Thursday, February 17, 2011

Ultimate UFC 127 Auction for Charity

THE ULTIMATE UFC 127 AUCTION – FIGHT FOR QUEENSLAND - BID NOW

THE ULTIMATE FIGHTING CHAMPIONSHIP LAUNCHES CHARITY AUCTION OF INCREDIBLE COLLECTORS ITEMS AND A ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME FAN EXPERIENCE TO AID THE QUEENSLAND PREMIER’S DISASTER RELIEF APPEAL IN AUSTRALIA

As the Ultimate Fighting Championship returns to Australia for the record-breaking UFC 127: PENN v FITCH event in Sydney on February 27, the world’s biggest combat sports organisation wants to give back to Australians by raising money for the Queensland Premier’s Disaster Relief Appeal.

The Appeal, set up by the Queensland government, will assist Queenslanders affected by recent flooding and Tropical Cyclone Yasi. Many communities have been devastated and some families have lost everything.

The UFC and its fighters are donating unique UFC 127 memorabilia and an unprecedented VIP experience to its Sydney show, including:
•    The actual Octagon canvas on which UFC 127 bouts will take place
•    The UFC gloves and shorts worn in the Octagon by UFC stars when they compete at UFC 127
•    An ultimate Aussie UFC 127 experience where the winner and a mate will have unprecedented behind-the-scenes access and VIP treatment during the UFC 127 weekend – Saturday 26 and Sunday 27 February.

Marshall Zelaznik, the UFC’s Managing Director of International Development, said: “Australia has been really great to the UFC, especially since we started holding live events there a year ago.  I don’t think anyone who has seen the footage from the recent natural disasters in Australia could fail to be moved by what the people of Queensland are going through, and we as a company want to do our bit to help.”

The auction is now live at http://ufc.thegivingbridge.com

Please note bidding for the Ultimate UFC 127 Experience pack ends at 7pm AEST (Sydney time) on Tuesday, February 22. Bidding for the merchandise items – which can be shipped worldwide – ends March 1 (AEST).

Full bid items:

Ultimate Aussie UFC 127 Fan Experience – BIDDING ENDS 7PM AEDT, FEB 22
The ultimate way to experience the biggest fight card in Australian history! You and a friend will have unbelievable access behind-the-scenes at both the weigh-in and on fight day, to the Octagon, and to the combatants and guest fighters. You’ll stay for two nights in a two-bedroom apartment at the official UFC 127 host hotel, Star City, have breakfast with UFC star Kenny Florian, plus much, much more:
•    Two nights (Friday 25 and Saturday 26 February) in a two-bedroom apartment at the official UFC 127 host hotel, Star City
•    Two VIP tickets to UFC 127 at Acer Arena on Sunday, February 27, sitting next to UFC fighters Ryan Bader and Josh Koscheck
•    Dream chance to visit one of your favourite fighters backstage and actually walk to the Octagon as part of his camp for his UFC 127 bout
•    Attend UFC 127 post-fight press conference on Sunday, February 27
•    Reserved front row seating for the weigh-in and Fight Club Q & A at Acer Arena on Saturday February 26
•    Express passes to the front of the line for official UFC 127 autograph sessions, also at Acer Arena on Saturday, February 26
•    Transport from hotel to and from the arena for the weigh-in on Saturday 26 February and fight day on Sunday, February 27
•    Go backstage at the UFC weigh-in at Acer Arena on Saturday, February 27, see the fighters prepare for battle and meet UFC President Dana White and other UFC personalities
•    A pair of UFC gloves personally signed by BJ Penn and Jon Fitch
•    Signed BJ Penn merchandise
•    Fight day Breakfast with UFC fighter Kenny Florian
•    Have photographs taken inside the Octagon before doors open to the public
•    VIP Backstage tour on fight day, visit with UFC staff behind the scenes, and see the dressing rooms
•    Two UFC 127 event programs
•    Two UFC 127 t-shirts
•    Two strictly limited UFC 127 posters signed by every fighter on the card

NOTE: Transport to Sydney and accommodation on Sunday, February 27 is not included.

UFC 127 Octagon Canvas – BIDDING ENDS MARCH 1
Bid now for your chance to win the absolute ultimate piece of UFC memorabilia: the actual Octagon canvas from UFC 127. Mixed martial arts history will literally take place on this canvas, with 12 UFC bouts featuring fighters from all over the world, including UFC icon BJ Penn, elite welterweight Jon Fitch, middleweights Michael Bisping and Jorge Rivera as well as the likes of George Sotiropoulos, Dennis Siver, Chris Lytle and Kyle Noke. This is the ultimate piece of UFC memorabilia for your gym or home, and worldwide shipping is included.

Jon Fitch UFC 127 Fight Shorts - BIDDING ENDS MARCH 1

Welterweight star Jon Fitch, one of the most successful fighters in the history of the UFC, has donated the fight shorts he will wear during the UFC 127 main event v two-time UFC Champion BJ Penn. This is a rare chance to own a piece of one of the most pivotal matchups in the UFC welterweight division. Worldwide shipping included.

Michael Bisping UFC 127 Fight Gloves and Walk Out Shirt - BIDDING ENDS MARCH 1
Own the very UFC gloves that ‘The Count’ will use in the Octagon during his UFC 127 co-main event vs. Jorge Rivera. Also included will be the official Bisping walk-out shirt ‘The Count’ will wear into the Octagon as he looks to settle his feud with ‘El Conquistador’. Worldwide shipping included.

Jorge Rivera UFC 127 Fight Kit - BIDDING ENDS MARCH 1
Middleweight contender Jorge Rivera has donated his walk out shirt, actual fight shorts and the UFC 127 fight gloves that he will wear when he vows he will knock out Michael Bisping in the co-main event. Worldwide shipping included.

Kyle Noke UFC 127 Fight Shorts - BIDDING ENDS MARCH 1
Aussie hero Kyle Noke has donated his UFC 127 fight shirt, fight shorts and fight gloves to help raise money to help his own. Bid now for a real piece of Aussie MMA history. Worldwide shipping included.

Ross Pearson UFC 127 Fight Kit - BIDDING ENDS MARCH 1

Bid now to own TUF 9 winner Ross Pearson’s actual UFC 127 fight gloves, walk-out shirt and board shorts that he will be wearing in his hotly anticipated fight with Spencer Fisher. Worldwide shipping included.

The UFC encourages fans to give whatever they can to the Queensland Premier’s Disaster Relief Appeal at: http://www.qld.gov.au/floods/donate.html


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Warburton Ready for His Second Chance

"I’ve just got to go out there and do a job. I’m gonna stand and trade with him and see what he’s got." Your commute to work ain’t got nothing on Curt Warburton’s trek to Sydney, Australia for his UFC 127 bout against Maciej Jewtuszko.

First, the lightweight prospect drove two and a half hours from his home in Bishop Auckland, County Durham, England to Manchester Airport. Then it was an hour flight to Heathrow, followed by flights to Bangkok and then Sydney, which clocked in at 12 and 10 hours, respectively. Yet you won’t hear any complaining from Warburton.

“I went last year with Mike (Bisping) for his training camp, so it should be okay,” he said. “I can’t see it being a problem. At least I’m getting out and seeing places. Plus it’s nice and warm over there.”

If you’re wondering how a native of cold and rainy England can have such a warm and sunny attitude about what isn’t an easy trip, consider that Warburton’s used to being on the road, taking the three hour drive to the Wolfslair Gym in Widnes every week to train. It’s a labor of love to say the least, yet what makes it more bearable is the fact that in the gym at the moment are a group of fighters, including UFC 127 card mates Michael Bisping and Tom Blackledge that are going through the same thing he is.

“We’re all in the gym together and it makes the gym a bit busier and a bit more of a laugh,” said Warburton. “If it’s just me in the gym fighting on a show, then everyone’s just on me all the time – you have to do this, you have to do that. It takes a bit of the pressure off if there’s a few people on the show and we all go through the same stuff.”

