Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Lanny Poffo Wants Greg Valentine In An MMA Fight

WWE Hall of Famer Greg “The Hammer” Valentine no-showing Great North Wrestling’s Randy Savage tribute show on Sept. 3 in Hawkesbury, Ontario, Canada has been turned into an angle.

Lanny Poffo, the brother of the late superstar wrestler, posted a video on YouTube challenged the 60-year-old to a mixed martial arts match on December 30 in Gatineau. The wrestler formerly known as The Genius says he will throw cash he received from his recent inheritance to bait Valentine into the fight. He also taunts Valentine by calling him a “mangina” and that he may be left in a body bag.

The video was uploaded at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R53Bkdi2hEA It has since been made private.

Valentine posted an explanation Friday on his Facebook account apologizing for no-showing the event and leaving a nasty voice message to Great North Wrestling promoter Devon Nicholson. Valentine says he no-showed the event because he received a phone call on the morning of the show that his mother-in-law had two days left to live, so he flew to Nashville to be by her side—she recovered. Nicholson said between Valentine’s flight from Tampa, hotel, pay and photos he printed up to sell, he was out $2,000. Valentine said he would return Nicholson the money when he arrived in Tampa.

“This was never the issue, so why he had to go off and try to hurt me at a time where we are having a tragedy in our family, I don’t know,” Valentine wrote of Nicholson releasing his angry voice message and saying he no-showed the event after he was paid.

He continues, “What tends to hurt me the most, is that I asked him to please tell the fans that I was sorry and that I was not going to be able to make it to the event. I purposely made sure that he would express that to the fans who came out to see me, and to celebrate the life of Randy Savage. Instead, he tells everyone that I pulled a “No show”. He didn’t give any reason for my absence, just told people I didn’t show up. This is not how I operate. However, when push comes to shove with family, family will always win out.”

Wrestling News

Source: http://www.ifight365.com/2011/09/lanny-poffo-wants-greg-valentine-in-an-mma-fight/

Mikey Burnett  Murilo Bustamante  Grant Campbell  Gesias JZ Calvancante 

John Dodson welcomes Jussier "Formiga" da Silva at UFC on FX 5 in Minneapolis

By: Jamie Penick, MMATorch Editor-in-Chief

UFC_on_FX_logo_22.jpg
An extremely exciting flyweight bout is heading to Minneapolis this October, as Shooto's South American Flyweight Champion, Jussier "Formiga" da Silva, will make his UFC debut against Ultimate Fighter 14 winner John Dodson at UFC on FX 5.

News of the bout was first reported by Tatame.com.

Da Silva, who signed with the UFC earlier this month, makes his debut on a five fight winning streak, a run that includes four straight submission wins. The 27-year-old is 14-1 overall in his career, with his sole loss coming by decision against Ian McCall in Tachi Palace Fights.

Dodson will bring a four fight winning streak into the bout, two of which have come inside of the Octagon. After knocking out T.J. Dillashaw in his TUF season's finals bout, Dodson added a decision win over Tim Elliott at UFC on Fox 3 in May.

UFC on FX 5 takes place from the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minn. on October 5, headlined by a heavyweight bout between Travis Browne and Antonio "Bigfoot" Silva.

Penick's Analysis: This is a fantastic fight, and is almost assuredly going to be on the FX main card for this event. Dodson's status as an Ultimate Fighter winner, who hasn't yet lost in the UFC, makes that clear, and it gives da Silva a major opportunity to make a splash in his debut. He could be a very formidable force in the flyweight division, and a title challenger sooner than later if he impresses against Dodson. Likewise, Dodson can continue making his name as a contender should he best a very respected flyweight in da Silva. Great matchmaking, and a great fight for this card.

Source: http://www.mmatorch.com/artman2/publish/UFC_2/article_13973.shtml

Luiz Buscapé Firmino Spencer Fisher Jon Fitch Kenny Florian

Middleweight Shakeup at UFC 150 as Okami now faces Roberts

Injuries to Rousimar Palhares and Chris Camozzi have scrapped both middleweights from their UFC 150 bouts against Yushin Okami and Buddy Roberts, respectively. So in response, Okami and Roberts will now face each other on August 11th in Denver, Colorado.

Additionally, the planned lightweight bout between Dennis Hallman and Thiago Tavares has been rescheduled for UFC 151. UFC 150 will proceed with ten fights.

Guillard Answers Cerrone's Call for Action
updated July 13
A day after tweeting, "Well I sure wish someone would step up for Denver," Colorado's own Donald "Cowboy" Cerrone found a willing candidate in "Young Assassin" Melvin Guillard, who is coming off a victory last weekend at UFC 148.

The lightweight war between the strikers and former teammates will be the co-main event at UFC 150 August 11 in Denver, Colorado

Update: At the same event, Cerrone's teammate, Erik "Goyito" Perez will face Ken Stone in a bantamweight bout.

Camozzi Gets Hometown Bout
updated July 9
After Denver's Chris Camozzi won his UFC on FX fight June 22 in Atlantic City, the middleweight TUF veteran publicly asked for a fight in his hometown.

He'll get his wish with a bout against Buddy Roberts, who made his successful UFC debut on June 22 at UFC on FX in Florida.

The two have verbally agreed to square off at UFC 150.

Lawrence, Palhares Get Next Assignments updated June 18
Brazilian striker Luiz Cane has been injured and forced out of his UFC 150 bout against Japan's Yushin Okami. Stepping in to meet Okami will be Cane's countryman, submission specialist Rousimar Palhares.

Plus, two fighters known for their striking abilities will go at it as TUF Live standout Justin Lawrence joins the ranks of the UFC featherweights to take on Max Holloway.

Verbal agreements are in for both Denver bouts.

Three Bouts Booked for the 303 updated June 4
Three more bouts have been booked for the Mile High City's UFC event this August.

Two go-anywhere fighters will test their skills in a featherweight battle as Nik Lentz takes on Japan's Eiji Mitsuoka

Also at featherweight, TUF finalist and featherweight Dennis Bermudez -- fresh off a decisive victory marked by a number of slams -- is jumping right back into action, this time against submission specialist Tom Hayden in Denver.

Fans in Colorado will also see a middleweight bout between Judo specialist Michael Kuiper and duarble striker Jared "The Messenger" Hamman.

Verbal agreements are in for all three bouts.

Bendo-Edgar 2 Confirmed for Denver updated May 9
The highly anticipated rematch between UFC lightweight champion Benson Henderson and the man he beat for the belt in February, Frankie Edgar, now has a home and a date, as UFC President Dana White announced on Tuesday’s UFC Tonight that August 11th’s UFC 150 event in Denver will be headlined by this five round clash of 155-pound titans.

Shields Returns to Middleweight Against Herman
updated May 1
TUF 3 alum Ed "Short Fuse" Herman and former Strikeforce champion Jake Shields have verbally agreed to a middleweight bout this August at UFC 150.

The match-up will mark the return to middleweight for Shields, whose four UFC fights to date -- including a title fight match Georges St-Pierre -- have taken place at 170 pounds. The former Strikeforce middleweight champion previously notched wins over notables including Dan Henderson at 185 pounds.

UFC 150 Slated for Mile High City updated April 27
The UFC will return to the city where it all started for its milestone UFC 150 event in August, as Denver -- home to UFC 1 and 2 -- will host the event at Pepsi Center.

Two bouts have been verbally agreed upon for the Mile High melee.

Brazilian bomber Luiz Cane will make his middleweight debut against top-ten ranked Yushin "Thunder" Okami.

At lightweight, Thiago Tavares and Dennis "Superman" Hallman will meet in a battle between well-rounded submission specialists. Both men were scheduled to fight on the UFC on FOX fight card May 5 but forced out of that event due to injures.

Information on tickets - which go on sale June 15 - and the main event will be coming soon to ufc.com.

Source: http://www.ufc.com/news/ufc-150-fight-card-updates

Phil Cardella Roan Jucao Carneiro Shane The Engineer Carwin  Jason Hollywood Chambers

Michael Bisping fires back at Chris Weidman for recent remarks

As one of the few middleweights left in division without an upcoming bout scheduled, and as an unbeaten competitor, Chris Weidman believes he is the top contender to face UFC middleweight champ Anderson Silva.

