building a company, that means a whole lot more than having ranked fighters that the general public has never heard of on your roster.
None of the other four are locks to be re-signed either. Koscheck has publicly stated he wants to stay. UFC has offered him a substantial raise from the $10,000 base pay with a $10,000 winning bonus he was getting from the long-term deal he was given in 2005 when he was an unknown fighter signing to do the Ultimate Fighter reality show. But a better offer could come from elsewhere.
Swick faces an altogether different situation. While he beat Josh Burkman by decision in his last fight in January, he fought tepidly and the fight was terrible. He is the third of three fighters from the same American Kickboxing Academy team in UFC's welterweight division, with Koscheck and current No. 1 contender Jon Fitch. None of the three will fight each other, which makes keeping all three a potential problem. Of the three, Swick would be the lowest on the priority list.
Negotiations haven't gotten close with Arlovski, who is seen as a star by the UFC audience, and is a fighter one would think every U.S. promotion would be interested in as an athletic heavyweight with great takedown defense and good hands. But fans have waited more than two years for the return of the Arlovski who destroyed people in 2004 and 2005. That fighter hasn't been seen since he was brutally knocked out by Sylvia at UFC 59.
Sylvia, on the other hand, has never been popular with the UFC audience, but has been a fixture on top of the heavyweight division for five years.
UFC is attempting to replenish the heavyweight division by building around three projects, all decorated college wrestlers, Brock Lesnar, Cain Velasquez, an Arizona State All-American who debuts on April 19, and Shane Carwin, a Division II national champion who starts on May 24.
Last year brought three major players, the IFL, EliteXC and Bodog Fight, all of whom burned through tens of millions of dollars. IFL had a weekly Monday night television show in prime time nationwide on Mynetworktv, but didn't have or make the right stars, nor did they seem to have long-term planning. IFL no longer has that TV outlet and they have completely revamped their presentation.
EliteXC had a deal with Showtime, bought smaller promotions all over the world, and with a CBS prime time television deal have a shot at making a great impact this year. Bodog had a television show on Ion that nobody watched, spent millions in advertising, failed on pay-per-view, lost their TV and are no longer even running shows.
This year's key new players include Mark Cuban's HDNet Fights, looking to become a major player by using MMA as a key sport in building a new television station and seemingly having the best chance of promoting the elusive Fedor Emelianenko vs. Randy Couture fight. Affliction, the makers of the T-shirts that are a fixture in the world of MMA, is starting a company tentatively scheduled to debut in June, and is making a big play for a number of free agents, reportedly making big offers to the likes of Matt Lindland (who has signed with them), Josh Barnett and Ben Rothwell among others, for non-exclusive contracts and numbers far beyond what they would be earning in UFC.
Cuban has stated many times he's not interested in getting into a bidding war over the top talent. UFC has not talked publicly, but privately, their philosophy based on recent negotiations is to also not get caught up in bidding wars for talent.
Sunday, February 3, 2008
UFC 81 in the books!

The only fight I was able to find online tonight was Lesnar v. Mir. Lesnar was beating up on Mir but, as has been shown time and time again, technique and experience usually beat out brute strength and this time it was no different: a few minutes into round one, Mir submits the gargantuan Lesnar with a slick knee bar.
Some of my favorite guys won tonight including Tyson Griffin and Nate Marquardt. I still believe Nate could beat Anderson Silva. Too bad Dan Henderson will get that honor before he'll get a rematch.
Results (from UFCMANIA):
UFC 81 QUICK RESULTS:
Antonio Rodrigo “Minotauro” Nogueira defeats Tim Sylvia via submission (guillotine choke) in round three
Frank Mir defeats Brock Lesnar via submission (kneebar) in round one
Nate Marquardt defeats Jeremy Horn via submission (guillotine choke) in round two
Ricardo Almeida defeats Rob Yundt via submission (guillotine choke) in round one
Tyson Griffin defeats Gleison Tibau via unanimous decision
Chris Lytle defeats Kyle Bradley via technical knockout (strikes) in round one
Tim Boetsch defeats David Heath via technical knockout (strikes) in round one
Marvin Eastman defeats Terry Martin via unanimous decision
Rob Emerson defeats Keita Nakamura via split decision
Check out UFC.COM and then click on the multimedia tab to check out post fight interviews, etc. Lesnar will be back with a vengeance.