“As soon as we get on the mat, everything’s serious and we train serious,” he continues. “I live three hours drive away from the gym so I’ll come down on a Monday and live in the gym all week with a few other lads. As soon as training’s finished, we’ll all go for some dinner or we’ll make some dinner in the kitchen and we’ll just have a bit of a laugh waiting for the next session. It’s really good and we are like a bit of a family here.”

And as the old saying goes, steel sharpens steel, so having a group of UFC vets in the gym can only strengthen each fighter’s chances for victory in a little over a week’s time. Warburton’s assignment is Poland’s Jewtuszko, an exciting battler who made a significant impression on fight fans in his lone WEC bout last August when he knocked out noted striker Anthony Njokuani in just 95 seconds.  Warburton hasn’t seen a lot of his opponent, but he has seen enough to get a read on him.

“All I’ve seen is what’s on Youtube,” said the 30-year old Brit of Jewtuszko. “And he’s very unorthodox and unpredictable. He’s a southpaw and I keep getting southpaws for some reason and I hate them. (Laughs) But I’ve just got to go out there and do a job. I’m gonna stand and trade with him and see what he’s got. I’m pretty strong for my weight and if he starts causing too many problems with him being too unorthodox, I think if I get him down, I can’t see him getting back up.”

“From what I’ve seen of him, he doesn’t know what he’s doing himself until the last minute,” Warburton continues. “Jumping scissor knees, jumping scissor kicks, spinning elbows. With him being so unorthodox, he leaves himself open and his guard’s down, so he’s there for the taking, but I have to go in range really tight because he could pull something out from nowhere. But if it comes to the point where we go into the clinch, I think I’ll be able to take him down quite easily.”

It’s a confident outlook from a fighter with just eight pro fights, but Warburton has earned that right, not only on the UK scene with a 2007 win over fellow 155-pound prospect Ross Pearson, but with a gutsy effort in his UFC debut last October against seasoned veteran Spencer Fisher. It was a toss into the deep end for “The War”, but he won the first round against Fisher and almost submitted him before running out of gas in the second frame en route to a three round decision loss. Regardless of the final outcome, Warburton showed that he belonged.

“I had a few things go wrong in training camp and we were deciding whether to pull out or not, but with it being my first time in the UFC and it being such a big opportunity, I didn’t want to pull out,” he explains. “I still thought I could win the fight, and the first round was going really well, but I gassed. I took a lot out of it though, and with him being such a great fighter, knowing that I could cope with him reasonably well until the last round, it gives me a lot of confidence going into this fight.”

Jewtuszko, at 8-0, has a similar level of experience on paper, but where Warburton may hold an edge is that he has lived through the first-time UFC jitters and also got a master class in high level lightweight fighting from a long-time contender in Fisher. You can’t put a price on such an education.

“He was experienced,” said Warburton of Fisher. “He knew when to pick the pace up and stuff like that. He knew how to control and when to put pressure on, and I learned a lot there. It was the first time in the big arena as well, so I might have had a bit of nervous energy. I felt okay, but you never know, and hopefully I’ll go into this fight a bit more relaxed.”

Despite the nerves, Warburton conducted himself like an old pro early on against Fisher, and it was an impressive showing from the former semi-pro football (soccer) player who started MMA in the off-season five years ago just to stay in shape.

“I picked it up really easy because I was rolling about with lads that had been doing it six, seven months and I was tapping them out with stuff, but I think I was just using my strength to be honest because I really didn’t know anything,” he said. “I got a fight a few months later and after winning that it just went from there. I really got my big break to come down to the Wolfslair and train a year and a half, two years ago.”

In 2010, Wolfslair team members Warburton, Blackledge, Rob Broughton, and Aaron Wilkinson were brought in to compete in the UFC. Broughton submitted Vinicius Queiroz at UFC 120, Warburton lost to Fisher, Blackledge will debut at UFC 127 against Anthony Perosh, and Wilkinson acquitted himself well on The Ultimate Fighter 12 but was cut after a TUF12 finale loss to Cody McKenzie. Needless to say, in the stacked lightweight division, having your hand raised is even more imperative if you want to stick around. Warburton plans on being one of the last men standing.

“I’ve had a good training camp for this fight, so hopefully I can put a good performance on because I want to be fighting in the UFC and the only way to do that is to win.”


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Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Aussie Perosh Seeks Elusive UFC Win

“I’m going to have the crowd behind me and it’s going to be great. We’re both up and coming guys, and this time I’ll be ready.” I have never played rugby, but I enjoy watching it on television every once in a blue moon.

Or so I thought until I chatted with Anthony Perosh.

A little background: I remember a few occasions, after midnight, laying in bed studying “Aussie” rules football on ESPN2. Though the American in me didn’t totally comprehend the sport’s rules or scoring system, the non-stop speed, palpable grit and poetic chaos of the game instinctively fascinated me.

Rugby, what a game!

And then, after a few years of harboring this belief – Perosh, a native Australian, made me feel utterly childish during a recent interview.

“No, no it’s not rugby. It’s different,” the 38-year-old UFC fighter said, shattering my assumption that Aussie rules football and rugby were one and the same.

“It’s complicated,” he continued. “We have four types of football and they’re all different. We have soccer, then rugby, then rugby league and Aussie rules football. That’s how crazy it is in Australia.”

Perosh, who is set to clash with Tom Blackledge at UFC 127 in Sydney, ought to know. For more than a decade he’s been an ardent fan and season ticket holder of the Sydney Swans of the Australian Football League. He’s had the same seat at Sydney Cricket Ground stadium since 2002: Bay 8, Row J, Seat 9.

“The Aussie Rules Football is recognized as the only national football league in Australia because it’s in every city and state in Australia,” Perosh said. “I love watching; it’s my getaway every two weeks when they play their home game. I go and support my team. I cheer when they win and yell when they lose.”

Perosh figures to be the subject of much cheering himself when he steps into the Octagon for the fourth time on February 27. The Aussie fan favorite seeks redemption for his TKO loss last year to the legendary Mirko Cro Cop, a Croatian who shares the same bloodline as Perosh.

It’s worth reminding people that Perosh (10-6) took the bout with Cro Cop on a mere two days’ notice after Ben Rothwell was scratched from the UFC 110 main card with an injury. Most fighters wouldn’t dare step up to the plate on such a short turnaround. Yet Perosh, a decorated Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt who has competed several times in the prestigious Abu Dhabi Submission Wrestling World Championships, said he was inspired by something he heard UFC president Dana White say at a press conference days before the event.

“That very morning at the UFC press conference, Dana White said, ‘It’s amazing how many guys turn down opportunities,’” Perosh said.

Later that day Perosh was offered the fight.

“I didn’t want to be one of those guys who turned down an opportunity to fight one of the biggest names in the world in front of my home crowd,” he said. “So it was almost a no-brainer.”

Anyone who saw the fight can never question Perosh’s will to win. Unable to take Cro Cop down to the mat, where Perosh excels, the last-minute replacement absorbed quite a beating. His face a bloody mess, Perosh valiantly fought on for 10 minutes before the cageside doctor halted the fight at the conclusion of round two.

This time around, Perosh has benefitted from a full training camp and dropped to the 205-pound weight class, though he knows substantially less about Blackledge’s tendencies than Cro Cop’s.

“From the footage I’ve seen he looks to be well rounded,” Perosh said of the British fighter, who trains with Michael Bisping at the Wolfslair Academy. “He likes to head kick and he looks well-rounded with his wrestling and BJJ as well.”

One of the most unlikely outcomes for the fight would be Blackledge triumphing by submission; no fighter has toppled Perosh in that fashion. Perosh’s biggest weakness, however, has been his lack of hand speed and general stiffness in the standup realm. When he doesn’t win by submission, Perosh’s odds of winning plummet. He’s won by TKO three times, been technically knocked out four times and lost twice by decision. Of note: Perosh has never won a fight that went the distance. Neither has Blackledge, who has never heard the final bell – whether winning or losing - in his 16 fight career, so something will have to give in their meeting.

For Perosh the stakes are huge. He has yet to have his hand raised inside of the Octagon. This is his golden chance, in front of his hometown faithful, to finally achieve that elusive milestone.