Michael Bisping, meanwhile, is slated to face Brian Stann at UFC 152 this September. The match-up has plenty of importance, as both believe they can become a challenger to Silva with a victory in tow.

However, Weidman recently made some comments regarding Bisping that seemed to tick the Brit off a bit, saying in an interview with Fighters Only Magazine, “I think he’s a really great fighter, I really do, but I question his mentality against top guys when the pressure is on.”

As a result, “The Count” fired back at Weidman, saying “Chris the Wiesel Weidman saying I fold under pressure. Hahahahaha I needed a good laugh this morning.”

Bisping will have his hands full with Stann, but there’s no question it would be an interesting outing to see the Brit paired up with Weidman down the road.

PHOTO CREDIT – UFC

Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2012/07/28/michael-bisping-fires-back-at-chris-weidman-for-recent-remarks/

Eddie Alvarez Thiago Alves  Andre Amade  Dean Amasinger 

Jon Fitch v Erick Silva Set For UFC 153

Quote:

Jon Fitch will draw one of the UFC's top young guns in his next outing.

The longtime welterweight contender is set to square off with Brazilian Erick Silva at UFC 153, MMA Fighting's Ariel Helwani has learned. Sources with knowledge of the situation confirmed the pairing.

Fitch was supposed to face Aaron Simpson in July, only to be forced out after suffering a knee injury. The setback apparently won't keep him on the shelf long. Upon returning, Fitch will be attempting to win for the first time in three fights. At UFC 127, he fought to a draw with B.J. Penn, and in his follow-up match at UFC 141, he was knocked out by Johny Hendricks, marking the first time he had been finished since 2002.

Fitch is 23-4-1 with 1 no contest.

Silva has looked spectacular in all three of his octagon outings. He debuted with a knockout of Luis Ramos at UFC 134, then appeared to earn a second straight first-round KO at UFC 142, only to be controversially disqualified for strikes to the back of the head. Silva then followed that up with a first-round submission win over Charlie Brenneman at June's UFC on FX 3.

Silva is 14-2 with 1 no contest.

Fitch will be tasked with facing Silva on his home soil, as the bout emanates from Rio on October 13.

http://www.mmafighting.com/ufc/2012/...et-for-ufc-153

Cant wait for this one!

Source: http://www.mmaforum.com/ufc/103914-jon-fitch-v-erick-silva-set-ufc-153-a.html

Alex Andrade  Jermaine Andrè  Yoji Anjo  Ao Hailin 

Bellator 72 Weigh-in Results

bellator 72 poster e1342740478906 Bellator 72 Weigh in ResultsThe Bellator Fighting Championships returns this Friday with Bellator 72 featuring the season 6 welterweight tournament final and the semifinals of the summer series light heavyweight tournament. All fighters successfully made weight today at the official weigh-ins from Tampa.

Karl Amoussou and Bryan Baker will square off for the welterweight tournament title and the opportunity for a title shot at champion Ben Askren.

Bryan Baker (169.5) vs. Karl Amoussou (170.25) – Welterweight Final

Emanuel Newton (204.75) vs. Attila Vegh (204.5) – Light Heavyweight Semifinal

Tim Carpenter (205) vs. Travis Wiuff (206) – Light Heavyweight Semifinal

Rudy Bears (169.5) vs. Paul Daley (170.25)

Waachiim Spiritwolf (170.3) vs. Marius Zaromskis (171)

Bellator 72 Promo Video

Bellator 72 Weigh-in Results is a post from: MMA Interplay UFC News

Source: http://www.mmainterplay.com/bellator-news/bellator-72-weigh-in-results-58929/

Kultar Gill Allan Goes Takanori The Fireball Kid Gomi Akihiro Gono

StrikeForce: Roger Bowling vs. Tarec Saffiedine breakdown and prediction

Source: http://mmasportsreport.com/1439/strikeforce-roger-bowling-vs-tarec-saffiedine-breakdown-and-prediction

Shane The Engineer Carwin  Jason Hollywood Chambers Ryo Piranha Chonan  Dan The Sandman Christison 

Ronda Rousey, Sarah Kaufman don skin-tight outfits for Strikeforce preview

With less than three weeks remaining before the bout, Strikeforce has started amping up their promotion of bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey’s August 18 title-defense against former title-holder Sarah Kaufman starting with a recently released preview.

Tagged with the line, “Form does not always follow function,” the clip shows Rousey and Kaufman in latex bodysuits before highlights kick in and a traditional face-off ensues. As might be expected from her “bad girl” reputation, Rousey’s outfit is appropriately black and features sunglasses with Kaufman’s pure white.

The 15-1 Kaufman will enter the upcoming bout with wins in her previous three outings including an exciting outpointing of Alexis Davis in March. Comparably, Rousey is unbeaten five fights into her MMA career with all of the victories involving an opening round Armbar.

The full preview for their fight can be seen below:

PHOTO CREDIT – STRIKEFORCE

Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2012/07/30/ronda-rousey-sarah-kaufman-don-skin-tight-outfits-for-strikeforce-preview/

Edwin Dewees  Nick Diaz  Tadhg Steamfist Dixon Joe Doerksen 

"Why's he grabbing his shoulder like that? Is there a bug?"

Source: http://www.watchkalibrun.com/2011/1/10/1927489/whys-he-grabbing-his-shoulder-like-that-is-there-a-bug

Clay Guida Jason Guida Melvin Guillard Cody Guinn

This ones for you @cheriecarlson ! Me and @joshlbarnett in kc

From My Inst@gram:

6bd0777ad9f611e1a0c81231380ff428 7 This ones for you @cheriecarlson ! Me and @joshlbarnett in kc

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TracyLee/~3/HWbi70iYjtc/this-ones-for-you-cheriecarlson-me-and-joshlbarnett-in-kc.html

Kultar Gill Allan Goes Takanori The Fireball Kid Gomi Akihiro Gono

Chris Weidman insulted by remarks from Anderson Silva’s camp

Middleweight Chris Weidman has spent more than half of his career inside the Octagon, racking up five wins in five UFC fights. The run has improved his overall record to 9-0 and established him as one of the division’s top contenders. However, in the eyes of 185-pound champion Anderson Silva’s management, Weidman has a ways to go before he’s earned the right to face the dynamic Brazilian.

The approach has apparently irked Weidman as made clear by some recent comments the “All-American” made in an interview with MMAWeekly.

“The managers they have no right to start putting down professional athletes,” said Weidman after he and a few of his highly-touted peers were labeled as being little more than amateurs by Silva representative Jorge Guimaraes. “I know I wouldn’t want my manager speaking about other fighters like that.”

Instead of mixing it up with Weidman (or any other 185er), Silva’s team has pointed to a potential super-fight with welterweight title-holder Georges St-Pierre in addition Nick Diazs name also coming up in light of recent statement’s from the polarizing pugilist’s camp. Needless to say, Weidman also feels slighted by the possibility of Silva going against someone outside of the division rather than face a deserving middleweight.

“I mean GSP, let’s start with him. The guy is coming off ACL surgery, we don’t even know for sure when he’s fighting, and when he does fight he’s fighting Carlos Condit for the welterweight title. You never know what’s going to happen and best-case scenario he could fight again around May. So if anything, fight me next, if you beat me then you get your shot with GSP. You’re just calling out a 170 pounder coming off ACL surgery,” explained Weidman on the topic of the long-rumored rumble. “Then Nick Diaz, he’s another guy he’d have a size advantage over, he’s another good name but the guy’s not going to be cleared till February. That’s just crazy.”

For now it appears Weidman will have to sit and wait until Silva makes a move or a tilt for establishing clear-cut top contendership emerges. No date has surfaced for Silva’s return to the ring, though he and Weidman are both fresh off strike-based stoppages where neither absorbed any significant damage.

PHOTO CREDIT – UFC

Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2012/07/29/chris-weidman-insulted-by-remarks-from-anderson-silva%e2%80%99s-camp/

Mikhail Avetisyan Luiz Azeredo  Luciano Azevedo  Ba Te er 

Hockey Fight of the Day: Mike Comrie vs. Ilya Kovalchuk

Every so often fans will see a hockey fight where the smaller man comes out triumphant against a larger opponent. This clip from 2002 between Mike Comrie (David) and Ilya Kovalchuk (Goliath) is not one of those times, as Comrie not only ends up eating at on of shots but also loses his jersey as the result of the rumble.