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
UFC 81
Check out the UFC 81 OFFICIAL PAGE HERE.
Syliva and Nog talk about the title fight (I hate Sylvia...he recently said he wants to have a "sexual experience" with the belt on like he did the first time he got it).
Mir and Lesnar
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Hey everyone...
Main event:
Antonio Rodrigo “Minotauro” Nogueira (30-4- 1) vs. Tim Sylvia (24-3) for interim UFC Heavyweight Championship
Main card (televised):Hvywt.: Frank Mir (10-3) vs. Brock Lesnar (1-0)
185 lbs.: Nate Marquardt (25-7-2) vs. Jeremy Horn (79-16-5)
185 lbs.: Alan Belcher (11-3) vs. Ricardo Almeida (8-2)Undercard (May not be broadcast):
155 lbs.: Tyson Griffin (10-1) vs. Gleison Tibau (15-4)
170 lbs.: Chris Lytle (24-15-5) vs. Kyle Bradley (13-4)
185 lbs.: Terry Martin (16-3) vs. Marvin Eastman (14-7-1)
185 lbs.: David Heath (7-2) vs. Tim Boetsch (6-1)
155 lbs.: Keita Nakamura (14-2-2) vs. Rob Emerson (6-6)Now from some posts from various mma blogs:
“I think I did good. I just got cut. I think it was getting better and better for me and sometimes you eat the bear and sometimes the bear eats you…. I just opened up a new school here in my hometown of Victorville and I want to take about 5 months off before my next fight. I want to do everything right. I got another baby on the way with my beautiful wife. I want to keep everything in line and go out there with no distractions.”
– Joe Stevenson tells FightHype.com that he plans to take some time off after his submission loss to BJ Penn at UFC 80: “Rapid Fire” during the fight for the vacant lightweight championship. In the first round of the match “Daddy” was cut with a well-placed elbow and bled like a stuck pig. It more than likely had a significant impact on the relatively quick result of the fight.
(Thanks to FightLinker.com for the tasty blood squirt image.)
Props: UFC.com
Quoteworthy:
– Former welterweight champion Matt Hughes sounds re-energized after a whirlwind book tour that took him across the United States. He checked in with Thomas Gerbasi at UFC.com to talk about the success of his biography, “Made in America,” (it’s #21 on the New York Times bestseller list), as well as assure fans that he will not retire after the second lopsided loss to Georges St. Pierre at UFC 79: “Nemesis” last month. In fact, he asked UFC President Dana White to match him up with his coaching counterpart on season six of The Ultimate Fighter (TUF), Matt Serra, ifs he loses to St. Pierre at UFC 84 in April. Hughes and Serra were supposed to fight at UFC 79 but Serra had to withdraw because of a serious injury he sustained to his back while training.“I told (UFC President) Dana (White) that I might take a little time off to see my family and because I’m starting this new gym, the H.I.T. Squad, and I’m getting my clothing line out there. But I want to see Georges and Matt fight, and I told Dana that I’d probably like to fight Matt Serra after that fight. If Matt loses, I’ll be looking to fight him. The fans will definitely see me in the Octagon again. I will be there.”
SOMETIME LATE THIS YEAR OR NEXT YEAR WE'LL SEE THE FIGHT EVERYONE WANTS, FEDOR vs. COUTURE:
Props: Sherdog.com
Diaz also mentions Kenny Florian, Kurt Pellegrino and Din Thomas specifically. He’s also a bit confused about the decision to let Joe Lauzon fight Florian when Diaz is the one who won The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 5.
Props: Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Quoteworthy:
“My next fight will probably be in the summer and I am thinking about Jardine since Jackson is already scheduled to fight (Forrest Griffin). I can’t wait around (for Jackson). I love the sport and I think I have a couple years left in me. I’m a very competitive person. I don’t even like to lose at things I’m not good at.”