Perosh does not mention the fact that time is ticking on that dream. He is a few months shy of his 39th birthday but claims he is in the best shape of his life.

“I’m going to have the crowd behind me and it’s going to be great,” Perosh said. “It’ll be just like when I fought Cro Cop last year except this time I’ll be fighting a non-contender just like me. We’re both up and coming guys, and this time I’ll be ready.”


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Fukuda Learns from an Unlikely Mentor

At UFC 127, Japanese middleweight Riki Fukuda makes his UFC debut against TUF11 veteran Nick Ring. Phil Baroni isn’t just Riki Fukuda’s close friend and longtime training partner. Baroni also moonlights, rather proudly, as Fukuda’s English teacher.

So while Fukuda, a Tokyo native, relied on an English translator for a recent UFC.com interview, the “New York Bad Ass” insists it was totally unnecessary.

“His English is fine! He’s my number one (English) student,” Baroni said enthusiastically, all kidding aside. “I’ve had a couple others.”

Leading up to his UFC 127 bout against middleweight Nick Ring, the 30-year-old Fukuda spoke exclusively in Japanese to UFC.com. Curious at what I was missing, I pressed Baroni to describe his buddy’s English.

“He has a New York accent,” Baroni said, “and he uses all the same words I do.”
Like what?

“Fugetaboutit,” Baroni offered.

What else?

“(Expletive) it.”

Baroni, wife at his side, brainstormed a bit more for the lessons he had imparted. After a short pause, two more Baroni-isms jumped to mind as staples of Fukuda’s fast-evolving second language:

“Yeah, right” and “nice, playa’, nice.”

English lessons aside, Fukuda (17-4) is best known for a seven-fight win streak that includes a unanimous decision victory over Murilo “Ninja” Rua, older brother of UFC light heavyweight champ Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. A revealing measure of Fukuda’s valor can be traced to his pro debut back in 2004 when he battled Joe Doerksen in Hawaii. Fukuda’s record was 0-0; Doerksen was 25-5.

Baroni was one of the men working Fukuda’s corner that night.

“He fought his a—off,” Baroni recalled. “He was a former wrestler and Doerksen was a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu who kept catching him in submissions and then Riki would escape and the crowd would go crazy. He showed a lot of heart and guts. I knew then that he would be a star if he ever had the right training and opportunities.”

While the bulk of Fukuda’s training has been in Japan, often with sparring partners Yushin Okami and Yoshihiro Akiyama, he has also traveled with Baroni for stints at the American Kickboxing Academy in San Jose, California, and Xtreme Couture in Las Vegas.

“All of the U.S. gyms are huge compared to Japanese gyms and they have a nice environment for training,” Fukuda said through his translator, Fumihiko Ishii. “All of the American fighters are very serious about reaching success and are more committed compared to Japan.”

That dedication, Fukuda indicated, is what has elevated his game over the past few years.

“I’ve put more effort in,” said the former collegiate wrestler, who also earned a college degree in law. “I committed to train harder than before.”

Fukuda, who also developed a fondness for yoga, MTV, reggae music and burritos during his forays in the U.S., surmised that many Japanese fighters have not fared well inside of the Octagon because they don’t cut weight or focus only on finishing a fight, rather than strategy. The Japanese fighter expects to have his hands full when he faces Ring, a member of the Ultimate Fighter season 11 cast who is 10-0 as a pro.

Baroni, a UFC veteran, sensed that his good friend was battling jitters as his UFC debut inched closer.

“He’s really nervous because this is his big chance; it’s do or die,” Baroni said. “I told him to fight and enjoy it. Go out there with a smile on your face, don’t put a lot of pressure on yourself. Not a lot of guys get to fight in the UFC. I’ve been there before and froze and fought tight and not to my potential. What happens is what will happen. The outcome will take care of itself.”


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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Tweets of the Week - 2/11

UFC 126 Remix
Kyle Kingsbury @Kingsbu looked great with his 29 second TKO on Spike this weekend even while running a bad fever. Follow @Kingsbu  -Ryan Bader

Sorry guys, was a bad night. I'll learn and will come back much better   -Ryan Bader

Got a soar foot..... Lol  -Paul Taylor

I just had the greatest night of my career and 20 mins before my fight my grandfather ( father) passed!! I'm so sick I don't know what to do  -Donald "Cowboy" Cerrone

Waitin to leave the hospital. Great news it's not broken!! Time to relax and have some fun. Thanks4all the love guys!!  -Chad Mendes

Big thank you to my sponsors @BSNFinishFirst @SLiMEnews @mmaelitebrand @SPRAWLshorts Support these guys!  -Forrest Griffin

But seriously, on a scale of 1 to 10 how dangerous is Anderson Silva??? Dance around for a bit then POW you're a HL reel...  -Benson Henderson

I just sow the kick. It was fantastic even then I think this will land once in a million , land tonight I only have one thing to say I love the fans and I will be back soon I have so much energy on me that i am ready to run , thanks for every one that came to se the fight and how both the fight much love  -Vitor Belfort

Sorry I tapped guys I should have gone asleep like a man !! :(  -Paul Kelly

Very happy to get the W for my teammates, coaches all my sponsors including #Xbox360 and too all my fans  -Demetrious "Mighty Mouse" Johnson

Catchweight?
http://plixi.com/p/76269206 sooo my hands doing great n still getting better everyday! Cnt wait till I can punch @philmrwonderful wit it;)!  -Dominick Cruz

@TheDomin8r if u want war little dude a war is what u'll get  -Phil Davis

Stann & Deliver
Long day and haven't had much time to tweet updates, working/training hard and still waiting for an opponent but UFC 130 looks like the date  -Brian Stann

Meathead of Household
This little monster put an ENTIRE bagel in his mouth and needless to say, vomited everywhere. Ahhh, the joys of parenthood  -Matt Mitrione

Git ‘er Downes
I just saw that Larry the Cable Guy is going to have his own show on the History Channel. They just don't make history like they used to  -Daniel Downes

Only If There’s a Laugh Track
I wanna make saying "hey gang!" cool.  -Kenny Florian


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UFC® Sells Out Rogers Centre In Minutes

UFC® 129: ST-PIERRE vs. SHIELDS Generates Largest Single-Day Event Gate in Rogers Centre History

55,000 Tickets Sold for Historic UFC Stadium Event

Toronto, Ontario, Canada – The Ultimate Fighting Championship® announced today that tickets for UFC® 129: ST-PIERRE vs. SHIELDS at Rogers Centre in Toronto on April 30 sold out minutes after being made available to the public. Rogers Centre was originally configured for 42,000 seats, but due to overwhelming demand, UFC and Rogers Centre officials reconfigured the venue to accommodate 55,000.

UFC® 129: ST-PIERRE vs. SHIELDS, which is presented by TapouT®, is the first major mixed martial arts event to ever be held in Ontario. The event doubles the largest gate and attendance records in UFC history. The previous gate record for a UFC event was $5.4 million, which was set on Saturday, Dec. 30, 2006 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas for UFC 66: LIDDELL vs. ORTIZ 2. UFC 124: ST-PIERRE vs. KOSCHECK 2, held at the Bell Centre in Montreal on Dec. 11, 2010, previously held the attendance record with over 23,000 fans.

With two UFC records already shattered, UFC 129 is also the largest single-day event gate in the history of Rogers Centre, which has played home to some of the world’s top entertainment and sporting events.

“UFC continues to set new milestones,” UFC President Dana White said. “We’ve sold 55,000 tickets in our first stadium event in Toronto and we continue to take the UFC to the next level.”

“Based on the lightning quick sell-out, there is no doubt that UFC’s fan base is extremely passionate”, said Silvio D’Addario, VP Events, Rogers Centre.  “We’ve worked closely with UFC to configure our venue to provide the best fan experience possible and we look forward to hosting this historic event.”
While UFC 129 is sold out, tickets for the UFC® Fan Expo at the Direct Energy Centre in Toronto on April 29-30 are still available at www.ufcfanexpo.com. Featuring the largest collection of UFC® fighters ever to appear in one location, exciting special events, interactive Q&A sessions, meet and greets, training and development sessions, the Octagon®, and much more, the UFC Fan Expo is a can’t-miss event for UFC fans.