Source: http://www.fighters.com/07/29/hockey-fight-of-the-day-mike-comrie-vs-ilya-kovalchuk

Ba Te er  Ryan Bader  Siyar Bahadurzada Bao Ligao 

Hockey Fight of the Day: Bobby Orr vs. Pete Mahovlich

Bobby Orr may be known as one of the best defensemen to ever play hockey but he wasn’t afraid of a little offense every now and then as well. In this clip from 1971, Orr mixes it up with Pete Mahovlich where he not only shows a ton of grit but a sweet double-leg takedown technique as well!

Source: http://www.fighters.com/07/26/hockey-fight-of-the-day-bobby-orr-vs-pete-mahovlich

Shane The Engineer Carwin  Jason Hollywood Chambers Ryo Piranha Chonan  Dan The Sandman Christison 

Browne vs. Bigfoot to Headline UFC on FX in October

When one door closes, another opens, and after unbeaten heavyweight Travis Browne saw his August 4th bout with Ben Rothwell get scrapped due to a Rothwell injury, "Hapa" immediately got back in the rotation, as he now gets a headlining date on Friday, October 5 against Antonio "Bigfoot" Silva.

This UFC on FX main event will take place at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. More information on this event, including ticket on-sale dates, will be announced shortly.

Source: http://www.ufc.com/news/ufc-on-fx-5-fight-card-updates

Martinsh Egle Eric Butterbean Esch Efrain Escudero Rashad Evans

Tim Kennedy interested in a go at Roger Gracie

With a limited number of options at 185 pounds it looks like Strikeforce middleweight Tim Kennedy is saving his bosses the trouble of finding him an opponent, opting to call out an adversary in hopes of helping facilitate a match-up. According to Kennedy, who has never been submitted in a fight, he’d like to face Roger Gracie before the end of 2012 based on the need for a challenge and some comments CEO Scott Coker made earlier this month.

“I read (Coker) said Gracie was the best grappler in Strikeforce,” Kennedy posted on his Twitter page recently. “I would love to prove that is not the case.”

A Closer Look at Kennedy’s Last Fight

Gracie, who is of course one of the members of the first-family of BJJ, is 5-1 since transitioning from the mat to a career in MMA. He most recently beat Keith Jardine by way of decision in his middleweight debut.

Kennedy also saw action at the same event, coming up short on the scorecards against divisional champion Luke Rockhold. He holds an overall record of 14-4 including wins over Jason Miller and Robbie Lawler.

PHOTO CREDIT – STRIKEFORCE

Source: http://www.fighters.com/07/24/tim-kennedy-interested-in-a-go-at-roger-gracie

Yves Edwards  Justin Eilers  Jon Olav Einemo Per Eklund

A Fond Farewell

Source: http://www.watchkalibrun.com/2011/1/14/1936251/a-fond-farewell

Cyril Abidi  Daniel Acacio Bernard Ackah  Terrance Aflague

Invicta FC 2 Results: McMann bests Baszler; Davis, Carmouche earn stoppage wins

By: Jamie Penick, MMATorch Editor-in-Chief

Women's MMA was back on display on Saturday night, as Invicta Fighting Championships returned to Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan. The event streamed live at InvictaFC.com, and featured several recognizable names in the world of women's MMA, including former Olympian Sara McMann, who edged past Shayna Baszler in the night's main event.

That main event bout was a rare decision on the card, as ten of the night's 14 fights featured stoppages. That included wins by Strikeforce veterans Alexis Davis and Liz Carmouche, as they submitted Hitomi Akano and Kaitlin Young, respectively. If you missed Saturday night's event, all of the night's fights are available at Invicta FC's YouTube page. Full results for the event are below:

Main Card

Sara McMann def. Shayna Baszler via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27, 29-28)
Alexis Davis def. Hitomi Akano via submission (rear-naked choke) at 3:41 of the second round
Liz Carmouche def. Kaitlin Young via submission (rear-naked choke) at 3:34 of the first round
Ayaka Hamasaki def. Lacey Schuckman via submission (armbar) at 4:45 of the third round
Amanda Nunes def. Raquel Pa’aluhi via technical submission (rear-naked choke) at 2:24 of the first round
Sarah D'Aleilo def. Vanessa Porto via submission (armbar) at 3:16 of the first round
Barb Honchak def. Bethany Marshall via TKO at 1:22 of the second round
Julia Budd def. Elina Nilsson via KO at 3:49 of the first round
Carla Esparza def. Sarah Schneider via TKO at 4:28 of the second round
Nicdali Rivera-Calanoc def. Angelica Chavez via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)

Preliminary Card

Raquel Pennington def. Sarah Moras via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)
Jessamyn Duke def. Suzie Montero via TKO at 2:32 of the third round
Jocelyn Lybarger def. Cheryl Chan via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
Liz McCarthy def. Jessica Philippus via TKO (doctor's stoppage) at 5:00 of the first round

Source: http://www.mmatorch.com/artman2/publish/quicknews/article_13964.shtml

He Peng David Heath Delson Heleno Dan Henderson

Urijah Faber's Championship Focus Never Changed

UFC bantamweight Urijah FaberDon’t worry, fight fans: Urijah Faber has no intention of sitting on the sidelines with the interim UFC bantamweight title should he emerge from his showdown with Renan Barao on Saturday night victorious.

The concern, of course, stems from Carlos Condit’s decision to wait for a title unification fight with injured champion Georges St-Pierre after winning the interim welterweight title at UFC 143. Despite there being a collection of contenders at the ready, “The Natural Born Killer” has kept his focus on fighting St-Pierre, something many fans have questioned, but Faber is quick to defend.

“I’m definitely not waiting for anything,” laughed the charismatic 33-year-old when asked about his post-victory plans. “I’m not a waiter; I’m extremely impatient, and I like to fight. I don’t plan on waiting, but it’s up to the UFC; I’ll do whatever they tell me to do. If they want me to wait I will; I just kind of roll with the punches.

“I understand Condit though; it’s a huge payday for him to fight Georges St-Pierre, who is one of the biggest draws in the UFC, if not the biggest, so it makes sense for him,” suggested Faber. “Carlos has worked hard to get this opportunity, but that’s not the same case with me and Dominick. He’s not one of the biggest draws in this sport – I feel like right now I’m probably a bigger draw than he is, and there are a lot of tough opponents out there, so I don’t wait around for people.”

This wasn’t supposed to be how things played out this summer for the former WEC featherweight champion. He was supposed to be facing Dominick Cruz, his nemesis – the UFC bantamweight champion whom he coached against this past season on The Ultimate Fighter. They were supposed to meet in the Octagon with Cruz’s title on the line for a second consecutive year, first as the main event, and then as the co-main event on the annual Fourth of July weekend pay-per-view.

But then Cruz became member of the UFC M.A.S.H. Unit; the walking wounded forced to be removed from the summer schedule. Torn knee ligaments required surgery, and the prolonged recovery period prompted the organization to introduce an interim title and call up the surging Barao from a previously scheduled fight with Ivan Menjivar.

And then injuries shifted the plans again, moving Faber and Barao from the penultimate place on the UFC 148 fight card to the main event of the company’s debut even in Calgary, Alberta. Even though the change of venue threw a wrench into things, it should come as no surprise that the laid back “California Kid” is choosing to focus on the positives of all the changes instead.

“The one thing that is upsetting is that I had probably a thousand people that I know were there for me (at UFC 148),” admits Faber. “But I’m excited to fight in Canada. I think there are a couple of positive things, and I’m a guy that loves to focus on the positives. The Canadian fans have always been awesome. I’m super-pumped to be the main event, and I feel like the fight has the potential to be Fight of the Year with this opponent. There are a lot of great things with this fight. Also, the extra two weeks back home is kind of nice as well.”

As for not having the opportunity to resolve things with Cruz once and for all, Faber says it’s not something he’s concerned about right now.

“My focus is all about Barao. Dominick is someone I was forced to deal with because he was my opponent, he’s the guy that has the belt, but right now, I don’t really care about him. I’m focused on Barao, and if Dominick’s in my face again, we’ll deal with it then.