Chuck Liddell reiterates that he wants to rematch Keith Jardine next — “The Dean of Mean” upset the “Iceman” at UFC 76: “Knockout” in September 2007. Liddell rebounded to defeat Wanderlei Silva in a thrilling three-round war at UFC 79: “Nemesis” in December 2007. Meanwhile, we haven’t heard much at all about Jardine (even though it was perhaps the biggest win of his career). Something tells me that whatever Chuck “thinks,” Chuck gets.
New pictures of UFC heavyweight fighter Mirko Cro Cop training have recently surfaced all over the Internet boards and blogs.
That normally wouldn’t be too newsworthy if it wasn’t for the fact the UFC President Dana White just announced over the weekend that the Croatian is “currently thinking about his future and is undecided about what his next move is.”
It’s a statement that contradicts recent comments from Cro Cop that he has five or six more fights left in the tank and was even interested in competing on the UFC 80: “Rapid Fire” card.
Something is not right. And with the heavyweight division all of a sudden void of numerous top contenders (again) now might be the time to make it right.
Sooner rather than later.
Diego Sanchez (17-2) will not take on Roan Carneiro at UFC 82: “Pride of a Champion” on March 1 at the Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio, as previously reported. Instead, the former winner of The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 1 will fight Swedish import, David Bielkheden (12-5).There was no mention of a reason behind the opponent switch in the MySpace bulletin sent around earlier this morning from the “Nightmare.”
Bielkheden is a veteran of the Japanese mixed martial arts (MMA) scene, having competed under the Pride FC and Shooto banners, among others. The “Scandinavian Lion” is on a two-fight win streak and will be making his Octagon debut.
Sanchez, on the other hand, will look to rebound from back-to-back losses to American Kickboxing Academy (AKA) training partners, Josh Koscheck and Jon Fitch. Those were the first two defeats of his professional mixed martial arts (MMA) career and he was contemplating moving down to fight at lightweight.
However, Sanchez recently decided against that and will now look to get back on track against Bielkheden at 170 pounds.
Carneiro posed some serious size and strength problems for Sanchez. It doesn’t appear that Bielkheden poses the same challenge. Other than that it’s hard to give an assessment on the bout without much intel on Brazilian Top Team’s Bielkheden.
Because Sanchez is involved this match up will more than likely make the televised main card, which is quite an accomplishment considering how deep it is. Of course, the main event features the sick showdown between UFC Middleweight Champion, Anderson Silva, and the last man to hold the Pride FC welterweight title, Dan Henderson.
For the most recent UFC 82 fight card click here.
With Akihiro Gono out with a hand injury, MMAmania.com has learned that Chris Wilson (13-3) might step up to face top welterweight contender, Jon Fitch (15-2), at UFC 82: “Pride of a Champion” on March 1 at the Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio.It would mark the Octagon debut for the red-hot Team Quest fighter if and when bout agreements are finalized.
Wilson is a veteran of the International Fight League (IFL) and Bodog Fight. He has strung together four straight wins against solid competitors such as Rory Markham, Jay Heiron and Derrick noble during that stretch.
He’s a tough guy who will be thrown in the deep end against an experienced UFC veteran like Fitch in his Octagon debut. It’s an incredible opportunity, however, to make an instant splash in the organization much like Houston Alexander did when he burst onto the scene to dash the title chances of Keith Jardine.
Fitch, however, is undefeated (7-0) in the Octagon since his debut in 2005. He has also not lost a professional fight since 2002 — more than five years. His rise to the top of the division has been long and hard and it didn’t get much easier with this fight … it’s dangerous.
In the recent past, we’ve called for Fitch to take on Karo Parisyan and Marcus Davis, who are top guys and well-known among fans. Those fights are not going to happen in the immediate future. Therefore, we’ll have to just sit tight and hang on for the ride.
This should actually be a tough fight for both guys if the Wilson who appeared in the footage that I’ve seen shows up in Ohio in top form.