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Tuchscherer Swinging "The Crowbar" Again

"I’ve had time to reevaluate the way my fights have been in the UFC and I kinda went away from the old Tuchscherer. I’m gonna bring back the old Tuchscherer.” The January announcement that former UFC heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar was going to coach season 13 of The Ultimate Fighter was met with a blitz of positive press and an equally enthusiastic response from fans.

Another interested party – heavyweight Chris Tuchscherer – was pleased as well, despite the assumption that he was losing a key training partner as well as some of his coaching staff as he prepared for his UFC 127 bout against Mark Hunt. But as “The Crowbar” explains, he has not only worked with his usual team for this fight in Vegas, but his itinerary includes a return to Greg Nelson’s camp in Minnesota and some work in Arizona with Ryan Bader and company.

“It hasn’t sidetracked me at all,” said Tuchscherer of Lesnar’s TUF13 stint. “I’ve been getting good training in, done some different things and switched up some things that I think are gonna be better for me.”

While conducting this interview, Tuchscherer was in Las Vegas, working with Lesnar for the week before heading back to Minnesota. This camp has provided a nice change in scenery and training philosophies for the 35-year old, who is hoping to even up his UFC record at 2-2 with a win over Hunt.

“What it (visiting different camps) does is let you see how other people train and lets you try different things instead of doing it the way you’ve always been used to doing it,” he said. “To keep evolving in this sport, you have to widen your game. You can’t be one-dimensional, and if something’s not working, it’s time to change it up.”

Coming off a first round TKO loss to rising star Brendan Schaub at UFC 116 last July, Tuchscherer has had plenty of time to reevaluate an Octagon stint that has yet to set the world on fire. Entering the organization with a 17-1, 1 NC record in 2009, the former Division II All-American wrestler got no favors in his first bout when he was pitted against former world title challenger Gabriel Gonzaga and then absorbed a cringe-inducing, yet inadvertent kick to the groin before getting stopped later in the first round with a legitimate barrage of strikes.

Next up was Tim Hague in February of 2010, and while Tuchscherer pulled off the majority decision win, he faded down the stretch thanks to a rough weight cut on fight week.

“I don’t know what went wrong,” he said. “I thought I was in good shape, but I think having to cut all that weight hurt me. I was walking around at 278 the week of the fight and I’ve never had to cut before.”

Then came the one-sided loss to Schaub, and in the months since that bout, Tuchscherer came to a realization when it came to the way he’s been fighting and performing.

“I said ‘what am I doing?’ I’m trying to fight a way that I shouldn’t be fighting. I shouldn’t be trying to be someone that I’m not. Us wrestlers try to work standup a lot, and you always want to put on a good fight, so I think I went away from my style as far as being a grinder. I’m a guy who’s in your face and who closes the distance right away, and in my last couple fights I went to ‘let’s go out there and see if I can be Mike Tyson and try to bang with this guy,’ and I was trying to do things that I probably shouldn’t be doing, especially against someone else who has that as their forte.”

So after finding out that striking with a former Golden Gloves champ with dynamite in his fists (Schaub) wasn’t the wisest course of action, Tuchscherer has gotten back to what got him here in the first place – good ol’ fashioned Mark Coleman / Dan Severn ground and pound. He’s also tightened up his cardio routines (he’s already been walking around at 265), and when it’s time to fight on February 27th against the former K-1 Grand Prix champion, his goal is clear.

“I’m gonna push, push, push,” he said. “I feel right now that I’m in the best shape that I’ve ever been in, my weight’s maintained, I’m walking around at about 265, and I feel good about where my cardio’s at. I’ve had time to reevaluate the way my fights have been in the UFC and I kinda went away from the old Tuchscherer. I’m gonna bring back the old Tuchscherer, and I’m bringing back to the table what got me here in the first place.”

One thing that isn’t on his throwback ‘to do’ list though is his former hobby of stock car racing in North Dakota.

“Racing’s been done since I started in the UFC,” he said. “I even had a couple people come up and ask me, ‘do you want to drive?’ It’s really tempting, but I’m so focused on this. I used to race 40-50 nights a year in the summer and I went from that to going to only two races, and that was to watch. You can always race when you’re old. (Laughs) You can’t fight when you’re 50-60.”

Well, unless you’re Randy Couture, who probably can’t be counted out from stepping into the Octagon at 60, but he’s the one in a million who could. For the rest of the fighting population, there’s a small window in which to put together a successful career, and Tuchscherer is willing to do what it takes to reach his goals. That means a lot of sacrifice, from him, and from his family. Luckily, the entire clan, which includes his wife Natalie and their two children, is on board.

“My family’s gotten me to where I am,” he said. “If I didn’t have their support, I wouldn’t be here. My hometown is Fargo, North Dakota, but when I train, I gotta leave every week. My wife works a full-time job, 48 hours a week, plus she takes care of two kids, and if she wasn’t there to help that part of it out, I couldn’t do it.”

So to make sure all the sacrifices are worth it, “The Crowbar” will start swinging again in less than two weeks. If you’ve watched him over the last couple years, you may not recognize him, but if you’ve seen his bouts in Fargo, Bismarck, and Grand Forks, it could be like seeing an old friend with a new haircut.

“I’ve been doing a lot of different things this time and I’ve got a real good feeling about this fight,” he said. “I’m looking at this fight as the new me, like I’m reinventing myself.”


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Injuries No Big Deal for Camozzi

“I’m kind of a roughneck, scrappy person. I don’t have a lot of talents but fighting is one of them. I’m always up for a challenge and I’ll fight through anything." Sometimes a man is faced with only two choices, neither of them good. That was the case for Chris Camozzi last year when he reluctantly consulted a doctor about extreme pain in his jaw and an inability to chew on anything.

The doc gave the pro fighter two options: A) No solid foods or chewing for six weeks or B) get your jaw wired shut for even longer.

“I chose not to chew anything,” said the 24-year-old middleweight, who is slated to clash with Kyle Noke on the main card of UFC 127 later this month in Sydney, Australia.  Noke (18-4-1) is an Australian who once served as a bodyguard for the late Steve Irwin, best known as the “Crocodile Hunter.”

Camozzi’s broken jaw ordeal is a testament to his extraordinary toughness and will to win. The Coloradan suffered the injury during a preliminary bout against Victor O’Donnell on The Ultimate Fighter 11 last year. At stake: a chance to become one of 16 fighters to get into the house and compete for a six-figure UFC contract.

Early in the first round, during a ferocious back-and-forth slugfest, O’Donnell landed a potent right cross to Camozzi’s chin.

“I felt a loud pop in my ears,” Camozzi said. “But you’ve got to fight through things. It was nothing that would stop me from finishing.”

O’Donnell emerged from the scrap even more damaged, suffering a fractured orbital bone en route to losing three-round affair. Camozzi’s injury initially went undiagnosed and he preferred it that way. But his inability to chew any foods soon created a problem.

“I planned on fighting and I tried to avoid going to the doctor,” he said. “I think I could’ve fought. I wanted it so badly that I was willing to do whatever. I figured I could fix it later. You know, pain doesn’t usually last forever … But the producers made me go to see the doctor and I was sent home. It was pretty devastating, not knowing if I would get another shot.”

Impressed with Camozzi’s performance, the UFC tapped him for The TUF 11 Finale and he delivered, winning a unanimous decision over James Hammortree. Note: Camozzi triumphed despite dislocating a shoulder in the first round. He followed that up with a split decision victory over Dongi Yang to run his record to 2-0 in the UFC. Winner of four straight, Camozzi finds himself pitted against another TUF 11 alum whom he considers his mirror image.

“I have a lot of respect for him,” Camozzi said. “He was one of the guys on the show that I liked as a person because he wasn’t there to be a clown or play up his persona; he was there to fight and win. Too many guys go on the show go and make a jackass of themselves.”