“Barao is such an incredible opponent; I mean, he’s more dangerous, and he’s on a bigger win streak than anyone in the sport. On top of that, I feel like I got the better of Dominick in the last fight, even though I didn’t get the judges’ decision, so that’s something that is to be determined on its own. I’m just looking forward to having a great fight with Barao, and getting that belt.”

In order to check “UFC Champion” off his personal “To Do List,” Faber must halt Barao’s 31-fight winning streak.

The Brazilian standout, who counts UFC featherweight champion and former Faber opponent Jose Aldo as one of his training partners, lost the initial fight of his career in April 2005 and hasn’t been beaten since, with a December 2007 No Contest the only result that has registered outside of the win column. Deemed a potential champion when he debuted with the WEC two years ago, Barao has lived up to expectations thus far, most recently earning a unanimous decision win over former title challenger Scott Jorgensen in February.

“You don’t want to take anything away from the guy – it’s incredible to have a win streak like that,” offers Faber. “It says that he’s mentally tough, and he’s well rounded as an athlete and as a fighter, but the bottom line is that I’ve been fighting for world championships since my third fight. Whether it be on Gladiator Challenge, King of the Cage, the WEC or the UFC, I’ve been fighting whoever they consider the best out there. That’s what I do, and I’ve got an impressive finish record, an impressive win-loss record, and I’m still at the top of my game. He’s not fighting any of those other guys he beat; he’s fighting me, and he’s not going to beat me.

“I’m going to have a conditioning edge and a comfort level in five-round fights that he’s not used to, on top of being a creative guy in the ring,” Faber says, adding that he feels there are more areas where he will have the advantage come fight night.

“I feel like the guys he’s beaten that are top level – guys like Cole Escovedo, Scott Jorgensen, and Brad Pickett – are all pretty straight forward fighters,” continues Faber, “and I can be able to trick you in there; have a little element of surprise and creativity. On top of everything else, that’s another thing that he hasn’t seen before.”

While he’s established himself as one of the biggest stars in the sport, a UFC title is the one thing that has eluded Faber to this point in his career. Saturday night, he gets a second chance to have UFC gold wrapped around his waist for the first time, and he doesn’t plan on squandering it.

“I have a lot of different ways to win,” he suggests. “I could KO, TKO, or submit him, outlast him for a decision. I don’t really know; I’m just predicting that I’m going to win. I’m not sure how, but I feel like I can go anywhere the fight goes.”


Source: http://www.ufc.com/news/Urijah-Faber-Championship-Focus-Never-Changed

Joachim Hansen Antoni Hardonk Dan Hardy Lee Hasdell

Anthony Pettis: "Showtime" Talks Meal Time

UFC lightweight Anthony PettisNext time you’re in Milwaukee, “Showtime Bar & Grill” is worth a visit. The establishment is jointly owned by highly-regarded MMA trainer Duke Roufus and his prized protégé, former WEC lightweight world champ Anthony “Showtime” Pettis. On the menu at the hotspot: Pizza with Italian sausage, a Kobe Beef Burger, chili cheese fries and a ribeye steak. All very tempting to the 25-year-old Pettis (13-2), who recently spoke with UFC.com about his predominantly organic diet and how it has made weight-cutting easy.

UFC: What sorts of foods do you remember eating as a kid?

Pettis: My mom wasn’t that good of a cook so she used to make a lot of macaroni and cheese and Spam. My dad was like a master chef at fried chicken; My dad made the best fried chicken ever! That was one of my favorite meals as a kid.

I came from a Spanish family, so we would eat pinchos, which is a Puerto Rican shish-kabob type of thing. We would enchiladas, tacos, rice and beans – all the kinds of things Hispanic kids eat.

Do you consider yourself a big eater?
I’m a huge eater and I’ve been that way ever since I was a kid. I have always been athletic so I was always eating a lot.

What changes have you made to your diet over the years?

I changed my diet because I had to become wiser about cutting weight. In my old sport – Taekwondo – I didn’t have to cut weight. We didn’t go by weight divisions. But once I started fighting amateur – my 20th birthday was my first fight – I had to start cutting weight and watching what I was eating.

I went through two phases. One phase is what I call ‘Eating Dumb.’ I didn’t know how to cut weight, I didn’t t know the right things to do. So I thought the less that I ate, and the cleaner my meals were – I would eat like chicken breast and salad for dinner – I didn’t know how to cut weight so that was my Eating Stupid Phase. So from the beginning of my WEC career (June 2009) all the way up until my camp for the Shane Roller fight (August 2010) I didn’t have a nutritionist so it was just a dumb way to eat.

I used to be hungry all the time so I couldn’t show my full potential in workouts. I was also getting injured a lot. I found out later that I could eat a lot more food, and a bigger variety of food, and still lose weight.

When do you feel like you found the right nutritionist and what does that diet consist of?
It was right after the Henderson fight, actually. I performed well on previous diets, but right after the Henderson fight I went and trained with Urijah Faber (in Sacramento). I met a nutritionist named Eric … and after sitting down and listening to what he had to say I felt like he was the right guy for the job. So I started working with him for the Clay Guida camp.

So that guy in California decides what the meals are going to be and sends them to my cousin, who is a chef and prepares all my meals.

I might eat a 4-ounce chicken breast, some greens, sometimes a carb like a sweet potato. I drink a lot of smoothies. Our big thing is we use coconut oil for everything. I take a scoop of coconut oil every morning when I wake up with a protein shake. I just eat whatever my nutritionist tells me to eat.

Every meal tastes like a regular meal so I never feel like I’m cutting weight. In the past when I was cutting weight my meals would be very plain and very dull. But the stuff I eat tastes amazing – it’s stuff I would pay to eat at a restaurant!

Any rules for your diet?
It’s pretty simple, nothing crazy. I don’t indulge in ice cream or anything crazy.

Do you take any supplements?

I take an organic whey protein. Every meal and everything that I eat is organic during camp. And even out of camp I try to eat clean. Organic just makes me feel better. I take glucosamine and coconut oil.

My nutritionist recommends that I drink one gallon of water a day. I also drink some coconut water and a chocolate coconut water. I put coconut water in my smoothies and my protein shakes.

After making weight for a fight what is your go-to meal?

Yeah, I do the same meal every time after weigh-ins: Salmon, spinach and sweet potato. But my meal the day of the fight always varies. The meal I had before my last fight with Joe Lauzon was pancakes, eggs and bacon. I eat breakfast and that’s it. Then I go big (with food) after my fight.

Do you pack on weight easily or are you one of those insane-metabolism/naturally slender guys who can eat whatever he wants and stay thin?
No. As a kid and in my teens, all the way up to my early 20s I could eat whatever I wanted and I was always slim. But now that I’m 25 I’ve been packing on weight. I’m coming off a shoulder injury so I couldn’t do much working out. I’ve had to watch what I eat. The heaviest I get is 185, but at that weight I feel sluggish and like crap.

Everyone remembers the so-called Matrix kick against Benson Henderson … and you’ve got so many other kicks in your arsenal. Can you still fire off those crazy kicks at 185?
Oh yeah, I can do all the same kicks. They just won’t be as crisp and I won’t be as energized as I’d like to be. My best weight is 170. When I’m at 170, I’m perfect.

So even an out-of-shape Anthony Pettis could knock somebody out with a head kick?
Oh yeah, definitely. That’s something I’ve been doing since I was a kid, so …

Quick question: Who do you like in the rematch between Benson Henderson and Frankie Edgar?
Henderson. I just feel he’s too big of a 155er for Frankie Edgar. I think it will be by decision because Frankie is one of those guys that is a tough, tough guy to finish.


Source: http://www.ufc.com/news/Anthony-Pettis-Showtime-Talks-Meal-Time

Don Frye Tony Fryklund Kazuyuki Fujita Masakatsu Funaki

Michael Bisping fires back at Chris Weidman for recent remarks

As one of the few middleweights left in division without an upcoming bout scheduled, and as an unbeaten competitor, Chris Weidman believes he is the top contender to face UFC middleweight champ Anderson Silva.

Michael Bisping, meanwhile, is slated to face Brian Stann at UFC 152 this September. The match-up has plenty of importance, as both believe they can become a challenger to Silva with a victory in tow.