For the latest UFC 82 fight card click here
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Here's a recap of UFC 80 from ufcjunkie.com:
UFC 80 Recap: B.J. Penn Claims Lightweight Title in Night of Knockouts
Joining Randy Couture as the only other UFC fighter to win championships in two different weight classes, B.J. Penn (12-4-1 MMA, 8-3-1 UFC) staked claim to the UFC’s vacant lightweight title with a second-round submission of Joe Stevenson (28-8 MMA, 5-2 UFC) on Saturday.
The title fight capped off UFC 80, which took place at the Metro Radio Arena in Newcastle, England. The event aired live and via tape delay on pay-per-view.
While the undercard was full of stunning knockouts, Penn relied on a submission — the night’s only one — to defeat top contender Stevenson in front of a reported sold-out crowd.
The fact that the fight made it out of the first round was the only surprise in a fight predicted to go Penn’s way. After dropping “The Ultimate Fighter 2” winner with a right uppercut in the fight’s opening seconds, Penn glanced Stevenson with a right elbow that tore open a deep gash in the middle of his forehead.
Like a water balloon had hit pavement, both fighters were instantly soaked in blood. After a quick conference with the ringside doctor, Stevenson was allowed to continue and even connected on a few shots while holding Penn in his guard.
Stevenson finished the first round and opened the second frame with a sense of urgency. However, Penn’s onslaught and the constant stream of blood proved too much for the youngster. As the second round came to a close, Stevenson rolled out of the mount position, giving up his back. Penn sunk in the rear-naked choke. Blinded and choking on blood, Stevenson was forced to tap out.
The lightweight belt, which was recently stripped from former champ Sean Sherk after his UFC 73 drug suspension (due to steroids) was upheld, was then wrapped around Penn’s waist. It’s been nearly four years since the former welterweight champ has owned any of the UFC’s hardware.
Penn then called out Sherk, who was sitting ringside as a guest commentator for the fight.
“Sherk, you’re dead,” Penn warned.
Sherk has already been promised the first shot at Penn’s title.
On the undercard, Fabricio Werdum (10-3-1 MMA, 1-1 UFC) was apparently determined to shake the “boring” tag that’s plagued him since an April 2007 loss to Andrei Arlovski. It just took him a round to find his stride.
Facing a fellow Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt in Gabriel Gonzaga (8-3 MMA, 4-2 UFC), Werdum initially looked tentative, and in the process, took a series of leg kicks that forced him to the canvas multiple times. Gonzaga, content to keep the fight standing, continually allowed Werdum to stand for more.
However, in the second round, Werdum went on the offensive just as Gonzaga began to look flat and tired. Werdum forced his way through Gonzaga’s clinch and continually tagged him with knees to the body and head. After popping him with an uppercut, Werdum then threw Gonzaga to the mat, forcing his head against the fence. Werdum then uncorked a series of punches, and with his opponent unable to defend himself after a dozen such blows, the bout was stopped.
Werdum earned the TKO victory at 4:34 of the second round to deliver Werdum the first back-to-back losses of his career.
In other action, we can make it 11 straight for Marcus Davis (14-3 MMA, 6-1 UFC).
The UFC welterweight contender kept his winning streak alive — which now includes six straight victories in the UFC — with a quick and decisive knockout of Frenchman Jess Liaudin (12-9 MMA, 2-1 UFC).
After getting tagged with a few leg kicks, Davis had enough and threw a left hook that hit Liaudin below his right ear. And bam — down went Liaudin.
Davis, a former professional boxer who’s transformed himself into a well-rounded mixed martial artist, continues his ascent in the UFC’s 170-lb. division. Although he’s complemented his striking with a solid ground game, he didn’t need it tonight.
Davis admittedly went into the fight with a chip on his shoulder, ticked that Liaudin questioned his legitimacy as a true Irishman.
“Literally, I said I was going to punch a hole in his face,” Davis said. “I was pissed. I gotta say I was really pissed.“
In a night of knockouts, none was more shocking than Wilson Gouveia‘s (10-4 MMA, 4-1 UFC) one-punch KO of Jason Lambert (23-7 MMA, 4-2 UFC).