Camozzi admitted to being a little more nervous than usual as the showdown with Noke inches closer.

“It makes me a little nervous, which is good. I’ve only had that feeling in a few fights and the fights where I was nervous have always been my best performances,” said Camozzi (14-3). “It means I don’t go in there overconfident but I don’t go in there scared, either. Being a little bit nervous puts me on my game.”

For good measure, Camozzi has a large tattoo across his chest depicting two skulls with a heart valve and a grenade sandwiched in between them.

“I’ve always been told that I have a lot of heart and I agree,” he said. “I’m kind of a roughneck, scrappy person. I don’t have a lot of talents but fighting is one of them. I’m always up for a challenge and I’ll fight through anything. Like the jaw … in the finale I dislocated my shoulder in the first round and fought through that. The grenade is a reminder of if you’re willing to push through anything … grenades will take out anything. Fighters with heart go farther than guys going on just skill.”

His track record is proof of that claim. And Camozzi said that as his career evolves he will continue to draw strength and educational value from his broken jaw experience.

“That’s given me more urgency to win fights quickly,” he said, mindful of making the most of his second go-round with the UFC. “In the end it all worked out well. They gave me another opportunity and I made the most of it.”


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Rivera's Road to 127

"I want to perform now. I want to put on a great fight and I want people to talk about it. I want to win every time by finishing my fights. I want the fans to go nuts.” Jorge Rivera may never be mentioned in the same sentence as the greats of mixed martial arts, but if you look down a record that includes the names Anderson Silva, Rich Franklin, Travis Lutter, David Loiseau, Chris Leben, Martin Kampmann, Dennis Hallman, Nate Quarry, and Kendall Grove, just to name a few, it would be hard to find a fighter who has been more willing to test himself against the top middleweights in the game than “El Conquistador.”

“I fought Anderson, I fought Rich, I fought Lutter, Loiseau, Leben – you name them, I fought them, and I never turned down a fight,” said Rivera. “When I first started fighting, that’s what I wanted to do. I wanted to say at the end of the day that I fought all these people. I can say that now, and I feel privileged and honored to say that. I’ve won some and I’ve lost some, but just to be able to say that I was good enough to compete with these guys at this level makes my day.”

This willingness to put it all on the line night in and night out has garnered Rivera respect from his peers and an ever-growing fanbase. And with a three fight winning streak heading into his UFC 127 co-main event bout against Michael Bisping, Rivera isn’t just a veteran, he’s a contender, so as he makes his run towards the top, it’s time to take a look at how he got here.

David Loiseau – UFC 44 – September 26, 2003
Result – Rivera W3

On a seven fight win streak, Montreal young gun David Loiseau blasted out of the gate in the UFC with a first round knockout of Mark Weir at UFC 42. Expected to do the same to the debuting Rivera (5-1 at the time), Loiseau came out fast and took the first round, cutting the New Englander with some of the best elbows in the game. But over the next two rounds, Rivera showed the heart that would come to define him, almost finishing “The Crow” in the final round as he pounded out a close, but unanimous, three round decision win.

Lee Murray – UFC 46 – January 31, 2004
Result – Murray Wsub1

Just as Loiseau’s quick UFC start got a rude stop in fight number two, Rivera’s perfect Octagon record got evened up in a hurry by the UK’s Lee Murray, a debutant who was getting a lot of attention for a street brawl with Tito Ortiz after UFC 38. Expecting Murray to be a one-dimensional banger, Rivera took his foe to the mat and figured he would have his way with him. 1:45 later though, Murray sunk in a triangle choke and Rivera tapped.
“That was a fluke, I just underestimated the kid,” said Rivera a few years back, but regardless of the circumstances, the upset loss killed the momentum built up by his impressive win over Loiseau four months earlier, and it was back to the drawing board for the Massachusetts native.

Rich Franklin – UFC 50 – October 22, 2004
Result – Franklin Wsub3

Following the loss to Murray, Rivera picked up two wins outside the Octagon before getting a return call to take on rising star Rich Franklin. It was without a doubt one of Franklin’s toughest early bouts, and in the back-and-forth clash, you could even make the argument that Rivera was winning (or at least even) as the bout entered the final round. But it was in that final round that a bloodied Franklin pulled away, as he used his ground and pound to set up a finishing armbar with 32 seconds left.

Anderson Silva – Cage Rage 11 – April 30, 2005
Result – Silva TKO2

Before he began his record-shattering reign in the UFC, current middleweight champ Anderson Silva took his show on the road with fights in Hawaii, Japan, and in England, where he competed for the Cage Rage organization. His second bout there was against Rivera, and while Silva was in control throughout as he showed off the devastating knees that would eventually earn him the UFC’s 185-pound title, Rivera didn’t back down against “The Spider”, and he gave a gutsy effort before being halted in the second round.

Edwin Dewees – TUF4 Finale – November 11, 2006
Result – Rivera TKO1

Throughout the rest of 2005 and into early 2006, Rivera won four of five fights, going 1-1 in the UFC with a win over Dennis Hallman and a loss to Chris Leben. But it was his stint on season four of The Ultimate Fighter that was going to determine where his career would eventually end up. Rivera wouldn’t win the show, but he did get a fight on the finale card against Edwin Dewees, and with his UFC career basically on the line, he delivered an emphatic one round TKO win that gave him new life in the Octagon. He has not fought outside of the organization since.

Nissen Osterneck – UFC Fight Night – April 1, 2009
Result – Rivera W3

The win over Dewees was followed by a 14 second knockout loss against Terry Martin that shattered his jaw and put him on the shelf for nearly a year. When he returned against Kendall Grove in January of 2008, he knocked out the TUF3 winner in 80 seconds, but again showed his erratic ways when he was submitted by Martin Kampmann five months later. Then came the most crushing blow of all when his daughter Janessa tragically passed away in August of 2008.

When he picked up his fighting career in April of 2009, Rivera was still dealing with the effects of this tragedy, and yet he carried on.

“It’s something I struggle with every single day,” said Rivera. “Some days are better than others. Some days it tears me down, and other days I use it to fuel me. But it’s not something I’ll ever get over, and it’s something I deal with on a daily basis.”

The verdict that night in Nashville may have been a split decision in Rivera’s favor, but really, Osterneck never had a chance against the emotional and motivated Rivera, who channeled his grief into a compelling performance that may one day be looked at as his greatest victory.

Nate Quarry – UFC Fight Night – March 31, 2010
Result – Rivera TKO2

The Osterneck bout kicked off a career resurgence for Rivera, who has learned not to let the “little things” affect him anymore.

“I think I cared too much about winning and losing before,” he said. “Not that I don’t care about it now, but I want to perform now. I want to put on a great fight and I want people to talk about it. I want to win every time by finishing my fights. I want the fans to go nuts.”

They have been. Rivera’s next bout after Osterneck was a punishing third round finish of Rob Kimmons in October of 2009, and then in March of 2010 he turned what was expected to be a Fight of the Year candidate into a one-sided blasting of Nate Quarry. It’s been an unlikely comeback, but a fun one to watch.


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Saturday, February 12, 2011

UFC 129's Challengers - Mark Hominick

"With Jose Aldo, I think everyone is so intimidated and so concerned about what he’s gonna do, and I’m just going in there and I know I can beat him. I know I have the tools to beat him and that’s the mentality I’m bringing in.” Anyone who has met Mark “The Machine” Hominick will tell you that he’s a true gentleman, one of the politest people in the sport of mixed martial arts. But then there was January 22, 2011, the night the quiet 28-year old from Thamesford became a “Mean Machine.”

“I wanted to make a statement with the fight,” said Hominick of his 88 second stoppage of George Roop on the UFC Fight for The Troops 2 card in Killeen, Texas. “There was talk that I was going to get the title shot, so I knew I was close, but I just wanted to go in there and make a statement, silence any of the critics, and just prove why I was the number one contender, and I went in there and that’s what I did.”

It sounds a lot less intimidating than what the reality was. On this night, Hominick tore out of his corner at the opening bell and the look on his face said it all. He was going to do everything he could to knock Roop out as cleanly and quickly as possible, and he was going to end the fight, leave the Octagon with no bumps or bruises, and leave himself in perfect condition to challenge UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo on April 30 in Toronto.