However, Weidman recently made some comments regarding Bisping that seemed to tick the Brit off a bit, saying in an interview with Fighters Only Magazine, “I think he’s a really great fighter, I really do, but I question his mentality against top guys when the pressure is on.”

As a result, “The Count” fired back at Weidman, saying “Chris the Wiesel Weidman saying I fold under pressure. Hahahahaha I needed a good laugh this morning.”

Bisping will have his hands full with Stann, but there’s no question it would be an interesting outing to see the Brit paired up with Weidman down the road.

PHOTO CREDIT – UFC

Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2012/07/28/michael-bisping-fires-back-at-chris-weidman-for-recent-remarks/

Patrick The Predator Côté  Randy The Natural Couture  Dan Cramer Alberto Crane

Rory MacDonald ready to “hurt” BJ Penn

As UFC welterweight Rory MacDonald continues to progress as a fighter he also appears to be upping his game in the trash-talking department as well. The 23-year old (who celebrated his birthday over the weekend) first broke from his typically soft-spoken, humble demeanor leading up to a previous fight against Che Mills and now appears to be doing the same where upcoming opponent BJ Penn is concerned.

The 13-1 MacDonald recently spoke about “The Prodigy” during a press conference and was asked for his opinion on comments from Penn pertaining to MacDonald’s affiliation with Georges St-Pierre and TriStar MMA. In essence, the Hawaiian referred to both as being core elements to his motivation for taking the match-up.

“He’s upset because Georges whooped him but I’m going to hurt him even worse,” MacDonald replied.

Penn Ready to Go “Into the Belly of the Beast”

GSP came out with his hand raised in two prior meetings with Penn, winning the first by Split Decision and the second as the result of a TKO.

Penn and MacDonald are set to meet on September 22 at UFC 152. The bout marks Penn’s return from a brief retirement, while MacDonald will be going for his fourth straight win including victories over Mills, Mike Pyle, and Nate Diaz.

PHOTO CREDIT – UFC

Source: http://www.fighters.com/07/24/rory-macdonald-ready-to-%e2%80%9churt%e2%80%9d-bj-penn

Kevin Kimbo Slice Ferguson Paulo Filho Mirko Cro Cop Filipović Luiz Buscapé Firmino

Eddie Alvarez Battles ‘Pitbull’ Freire in Possible Bellator Finale

Bellator Eddie Alvarez

And the countdown begins. Former Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez (Pictured) will battle Patricky “Pitbull” Freire on October 12th. Bellator Fighting Championships CEO Bjorn Rebney announced the scrap Monday via Twitter.

The contest marks the final fight on Alvarez’s current Bellator contract. Most pundits expect the 155-pounder will be Octagon bound the second his deal expires.

UFC president Dana White and co-owner Lorenzo Fertitta have publicly recruited Alvarez over the past several months. They recently nabbed Bellator middleweight champ Hector Lombard from their stateside rival. However, Lombard’s big league debut didn’t quite live up to expectations.

Prior to losing his title to Michael Chandler, Alvarez, along with Strikeforce king Gilbert Melendez, were considered the planet’s top lightweights not competing in the UFC. Alvarez quickly disposed of Shinya Aoki in April at “Bellator 66.”

Freire has alternated between wins and losses over his last four contests. The Brazilian was most recently seen getting submitted by Lloyd Woodard in March.

The event takes place inside Caesars Windsor in Ontario, Canada.

MTV2 will broadcast the main card beginning at 8PM ET/PT.

Source: http://www.5thRound.com/124113/eddie-alvarez-possibly-completes-bellator-career-against-pitbull-freire-on-october-12th/

Eric Butterbean Esch Efrain Escudero Rashad Evans Urijah Faber

UFC 149 Musings

<a href='../event/UFC-Silva-vs-Irvin'>UFC </a>149 - Barao vs. FaberDOES THE BARAO ERA START NOW?

Renan Barao entered his first UFC title shot riding a title wave of hype. He was in the midst of the longest current unbeaten streak in the sport. UFC commentator extraordinaire Joe Rogan dubbed him the best fighter in the world without a title. And he is a training partner of featherweight kingpin and pound-for-pound candidate Jose Aldo, who just so happens to own a shutout win over Barao’s interim championship opponent at UFC 149, Urijah Faber.

It wasn’t a big shock, therefore, that the Brazilian fighter entered Saturday’s bout as the betting favorite.

That is a ton of pressure for a first-time title challenger. Some quietly felt that it would be too much for the 25-year old contender to handle. Barao obviously forgot to read the memo because he not only beat Faber, he did it in dominant fashion.

His performance at UFC 149 suggests that this guy’s ceiling is every bit as high as his rabid supporters suggested heading into the fight. Now is it up to the new interim champion to reach that ceiling, which means remaining supremely focused on improving his weaknesses (everyone has them) and further sharpening his strengths through the same gym rat dedication he has shown so far in his career. It means staying off the Internet, to a degree, to avoid buying into his own hype. It means continuing to train with Aldo, who is the one person in his camp who can continue to push him to greater and greater heights.

Let’s face it, Barao is the interim bantamweight champ, but we are still in the midst of the Dominick Cruz era. That remains true until someone defeats the true champion or he walks away from the sport. The only reason he wasn’t in the cage against Faber on Saturday was a blown ACL.

It is likely that Cruz will be out for another 10 months or so, as he continues to heal from his surgery and then rehabilitate himself to full strength. That is plenty of time for Barao to get in a couple of title defenses. I think he should do just that. Remaining active is the key to continued growth as a young fighter, and Barao is certainly still young, despite his wealth of experience. Plus, that is a great way to build the anticipation for the Cruz matchup, assuming he can win those couple of defenses.

Was UFC 149 the beginning of the Renan Barao era? I’m not sure, but I do know one thing. Dominick Cruz is champing at the bit to find out.

WHERE DOES FABER GO FROM HERE?

With the loss to Barao, Faber has now lost his last five UFC / WEC championship bouts. One would be hard pressed to find another fighter in a Zuffa-owned company who has lost five consecutive title bouts. What that says to me is that Faber remains among the best in the world, because he certainly continues to earn championship opportunities, but he may no longer be the best in any particular weight class.

I’m sure the blogs and forums will be full of opinions about Faber hanging up the gloves. After all, losing five consecutive title fights is truly unprecedented. If he is no longer championship caliber, then there is no reason to continue fighting, right?

My reaction? Stop it, guys.

It is preposterous to think that fighters only compete for championships. That may be true for a select few who are financially secure for life, so the only reason to risk personal safety is the glory of being the best.  Everyone else fights to pay the bills. Sure, they have championship aspirations – many do, at least. But these guys also have mortgages or rent, car payments, retirement accounts to fund, college funds and the like to deal with.

Competing in the UFC is a profession, no different than being a doctor, lawyer, salesman or professional athlete in any other sport. Do you wake up in the morning and decide to change careers just because you may never become the CEO of your company? That is ludicrous. Should the tenth man on the Minnesota Timberwolves hang up the hoop shoes because he will neither win an NBA championship or become the league’s MVP anytime soon, if ever? No.

Faber should continue fighting for as long as it makes financial sense for him to do so, he still enjoys it and there aren’t any abnormal health risks. Guess what? I’ll bet he earns another title bout before it is all said and done, too. At least one more, possibly winning the 135-pound belt. A third fight with Cruz is still a very marketable fight, if Cruz gets past Barao (assuming nobody else gets to the interim champ first) and Faber scores another win or two. Why? Because the “California Kid” is just that good, and he has more than earned it.

LOMBARD SHOULD DROP TO WELTERWEIGHT

Hector Lombard entered the UFC with just about as much hype as Barao had heading into his first title fight. The former Cuban Olympian was riding an unbelievably impressive 25-fight winning streak (which, interestingly enough, is longer than Barao’s winning streak, though not longer than the Brazilian’s unbeaten streak – you figure it out).

Then, he laid an egg.

OK, to be fair, he didn’t really lay an egg. Tim Boetsch is far from a middleweight gatekeeper. Boetsch beat him, just as much as Lombard failed to execute (which, again, probably had a lot to do with Boetsch).