Lambert dominated the light-heavyweight bout from the first bell, stalking his opponent, forcing him to the mat, and delivering a brutal barrage of ground and pound. If Gouveia broke free, Lambert was there to pounce right back on him.
Early in the second round, though, Lambert forgot a key part of the plan: defending himself. Shoved into the fence for the final time, Gouveia waited for Lambert to drop his hands and then tagged him with left-hook haymaker. Lambert’s legs disappeared, and he folded into a heap.
The bout was halted, and Gouveia scored the come-from-behind KO victory at 0:37 of the second round.
First came the stunning defeat to Patrick Cote in August, and “The Ultimate Fighter 3” winner Kendall Grove (8-5 MMA, 3-2 UFC) can now add another upset loss to his resume — this time to veteran Jorge Rivera (15-6 MMA, 4-4 UFC).
Grove, once considered one of the most improved fighters to come out of “The Ultimate Fighter” reality series, never stood a chance in Saturday’s televised opening fight. Rivera immediately went on the offensive, scoring the early takedown and pinning Grove against the fence. Rivera unleashed a barrage of punches. Grove created some distance and got back to his feet, but Rivera continued throwing shots until his opponent hit the canvas.
Rivera never let up on the assault — and for good reason.
“I thought I hurt him with the very first punch because I saw his knees buckle,” Rivera said.
In the end, it was an 80-second TKO victory for the “Conquistador.” As for Grove, it’s back to the drawing board as his stock in the UFC’s middleweight division hits an all-time low.
UNDERCARD
- In the finale of the night’s preliminary card, Antoni Hardonk (6-4 MMA, 2-2 UFC) made short work of fellow heavyweight Colin Robinson (8-4 MMA, 0-2 UFC), tagging the local favorite with a series of knees, leg kicks and punches that sent “Big C” staggering across the canvas. With his opponent dazed and unable to stand, Hardonk earned the TKO victory just 17 seconds into the fight.
- British fighters Paul Kelly (7-0 MMA, 1-0 UFC) and Paul Taylor (8-3-1 MMA, 1-2 UFC) were determined to dazzle the local crowd, and a frantic early exchange set the tone for the rest of the bout. In the end, though, Kelly dominated the ground war and cruised to a unanimous-decision victory (30-27, 30-27, 30-27).
- After losing three of four fights in the UFC, Alessio Sakara (12-6 MMA, 3-3 UFC) has bounced back for two straight victories — his latest over James Lee (13-3 MMA, 0-1 UFC), who appeared to injure his back during a takedown attempt early in the fight. Sakara unloaded a flurry of punches that forced a TKO stoppage at 1:30 of the first round. It was the last fight at light heavyweight for Sakara, who will now compete as a middleweight in the UFC.
- The event got off to a slow start when Per Eklund (12-3-1 MMA, 0-1 UFC) failed in his many takedown attempts of Sam Stout (13-3-1 MMA, 2-2 UFC). The Canadian kickboxer repeatedly stuffed Eklund’s attempts and landed enough punches to earn a unanimous decision victory (30-27, 29-27, 30-27)
QUICK RESULTS
- B.J. Penn def. Joe Stevenson via submission (rear-naked choke) — Round 2. 4:02
- Fabricio Werdum def. Gabriel Gonzaga via TKO (strikes) — Round 2, 4:34
- Marcus Davis def. Jess Liaudin via KO (punch) — Round 1, 1:04
- Wilson Gouveia def. Jason Lambert via KO (punch) — Round 2, 0:37
- Jorge Rivera def. Kendall Grove via TKO (strikes) — Round 1, 1:20
- Antoni Hardonk def. Colin Robinson via TKO (strikes) — Round 1, 0:17
- Paul Kelly def. Paul Taylor via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)
- Alessio Sakara def. James Lee via TKO (punches) — Round 1, 1:30
- Sam Stout def. Per Eklund via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-27, 30-27)