Mission accomplished, and in two and half months, he will challenge for his first world title. Better yet, he will do it in his home province in front of 40,000 of his closest friends at the Rogers Centre.

“It’s an iconic place, especially for Toronto and people in Ontario,” said Hominick of the home field of the Toronto Blue Jays and Toronto Argonauts. “Like back when it was the Skydome and the Jays won back-to-back World Series and the Joe Carter homerun. But I never thought the UFC would be coming there. This is beyond dreams.”

It’s a great story on a lot of levels, and being just an hour and a half away by car, Hominick will likely be the focal point of many in the media leading up to the fight. He’s already become a favorite of friends who date all the way back to his kindergarten days in terms of ticket requests, but he’s not about to get distracted, even with his wife expecting their first child five days after UFC 129.

“I focus on the task at hand, and I’ve always been good at that,” he said. “This is the first thing when I wake up and the last thing I’m thinking about when I go to bed, and finally, everything’s come together.”

A pro since 2002, Hominick paid his dues on the Canadian circuit, winning the country’s super lightweight title as well as the featherweight belt from the TKO organization that propelled his career to the next level. But it’s been a five fight winning streak that began in 2008 that has really proved Hominick to be ready for prime time in the 145-pound weight class.

“You can see in my last five fights, I got five in a row, and I think every fight, I’ve gained in confidence and believing I’m the best in the division,” said Hominick, 20-8, a victor over Roop, Leonard Garcia, Yves Jabouin, Bryan Caraway, and Savant Young during his unbeaten string. “And with Jose Aldo, I think everyone is so intimidated and so concerned about what he’s gonna do, and I’m just going in there and I know I can beat him. I know I have the tools to beat him and that’s the mentality I’m bringing in.”

Brazil’s Aldo, who will be defending the UFC belt he was awarded last November for the first time, has yet to be tested in his time under the Zuffa umbrella. His 8-0 record in the WEC is filled with jaw-dropping knockouts and dominant performances against the cream of the featherweight crop. Hominick certainly respects the champion, but he doesn’t fear him.

“First off, I think he’s one of the best pound for pound fighters, there’s no denying that,” said Hominick of Aldo. “But I match up very well with him, and there’s nobody that’s brought the skill set that I have. No one’s been in his face, no one’s had the technical standup skills that is gonna back him up. He dictates the fight, and everyone moves backwards because they’re intimidated by his standup and what he’s done to everybody else. I plan on putting the pressure on him, and nobody’s done that.”

Hominick’s confidence comes not with bluster or arrogance; it comes from a place where you let your fists and feet do the talking. So he’s ready for April 30 and ready to enjoy every day leading up to the defining fight of his career.

“I’m just trying to take it all in, and not get swallowed by the hype,” he said. “I’m pumped to be a part of this, and I always enjoy the moments leading up to the fight, but this one’s gonna be extra special. And I’m a fan of the sport too, so it’s pretty cool to be up there with Georges St-Pierre and headlining an event in Toronto. This is ten years fighting as a pro all coming to one moment, and I’m gonna give it everything I got.”


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UFC 129's Challengers - Jake Shields

“This is the fight I’ve wanted for years. He (St-Pierre) has been a champ for a while in the UFC, and he’s the one everyone’s talking about as the best in the world." When the list of people you’ve beaten includes the names Martin Kampmann, Dan Henderson, Robbie Lawler, Dave Menne, Yushin Okami, Hayato “Mach” Sakurai, Carlos Condit, Jason Miller and Paul Daley, it’s safe to say that you’ve been in some big fights.

But Jake Shields knows that his April 30th challenge of UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre will be unlike any other.

“Without a doubt it will be the biggest,” said Shields, the number one contender at 170 pounds. “Fights don’t get much bigger than this.”

Don’t mistake that observation for intimidation though. Shields has been doing this sort of thing for 11 years now, and he has 26 wins to show for it. In fact, he hasn’t lost since 2005, a string covering 15 bouts. So it’s unlikely that 40,000 Canadians screaming for their hero will rattle the California product.

“You try not to think about the crowd,” he said. “It’s just gonna be me and Georges in that cage, so it doesn’t matter how many people are gonna be in the audience.”

St-Pierre is quite the handful in the Octagon though, and if his own winning streak (eight) and five title defenses aren’t enough, consider that he hasn’t lost as much as a round since August of 2007. Yet during that time, Shields, who was collecting title belts in the Elite XC and Strikeforce organizations, always had an eye on the pride of Montreal while envisioning a future fight.

“This is the fight I’ve wanted for years,” he said. “He (St-Pierre) has been a champ for a while in the UFC, and he’s the one everyone’s talking about as the best in the world. I’ve been over there thinking I can beat him for the last three, four years, and it’s been frustrating not having that opportunity. So to finally have this opportunity in front of me, I couldn’t be more excited.”

He plans on taking that excitement into the Octagon with him at the Rogers Centre in Toronto, and in doing so, he’ll look to send a message immediately that he didn’t come to just compete in one of the biggest MMA events of all-time, but to win the belt.

“It’s very important to go out there and get things started right away because GSP goes out there and he takes the fight right away and puts it where he wants it and that’s why he’s such a great fighter,” said Shields. “He goes out there from round one and dictates the pace and that’s something I’m not gonna let him do.”

And in addition to his stellar ground game (which has been used to secure ten of his 26 victories), Shields brings something that most of St-Pierre’s challengers haven’t – the experience of having gone the five round championship distance. And he’s gone the route not just once, but twice, in his wins over Henderson and Miller.

“I’m definitely glad I’ve fought five rounders before,” he said. “The first one you go into, it’s a big jump going two extra rounds, and having gone a couple five rounders now, it’s nice knowing that I can.”

Experience…check.

Skills…check.

Focus…check.

The only thing missing for Shields now is a UFC championship belt.

“This is the whole reason I got in the sport,” said the 32-year old. “When I started 11 years ago, I was watching the UFC. It’s always been and still is my favorite show, and it’s always been the biggest and the best. The belts I have do mean something, but ultimately the belt of all belts is the UFC’s and that’s been my dream all along.”

So has he cleared some room in his trophy case?

“I got a spot on the top all ready for it.”


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Is Silva the G.O.A.T.?

Is Anderson Silva the greatest fighter of All-Time? Read on to hear Michael DiSanto's take on that question... Anderson Silva’s spectacular first-round knockout win over former 205-pound champion Vitor Belfort solidified his kung fu grip on the claim of best fighter in the world, pound for pound.

Belfort represented the final unknown at 185 pounds, at least for the time being. That may change in time. Maybe even in the short term. But as I sit here today, I cannot think of a single person fighter that Silva “needs” to fight.

13 UFC bouts. 13 wins. Eight consecutive successful defenses of the title. Both of those stand as UFC records, by wide margins.

With nothing left to prove in the middleweight division, what else is there for Silva, other than focusing on establishing his legacy? He is lying if he claims that he doesn’t think about the label of Greatest of All Time. Of course he thinks about it. Every fighter wants to go down as the greatest to don a pair of vale tudo gloves. Silva is no different.

Again, Silva is universally regarded as the greatest fighter in the world, pound for pound, and he has owned that undisputed title for several years. But is he the greatest ever?

Randy Couture certainly has to be included in any discussion of the G.O.A.T. He has several career records of his own. Couture will forever go down as the first man to ever win titles in two different weight divisions—heavyweight and light heavyweight. He is the only man to win the UFC Heavyweight Championship three separate times. He is also the only man to win the 205-pound title twice. His nine wins in UFC championship bouts ties him with Silva and Matt Hughes.

Couture certainly has a legitimate claim to the title of G.O.A.T. But one must weigh the value of winning across divisions versus Silva’s record-setting run in one. Silva is a former 170-pound competitor, but that was before his arrival in the UFC. He also has a couple of great wins at 205 pounds, including a win over a former champion in Forrest Griffin, though he has not yet won a UFC title outside of the middleweight division. Couture comfortably holds the edge, therefore, on multi-division success within the UFC.