We can pontificate all day on whether debut jitters played a role. It is an interesting question because Lombard was far from the Mike Tyson-like attack-at-all-cost offensive fighter who terrorized the smaller promotions before coming to the UFC. Was he injured? Was it just a bad night? Or is Boetsch simply the better fighter?

I’ll let you guys take on that debate in the comment section below and elsewhere in Internet land. I’d rather bandy about a different question – should Lombard drop to welterweight?

I’m sure I’m not the only one who noticed that Lombard looked a full weight class smaller than Boetsch. “The Barbarian” is a big middleweight, but certainly not the biggest in the division. I had a feeling that would be the case when I noticed at the weigh-ins that Lombard insisted on putting his shoes back on before squaring off with his opponent. The size differential was certainly not apparent once he had the aid of another inch from his shoes. But it was glaringly apparent when the two squared off inside the cage.

At 5’9, Lombard is one of the shortest middleweights in the promotion. In fact, he would be a relatively short welterweight. I look to former UFC star Phil Baroni as a comparison. Baroni was a massively muscled middleweight with a welterweight’s frame (or maybe even lightweight, if we’re talking solely on height and reach). That is Lombard in a nutshell.

If Lombard can cut to 170 pounds without adversely impacting his strength and explosiveness, he could be an absolute savage in the welterweight division. If I were a betting man, and I just so happen to be one, I’d bet that he could easily make the welterweight limit with just a few tweaks to his training camp diet. He looked extremely thick with full, round muscles and a full face at the weigh-ins. Contrast that to Faber, who looked like he had squeezed every safe ounce of water out of his system for the weigh-ins before adding back nearly 18 pounds in the 30 hours leading up to fight time. Lombard can do the same thing.

At welterweight, Lombard won’t have to deal with the same size, reach and strength issues that he faced against Boetsch, though the last of those certainly wasn’t an issue at all. With this guy’s insane core strength, sick judo skills, jiu-jitsu black belt, and show stopping power in his punches, George St-Pierre probably hopes the big fella stays in the middleweight division. By contrast, I think he should drop to welterweight.

What do you think?

RIDDLE DEMONSTRATES THE BEAUTY OF JIU-JITSU

I’ll keep this one short and to the point. Matthew Riddle’s submission win over Chris Clements was my favorite moment of UFC 149—and I’m a guy who prefers striking to submissions.

The way he used Clements’ missed spinning backfist to step in and secure an arm-triangle was about as beautiful of an ending to a UFC fight that I can remember. He locked himself into position while the pair was still battling on the feet, used the leverage for a quick leg trip, and then squeezed his way to a victory.

That sequence demonstrates the beauty of jiu-jitsu, in my opinion. Sure, Ryan Jimmo’s seven-second knockout win over Anthony Perosh was insanely impressive. But Riddle’s submission win (and again, I’m a converted boxing guy) is the sequence that I replayed on my DVR 25 times today. It was poetry in motion. A Picasso moment inside the cage. And the embodiment of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, all rolled into one.

Source: http://www.ufc.com/news/UFC-149-Musings

Daiki DJ taiki Hata He Peng David Heath Delson Heleno

Monday, July 30, 2012

Dana White Clarifies Stakes at ‘UFC on FOX 4′

UFC President Dana White

Less than a week ago, UFC president Dana White (Pictured) claimed Mauricio “Shogun” Rua could solidify his next dibs status by posting an impressive win over Brandon Vera in Saturday’s featured attraction. On the flipside, if Vera serves up an upset special or Shogun is less than spectacular in victory, Lyoto Machida would earn the nod if he gave Ryan Bader the business in the night’s co-main event.

However, during Monday’s conference call White clarified the light heavyweight pecking order. Unfortunately for “The Dragon” and Bader, they were unexpectedly erased from the top contender picture for the time being. By the same token, White wasn’t speaking as though he expected Vera to reign supreme this weekend inside Staples Center in Los Angeles.

“I already announced the winner of Vera and Rua gets the shot,” White said in response to Machida or Bader possibly jumping the line with a devastating finish. “Of course I hope that all the fights are exciting that night, but you’re dead on when you say we do look at guys who we’d like to see get a shot at the title – we like impressive finishes. We like guys that finish.

“Shogun just came off the fight of the year last year and he’s probably one of the greatest fighters in the last decade. If you think about it, this guy knocked out [Quinton 'Rampage' Jackson], knocked out Chuck Liddell, knocked out Mark Coleman, knocked out Lyoto Machida, knocked out Forrest Griffin, knocked out Alistair Overeem twice, submitted Kevin Randleman. A win puts this guy right back in position, and he’s probably the #2 guy in the world.”

White didn’t reference Vera’s résumé once during the call.

Reigning light heavyweight king Jon Jones is set to defend his throne against Dan Henderson at UFC 151.

Jones holds convincing wins over both Shogun and Vera. “Bones” steamrolled Rua at UFC 128 to become the youngest champion in company history. Three bouts before that, he crushed Vera’s orbital bone in the opening round.

Vera most recently took a unanimous decision over Eliot Marshall. Prior to the October victory, he hadn’t sniffed a win since beating Krzysztof Soszynski in August 2009.

Henderson is coming off an instant classic unanimous decision victory over Shogun at UFC 139. Hendo has never faced Vera.

Source: http://www.5thRound.com/122262/dana-white-clarifies-stakes-at-ufc-on-fox-4/

Leonard Garcia Andrew Gardner Tiki Ghosn Dennis George

Jon Fitch Fights Erick Silva at UFC 153

UFC Jon Fitch

According to MMAFighting, former welterweight top contender Jon Fitch (Pictured) will meet up-and-comer Erick Silva at UFC 153.

Not only is Fitch looking to bounce back from only the second loss of his UFC career, but the veteran is also rebounding from a knee operation that forced him out of last month’s scrap against Aaron Simpson. Fitch was last seen getting put to sleep by Johny Hendricks at UFC 141 this past December.

Silva should be perfect through all three of his Octagon outings. After posting a TKO victory over Luis Ramos in his big league debut, “Indio” violently put Carlo Prater down at UFC 142, but was controversially disqualified for unleashing strikes to the back of his opponent’s head.

He most recently submitted Charlie Brenneman at “UFC on FX 3” in June.

The pivotal 170-pound affair will likely receive third-to-top billing in the show’s lineup. A featherweight title tilt between champion Jose Aldo and Erik Koch headlines the pay-per-view broadcast.

UFC 153 takes place October 13th inside HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Here is the event’s updated roster:

Cezar “Mutante” Ferreira vs. TBD

Joey Gambino vs. Diego Brandao

Sergio Moraes vs. Renee Forte

Cristiano Marcello vs. Reza Madadi

Rony “Jason” Bezerra vs. Sam Sicilia

Jon Fitch vs. Erick Silva

Vitor Belfort vs. Alan Belcher

Erik Koch vs. Jose Aldo (UFC featherweight champion)

Source: http://www.5thRound.com/124153/jon-fitch-fights-erick-silva-at-ufc-153/

Marcelo Brito  Rob Broughton  Mike Brown  Junie Browning

Roy Nelsons released TUF coaches list & problems

Quote:

Roy Nelson was excited to get the news that he would be a coach on the newest installment of The Ultimate Fighter, but now it’s all about getting his assistant coaches approved.

According to the former Ultimate Fighter winner, there appears to be a hold-up in approving some of his chosen coaches, and he’s not sure what’s happening exactly.

“I’m excited. I’m just over here hoping that I can actually bring all my coaches that I want to be my assistant coaches and bring on. I might just have to do it myself. You never know. I don’t (think) they approve of half the people I hang out with,” Nelson told MMAWeekly Radio.

The choices of Nelson’s coaches include former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal, who is now signed to Bellator Fighting Championships as well as TNA wrestling.

“Right now I got Mo Lawal cause he’s a great wrestling coach and he helped me out the last time. Then I got Jeff Mayweather, James Johnson, those are just the three main ones that I have so far, and then I’m working on Anthony Brown,” Nelson revealed.

Anthony Brown is a Muay Thai and Krav Maga instructor out of Las Vegas, while Jeff Mayweather is a famed boxing trainer coming from the long line of Mayweather brothers including Floyd Mayweather Sr. and Roger Mayweather.

The problem now is getting them all approved, and Nelson isn’t sure why there is a hold up in the process. Is it because of Lawal’s newly signed contact with Bellator, where he will appear on Spike TV, the former home of UFC programming?