Where Silva stands out compared to his much older rival is the length of his title reign and undefeated start to his UFC career. Most people will probably be surprised to know that Couture’s longest winning streak in the UFC is only seven fights, and he lost three times outside the UFC during that run. “The Natural” has never gone more than four professional fights without a loss. And his longest winning streak over the last decade sits at three.

Again, one’s definition of all-time greatness dictates whether Couture gets the nod for his success across divisions or Silva for his unmatched reign at middleweight. Let’s not forget this guy named Georges St-Pierre, either. It may very well come to pass that when the smoke settles, he passes Silva in both consecutive wins and successful title defenses. The odds are against him, but it could happen.

Better yet, GSP could remove Silva from the debate by scoring a timeless upset in a much ballyhooed future catchweight fight with the pound-for-pound kingpin. It is a fight often bandied about at bars and on Internet forums, and UFC President Dana White seems committed to making it happen, if GSP gets past Jake Shields in April.

For the record, I am torn. I flip flop all the time. One day I will firmly believe that there is no reason for Silva to leave the comforts of the middleweight division. The next day it becomes a pound-for-pound requisite, if he wants to stand before Couture.

The truth of the matter is there is no right answer. Not until Silva, Couture and GSP have concluded their illustrative careers. Mixed martial arts has such a short history that it is impossible to predict how fans will evaluate the respective careers of Randy Couture, Anderson Silva and Georges St-Pierre 20 years from now. All we can do is look to boxing’s more than century-long history for some guidance.

Most top 10 lists include some variation of the following 15 names, in no particular order: Sugar Ray Robinson, Henry Armstrong, Willie Pep, Roberto Duran, Benny Leonard, Sam Langford, Joe Gans, Sugar Ray Robinson, Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis, Roy Jones Jr., Jack Johnson, Manny Pacquiao, Harry Greb and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Only six of the names among that list did not win championships across multiple divisions. Three of them, Ali, Louis and Johnson, were heavyweights. Langford never won a legitimate world title, but that was due to the racist realities of his day, not his talent, since he defeated many former or future champions from lightweight up to light heavyweight. In any other era, Langford would have won titles across several divisions. Both Pep and Gans fought their entire championship careers in one division, featherweight and lightweight, respectively.

Contrast that list with division record holders for most successful title defenses in boxing history. Louis holds the all-time mark at 25 and is the only single-division champion who graces both lists. Joe Calzaghe, Sven Ottke, Dariusz Michalczewski, Bernard Hopkins, Eusebio Pedroza, Wilfredo Gomez, Khaosai Galaxy, Pongsaklek Wonjongkam and Ricardo Lopez each put together historic runs in their respective divisions, but one rarely sees any of those names pop up on all-time pound-for-pound lists.

It is safe to assume, therefore, that Silva’s claim for G.O.A.T. would be more persuasive in the decades to come, if he is able to move up in weight to capture the 205-pound championship. Defending his 185-pound title a couple of additional times probably won’t do much to enhance his legacy, unless he can get the number to something absurd like 20.

If I am part of Team Silva, I think the path to solidify his legacy is a very clear one. He must first take care of business against GSP, assuming the French-Canadian gets past Shields.

That fight is all about helping to define GSP’s legacy. It does nothing for Silva. Let’s be honest for a moment. The size differential between the two is going to be shocking come fight time. If GSP wins, it will be one of the all-time great upsets. If Silva wins, he beat someone he was supposed to beat, regardless of GSP’s true level of greatness.

Nonetheless, it is a fight that has to happen. GSP wants it. The fans demand it. And Zuffa recognizes that it may very well be the biggest fight in UFC history. So it makes a lot of sense from a lot of perspectives, other than Silva’s.

Assuming Silva passes the GSP test, I believe that he should instantly challenge for the light heavyweight crown. Don’t pass go. Don’t collect $200. Move up and try to make history. The one thing that nobody has been able to accomplish, not Couture and not BJ Penn (who is the only other two-division champion in history) is to simultaneously hold belts in two divisions. Silva has the size and skills to do just that.

He should then defend both belts, moving up and down in weight until his luck runs out. If he can put together two or three defenses at each weight, it will throw down the gauntlet for greatness for fighters decades into the future. The other storybook ending would be to win the 205-pound title and retire the next day. That is one heck of a way to go out.

I think Silva needs to be very careful taking 205 pound fights without the belt being on the line. Those are unnecessary risks. Only bad can come from non-title affairs against light heavies. Winning doesn’t improve his legacy and losing crushes it because it eliminates the argument by his supporters that Silva could have dominated at 205, just like he did at 185 pounds. That argument is critical for the G.O.A.T. argument, if the champion doesn’t actually move up and challenge for the title.

Is Silva the true G.O.A.T.? Based on his body of work to date and my view on what would happen if he faced Shogun Rua, or any other 205-pound champion who isn’t a ground-and-pound specialist, it is tough to argue against him.


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Friday, February 11, 2011

Jon Fitch - Seven Defining Moments

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Jon Fitch battles BJ Penn in the main event of UFC 127 on February 27th. Read on for his seven defining moments... The Captain of the American Kickboxing Academy fight team in San Jose, California, Jon Fitch earned that accolade through hard work, a selfless attitude in the gym, and an example that is second to none. That’s why the honor was bestowed on him by none other than his teammates.

“All of that means a lot to me,” said Fitch. “I carry that with pride and honor and I try to represent the team as well as I can and help everybody as much as I can. I’m not that much of a vocal guy, but I always believed that actions speak louder than words, and through my actions and the way I carry myself, I think it’s a good example for the rest of the guys to follow if they really want to be successful with their fighting careers.”

On February 27, Fitch will headline UFC 127 against former two division UFC champion BJ Penn. It’s an opportunity for the Purdue grad to cement his place as one of the leading contenders for the welterweight crown while paving the way for an eventual rematch with Georges St-Pierre. So how did Fitch get here? These are his seven defining moments.

Mike Pyle – RFC1 – The Beginning – July 13, 2002
Result – Pyle Wsub1

Fitch found mixed martial arts while he was wrestling at Purdue, as assistant coach and MMA fighter Tom Erikson brought in UFC and Pride veterans Mark Coleman and Gary Goodridge to train with him.

As Fitch recalled, “I got to roll with them and I just got to develop a real appreciation for the sport and the techniques involved. I said, ‘I think I can do that.’ I always loved competing, and in some sick way, I think this is God’s plan for me, because there’s no way you could have said 15 years ago, ‘hey, you’re gonna fight in the UFC someday.’ I have no fighting background, and I probably have around three times as many professional fights as I’ve had street fights. I’m not one of those macho guys who goes around trying to pick fights with people. I just have an appreciation for the sport.”

And when the MMA vets started discussing the money they were making, Fitch’s interest was really piqued.

“They’re talking about the money on their end,” he said with a chuckle. “I didn’t know it was a lot different when you’re first starting out. They’re talking about 70 to 100 thousand dollars a fight; little did I know that I’d be spending two, three years of my life fighting for like $500 in some smoky bar.”

That first fight, in July of 2002, was against Mike Pyle, and with little but wrestling and heart on his side, Fitch was submitted via rear naked choke at 2:35 of the first round.

Welcome to MMA.

Thiago Alves I – Ultimate Fight Night – June 28, 2006
Result – Fitch TKO2

Life in the fight game wasn’t a smooth one for Fitch in the early days of his career, as he sat with a 2-2, 1 NC record after five fights. But soon Fitch got the hang of things and he started to run off wins with regularity. The success got him noticed by Spike TV, which was putting together a new reality show called The Ultimate Fighter, and he apparently made the cut. Then disaster struck.

“My bags were checked, and they called me with about ten minutes to board and told me not to get on the plane,” remembered Fitch, who was scrapped from the show at the 11th hour. “I had to pull my bags from the plane and call my girlfriend to pick me up, and then I had to go back and explain to everybody what happened for like the next month. I still don’t know what happened.”