“I don’t know,” answered Nelson. “It’s about coaching and it’s about these kids. I think I even asked Victor Conte and I think he probably wouldn’t get approved because it’s about cleaning up the sport, and he’s one of those guys that wants to clean it up.”

Victor Conte is infamous in the world of performance enhancing drugs as the former head of BALCO, the lab that was connected to designer steroids and many famous pro athletes including Barry Bonds, Shane Mosley and Bill Romanowski.

After doing a stint in prison for his part in the illegal distribution of the drugs, Conte states he’s cleaned up his act and is now an advocate for ridding the sports world of performance enhancing drugs.

Nelson is still trying to put together his coaching staff as the new season of the Ultimate Fighter begins filming in just a few days before it debuts in early September. He’s unsure what the final call of coaches will look like, but warns that he may be a one man wolfpack when The Ultimate Fighter season 16 begins.

“The thing is I’m just hoping they get approved because they tend to all stick together, because they know how it works. I don’t want them to be treated like Rosa Parks,” Nelson stated.

“All I know is they’re the ones that do the casting calls. If this year’s Ultimate Fighter sucks, I’m going to blame them.”
Quote:

UPDATE:
Roy Nelson has now released the final list of coaches and guest coaches that will be appearing on the Ultimate Fighter this season. Nelson released the list via his official Facebook page on Saturday.

“Here are my assistant/guest coaches the non-UFC coaches will be helping but not on the set because they are black, criminals, white, Olympian, great TV … (disclaimer I have no idea, just opinion)” Nelson stated. “Non-UFC allowed: Muhammed Lawal, Kurt Angle, Victor Conte.”

The list of ‘allowed’ coaches according to Nelson include: Royce Gracie, James Johnson, Jeff Mayweather, George St. Pierre, Nick Diaz, Nate Diaz, Rashad Evans, Forrest Griffin, Chael Sonnen, Jake Shields, Gilbert Melendez, Martin Kampmann, Amir Sadollah, Mike Pyle, Gray Maynard, Ron Frazier, and Anthony Brown.

“I am a student first, teacher second. Let give these kids an opportunity of a lifetime,” Nelson wrote. “A UFC super camp.”
What does that really mean??? Like they are allowed there but are not going to be filmed?? or cut out at editing???

Maybe im just being slow or something but can someone explain the situation to me?

Source: http://www.mmaforum.com/ufc/103897-roy-nelsons-released-tuf-coaches-list-problems.html

Matt Andersen  Alex Andrade  Jermaine Andrè  Yoji Anjo 

Matt Serra: Weidman is a submission freak.

Quote:

Of course, the New Yorker is biased toward Weidman. But as the only fighter to defeat Georges St-Pierre – despite 10-to-1 odds – in the last eight years, Serra’s ability to spot long shots isn’t something to be taken lightly.

He believes Weidman (9-0 MMA, 5-0 UFC) has what it takes to snap Anderson Silva’s historic streak of 10 straight title defenses and 15 straight UFC wins.

Serra has considered Weidman’s championship potential for a long time. Weidman’s emphatic second-round knockout of Mark Munoz at UFC on FUEL TV 4 earlier this month solidified it.

"If you go back, I did a video blog ages ago," Serra told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "He was getting ready for a local fight and I was getting ready for a fight with I think Chris Lytle or something. I said, 'This kid’s gonna be champ one day. You’ll be watching these video blogs saying, 'Hey, I said it.' It’s not that I’m a genius. I’m no Nostradamus. I just think this kid is that talented.

"When he’s up here saying he wants Anderson Silva, he’s not doing it for just a paycheck. He’s doing it because he truly believes he can beat and finish Anderson Silva. He has the same approach to sparring, to rolling. He wants to – you want to spar with this guy, this guy’s tough – he wants to feel it. I believe he will be champion."

Styles make fights, and Weidman’s Serra-Ray Longo inspired game poses trouble for even the most dangerous opponents like Silva, who has finished 12 of 14 combatants in the octagon, according to Serra. Judging by the two men to find some success against "The Spider," Travis Lutter and Chael Sonnen, Serra feels more comfortable in claiming Weidman could not only beat Silva – he can stop him.

"Chael is similar in a sense to Chris," Serra said. "Chris is just a little younger and he’s a stud. Submission wise, he’s a freak. You’re talking about a kid who went to Abu Dhabi [Combat Club grappling tournament] after six months of training, and he’s battling it out with black belts over there. He’s that good. He really is. For people to not think so, or think maybe he’s not ready, look what he’s done so far. Look at the guys who Mark Munoz fought."

Even Serra was surprised by Weidman’s dominance against Munoz, who had his four-fight win streak end with his first stoppage loss at 185-pounds. Shut down in the first round by ground control and submission attempts, Munoz’s end came via right elbow followed by uncomfortable punches on the mat.

Witnessing the grappler score the knockout furthered Serra’s confidence that not even he knows what the "All-American" is capable of doing on fight night. Aside from respectable veteran Michael Bisping, Serra is at a loss for who is more deserving than Weidman to challenge Silva next. If observers were impressed by Weidman versus Munoz, the Renzo Gracie Jiu-Jitsu black belt expects there is still plenty for Weidman to bring to the table that makes him a viable contender, or if he’s right, champion.

"That’s two rounds. If he’s ever put in a bad position, he can persevere. You didn’t really get to see that. The closest you got would be the [Demian] Maia fight because he had no gas tank. He had no training for that fight. That alone speaks for itself," said Serra. "He got the ‘W,’ but he might have got some criticism because he looked a little flat and this and that. What do you expect? That’s how you look if you don’t train. You jump off the couch and took a fight. He manned up and he did it [on 11 days notice]. This is what he looks like when he has a camp, you know?"

Serra insists his 28-year-old student asserting he’s the man to dethrone the middleweight kingpin isn’t Weidman being cocky. Then Serra adds a dash of East Coast brag to the recipe the Serra-Longo team can cook up opposite Silva, nine-years Weidman’s elder.

"It’s the circle of life like 'The Lion King,'" said the 38-year-old, pointing out age could be a factor. "I’m an older guy; I’ve been in the game a long time, me and Longo. Longo worked 1,000 corners, including mine. He brought me up to the championship. In this game, experience is just so crucial. Not just as fighter, but as corner guy, as a coach, as a trainer. You get a guy as talented as Chris and you get some guys who think they know what they’re doing, it’s a recipe for a good thing."

I gotta say Matt Serras comments made me a bit more excited for Weidman. I just wish the guy gets to fight Bisping,Chael,Belcher or even Okami so there is more hype behind him. But id be content with letting him fight Anderson next. Much better then the Diaz fight...

If not Rashad or GSP then Weidman or Bisping is okay. But im leaning towards the side of Weidman because i think he has a better shot style wise. There is no way Bisping is outpointing Anderson in a 5 round fight. And he wont knock him out or even rock him. And Bispings great wrestling defense wouldnt help him against Anderson at all.

Personally i think Bisping/Anderson could learn alot from each other in the practice room.

Source: http://www.mmaforum.com/ufc/103899-matt-serra-weidman-submission-freak.html

Tony Bonello Stephan Bonnar Lorenzo Borgomeo  Kyle Bradley 

Greco-Roman Wrestling - Building Toughness Daily

Two-time US Olympian in Greco-Roman wrestling, Dan HendersonDan Henderson. That’s all you need right there.

If one had to validate to a UFC fan how exemplary an elite background in Greco-Roman wrestling can be for a fighter, one would only need to mention “Hendo,” who, at 42 years old, will be facing UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones at UFC 151 on September 1st. The born and bred Californian has competed in MMA for 15 years, fought and won in three weight classes, won multiple belts and tournaments in multiple organizations (UFC, Strikeforce, and PRIDE), and still to this day is one of the toughest and most dangerous fighters around, one especially known for his granite chin and outrageous knockout power. Before his incredible nearly 40 fight career in the cage began, Henderson was a two-time US Olympian (1992, 1996), winner of several medals in international competitions like the Pan American Games and World Cup, and, truly, a lifelong wrestler.

“You definitely have to be dedicated,” said Henderson of being an Olympian. “You have to be able to learn and to get into shape and be able to do all the cross-training that is involved. I think that's why I'm so mentally tough, because I competed like that. Wrestlers in general are fairly mentally tough. The biggest thing is the dedication involved - the commitment. It was obviously one of my goals. It was something that I wouldn't trade for anything. It definitely made me much more of a patriotic person. There are all the countries there, and to represent the United States was awesome. Barcelona was my first time and I was 21 years old. I was really excited about it, but it didn't compare to wrestling for my country in my home country in Atlanta. I think I was the first American to compete, so the crowd was really waiting for an American to come out and it happened to be me.”

What Henderson has been able to accomplish in MMA should be reason enough to sway the uninformed of a Greco-Roman wrestling mat’s ability to forge hardened fighters. But “Hendo” is far from alone, as UFC veteran Matt Lindland won a silver medal at 76 kg at the 2000 Olympics, former UFC heavyweight and light heavyweight champion Randy Couture was a three-time Olympic alternate, “The People’s Champ” Chael P. Sonnen won high honors in several international tournaments and was an Olympic alternate, and the original depiction of Greco-Roman wrestling in the Octagon was multiple Olympic alternate and UFC Hall of Famer Dan “The Beast” Severn. The facts of the matter are clear, Greco-Roman wrestling can make a man out of you.

“I believe that Olympic caliber Greco-Roman wrestlers have an advantage in a lot of particular positions, but more importantly, at the highest levels everything is a fight,” affirms Lindland. “You fight for points that don't come easy, you fight to make it on teams, you are fighting to medal at the tournaments. You absolutely have to fight for every inch and the word used is literally ‘pummel’. These are some of the most mentally tough men I know.”

For the uninitiated, Greco-Roman wrestling is part old school brutal, chest to chest battling for positioning and it’s part gut-wrenching suplex superiority. It’s a brand of punishing physical endurance one wouldn’t wish on their worst enemy mixed with near herniating highlight reel lifts and slams. The event is also home to one of the single greatest moments in US Olympic history when Rulon Gardner won gold in Sydney in a 1-0 victory over the seemingly undefeatable three-time Olympic gold medalist Aleksandr Karelin. If the US team’s head coach and 1984 Olympics gold medal winner Steve Fraser has anything to say about it, the 2012 London Games will play host to a similarly dizzying and headline-grabbing effort by his current roster of wrestlers.

“We have high expectations and we truly believe that every one of these six guys can medal for sure,” states Fraser. “There is nobody on our team that doesn't have a chance. With that said, with two young guys who are totally unproven and a few veterans who have won, but haven't won in a few years - you never know. It never gets easy in this sport. Our expectations are to do well and what that means is five medals with at least two gold. If we were to do that, we would be the heroes of the world and have shocked everybody. Nobody in Greco wins five medals usually. The countries that are winning a team title in the World Championships are winning three medals and that's enough to win the team title. Our goal is for everyone to win a medal, which would be six, but, realistically, if we win three then we could win the unofficial Olympic team title.”

It comes down to six guys who will be worked to the bone by Fraser and his illustrious staff of assistant coaches to be ready to give it their all once the lights and cameras are on. Only three countries qualified all seven weight classes on their team and for the US that unattained spot is at 96 kg. The six for the US seem to be split down the middle of young blood or experienced. As mentioned, regardless of which category they fall in, Fraser’s job is to get them in the mindset that they’re going to end up on the medals podium.

“Steve Fraser is one of those individuals who is a great coach, a great motivator,” remembers Henderson. “He tries to make everybody mentally tough and if you're not - he's going to beat it into you. He's on the mat and wrestles with us, grinds with us. At his age and being able to beat us at the same time? Being mentally tough was his biggest thing. Being mentally tough and confident. He always said, 'Expect to win. Expect to win.' I think he is definitely a great asset to USA wrestling.”

The younger trio of Team USA is comprised of three first time Olympians: Ellis Coleman at 60 kg, Ben Provisor at 74 kg, and Chas Betts 84 kg. The latter, Betts, is a well-conditioned grinder from the University of Northern Michigan who won gold at the Pan American Championships earlier this year. In May, Provisor’s profile and confidence shot through the roof as he defeated 2008 Olympic gold medal winner Manuchar Kvirkvelia of Georgia at the Curby Cup. The youngest member of the team is the most famous pop-culturally as Coleman took the internet by storm after successfully landing a “flying squirrel” technique at the Junior World Championships. As US assistant coach and 1976 Olympic gold medal winner Momir Petkovic explains, Coleman’s strengths aren’t his theatrics, but his tenacity.

“On this team, we have younger kids who are just coming up like Ellis Coleman,” says Petkovic. “He is 60 kg. He is a two-time Junior World Bronze medalist. Very focused, very hungry, very determined, loves it so much. This is his first Olympics. He is young, only 20-21 years old, and, hopefully, he will be able to pull out a surprise for us. We know how much he can do, but for the rest of the world this will be his first big, major international competition. I can definitely see Ellis Coleman in MMA. He's got that killer instinct. He's just a unique, unique, unique guy. I've been in this sport for like 50 years and not that many I see like him. I never see anyone have a major surgery, broken ankle, screws, ligaments, four hour surgery. And then the next morning he's in the gym lifting, push-ups, sit-ups, like what the [expletive] is going on with this kid? Where is he coming from? Just a very unique, unique, unique person.”

The leadership of the US team obviously comes from its experienced half of three top candidates for medals in their respective weight classes: Spenser Mango at 55 kg, Justin Lester at 66 kg, and, team stalwart Dremiel Byers at 120 kg. For Mango, a second appearance at the Olympics mixed with his copious amount of World Championships experience and still being only 26 years old should mean trouble for the rest of the competition. Don’t call him “Harry” anymore, as the 2x World bronze medalist, Lester, has proven he is one of the elite at his weight and is highly motivated to prove that in London after shockingly missing out on the team in Beijing. The final and heaviest member of the team is also one of the most decorated wrestlers in country history, as Byers owns a bronze, silver, and gold medal from the World Championships. These three will look to their vast experience to help themselves as well as to guide each other to the ultimate achievement of Olympic glory.

“The Olympics are so special,” asserts Petkovic. “The first time at the Olympics it is overwhelming. Suddenly, you're in the middle of 10,000 athletes and you don't know what you need to do. One thing we try to work with them on is them trying to keep cool and know that this is just another tournament. Get ready to raise your individual game to the level for you to be able to function at the best you can. Everyone at the Olympics has a dream of winning the gold medal. It doesn't matter if they've did anything before or if they didn't do anything before. It doesn't matter where their ranking is before. That all falls apart when the competition starts and anything can happen against anyone at any moment. An 18 year old kid can go in there and kick some ass against a two-time World champion. It's a totally different competition. The whole world is waiting for this and ready to declare, ‘this is my time’.”

In MMA, the buzz word for wrestlers is “control”. Fighters with frightening wrestling talent like past and present Olympians have the ability to dictate where a fight takes place or doesn’t take place. That is an added benefit during a fight, and for a career, as wrestlers can keep themselves out of harm by controlling the action, which can potentially lengthen their career. On top of that, wrestlers are molded over thousands of hours of acclimating themselves to the pain of training and competing. After years of grinning and bearing it in wrestling rooms and day long tournaments, fighting one fight in a cage in one night doesn’t seem so bad.

“It is a fact that the daily grueling training that wrestlers have to go through to become great wrestlers is such a benefit in the MMA world,” explains Fraser. “The conditioning factor alone, both physically and mentally. There is no other sport in the world that requires such grueling training as wrestlers. Wrestling is constant, non-stop attack. The conditioning factor from wrestlers is just huge. There are no better conditioned athletes, mentally and physically, than wrestlers.”

Beginning August 5th and ending August 7th, a sport will take center stage that is one of the most utterly excruciating and muscularly demanding you’ll ever see. As the former two-time member of the US Olympic team, Henderson, prepares to drop an “H-bomb” at his UFC 151 showdown on a champion who is 17 years his junior, fight fans should watch the wrestling event that made this old man “Hendo” so damn tough.

Source: http://www.ufc.com/news/Greco-Roman-Wrestling-Building-Toughness-Daily

Keith Hackney Matt Hamill Volk Han Joachim Hansen