Disappointed but undaunted, Fitch got back in action, continued to win, and by October of 2005 he had made it to the UFC and he went on to score Octagon wins over Brock Larson and Josh Burkman. But it was his battle with fellow young gun Thiago Alves that really put his name on the map as he halted the Brazilian in the second round to improve to 3-0 in the organization.

Diego Sanchez – UFC 76 – September 22, 2007
Result – Fitch W3

If you believe in fate, then it was probably written in the stars that Fitch would eventually face one of the winners of the show he got scrapped from. And in Diego Sanchez, Fitch would be facing a fighter that he mimicked for an entire training camp five months earlier, when his teammate Josh Koscheck handed the “Nightmare” his first pro loss.

“I was Diego for the Koscheck fight,” said Fitch. “I had to imitate how he fights, I switched to southpaw for a couple of months, and I did everything that Diego does. I’m in his head a little bit because I can see how he thinks and what he’s looking for.”

And it worked, as Fitch scored a three round decision win over Sanchez that solidified his place in the 170-pound pecking order. A shot at the welterweight crown was within his grasp. All he needed to do was win one more fight.

Chris Wilson – UFC 82 – March 1, 2008
Result – Fitch W3

Sometimes the anticipation for a title fight is worse than the fight itself. Add in the fact that it will take one win over a tough, yet relatively unknown, opponent to secure that fight, and it can break a fighter. Sure, if you can’t beat one of your fellow contenders then you probably don’t deserve the shot, but all it takes is one lost second of focus, one awkward punch that breaks your hand, one wayward elbow that cuts you and all your dreams have gone down the drain. With a 7-0 UFC record and an overall 15 fight winning streak, Fitch had earned his title fight, but he still had to beat Chris Wilson to secure it. He did, reaching down deep to gut out a tough three round decision, but it was far from easy. Regardless, when it was over, Fitch could breathe a sigh of relief and set his sights on the welterweight title.

Georges St-Pierre – UFC 87 – August 9, 2008
Result – St-Pierre W5

Things were going well enough for Fitch early in his title bout against Georges St-Pierre. Then an ill-advised kick changed everything.

“The second I threw that kick, I was like ‘what the hell am I doing?’” recalled Fitch. “I didn’t set it up, I didn’t step off, and it just felt bad throwing it. The next thing I knew, ‘boom’, I got hit, and everything was in slo-mo and I was kinda like ‘survive through the round.’”

Fitch ate a right hand from the champion in response to the kick, and from there GSP took over, eventually winning a five round unanimous decision. Yet even though the judges didn’t give Fitch a round, this was far from a one-sided beatdown, as Fitch never stopped trying to win throughout the 25-minute scrap. To this day, St-Pierre calls the bout his toughest ever, but that’s little consolation to Fitch.

“I’m not big on moral victories,” he said. “I’m proud of the work I did to get to that position and I’m proud of the work I did in that fight, but I wasn’t complete at that time, and I think I’ve done the work from then to now to complete myself as a fighter.”

“I thought I belonged there before, but after I went through it, I definitely know,” Fitch continued. “I eliminate a few of those mistakes, make a few changes here and there, and I’m right there in contention for a title with those guys considered to be pound for pound the best in the world, maybe the best ever.”

Akihiro Gono – UFC 94 – January 31, 2009
Result – Fitch W3

One look at Fitch’s face in the aftermath of the St-Pierre bout, and you had to wonder if he was going to be able to rebound. Sure, he was young and that was his first real war, but fights like those have a way of chipping away your armor a lot faster. So while the entire MMA world expected him to beat Akihiro Gono at UFC 94, the way he did it was going to be telling. And Fitch responded by being Jon Fitch, showing no signs of wear as he pounded out a three round win the way he always does – efficiently and in dominant fashion. Fitch was back, and ready to start a new winning streak.

Ben Saunders – UFC 111 – March 27, 2010
Result – Fitch W3

If you had to pick some mentally tough fighters to have your back, Jon Fitch would likely be in your top three. And if he’s not, he should be. So when a late switch of an opponent takes place, you expect that he would be the last guy rattled. But what was going to happen when his old rival Thiago Alves, was forced out of their UFC 111 rematch on fight week, with hot prospect Ben Saunders not only agreeing to step in, but requesting it? Fitch was unmoved by the switch, unrattled by taking on the lanky Muay Thai machine, and when the bell rang that night in Newark, it was business as usual for Fitch, who again proved himself to be Ol’ Reliable as he scored a three round unanimous decision victory while getting barely threatened by Saunders. In August of last year, he would make it two in a row over Alves, and now he’s got Penn on his dance card in what is likely to be one of the most intriguing fights of early-2011.


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UFC 126 Musings

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RUSTY GRIFFIN REMAINS RELEVANT

Forrest Griffin will be the first to admit that his performance against Rich Franklin was not very Forrest-esque. The effort was certainly there. The intensity was certainly there. Yet, it seemed a bit difficult for him to both pull the trigger and, when he was able to pull the trigger, find his mark.

That is what a 441-day layoff will do to most mortal men.

After putting up back-to-back losses followed by a razor-thin split decision win over Tito Ortiz, Griffin had to wonder where he stood in the division he once ruled. The win over Franklin answered that question with an exclamation point.

I completely agree with UFC color commentator Joe Rogan that Franklin is a more effective fighter at 205 pounds than 185 pounds, despite the fact that “Ace” is a former champion at the lighter weight. A win over this guy catapults anyone to the top of the division. Not to mention a win by a former champion.

Griffin now sits in prime position for another marquee matchup in his next bout. Whether he wins or loses on March 19, Shogun is a logical next opponent. Griffin spoiled the UFC debut of the reigning champion, battering him from pillar to post in their 2007 matchup before bringing the bout to an end with 15 seconds on the clock courtesy of a rear naked choke.

Rashad Evans and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson also have history with Griffin. A bout with either of those former champions would be a box office hit, as well as a nice way to determine the next in line for the winner of Shogun-Jones. Assuming that up-and-comer Phil Davis is successful against Matt Hamill on April 30, he is another intriguing opponent for Griffin. Even a rubber match with Ortiz, assuming “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy” survives Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, which is no safe assumption, would be a fun fight that makes a lot of sense, since the pair traded split decision wins.

In other words, the UFC has a lot of options on what to do with Griffin. Whatever UFC President Dana White and matchmaker extraordinaire Joe Silva decide to do next, it is clear that Griffin is now firmly back in the 205-pound mix.

FRANKLIN’S REACTION

Franklin was clearly surprised at the outcome when ring announcer Bruce Buffer read the judges’ cards. He was convinced that he had done enough to earn the win, shrugging at Griffin after the announcement as if he was expecting his opponent to agree with him.

Granted, the fight was close. Griffin won the first round. There is no plausible argument to the contrary. The second round was tough to score. Both men threw a decent amount of strikes—most missed. The only truly significant strike of the round was the left hook that wobbled Franklin with just over 90 seconds remaining. They traded a couple of power shots and body kicks over the next minute, but the left hook was far more significant than any of the other shots.

Griffin also scored two takedowns and kept Franklin down for 30 seconds or so, but didn’t really do much with either one, other than controlling the position. It is tough to argue that Franklin won the second round. At best, he earned a draw for being the more active of the two. I scored it 10-9 for Griffin.

The third round was great. Both men were active on the feet, with Franklin appearing to be the sharper of the two. The pair fought to a stalemate in terms of takedowns and transitions. I scored it 10-9 for Franklin, principally due to his effective striking and effective aggressiveness.

I don’t see how Franklin was surprised at the decision. He has to remember getting rocked late in the second round and knows full well how that impacted the judges. Griffin was awarded a well deserved decision.

Nevertheless, this is one of those fights where there was no loser. Franklin did not hurt his standing in the division by dropping a highly technical, close fight to a former champion. I think he instead proved that he belongs among the division’s elite.

TOO MUCH TOO SOON FOR JONES?

Following Jon Jones’ lopsided win over Jake O’Brien at UFC 100, I wrote the following words in my post-mortem report:

Jones, who turns 22 this weekend, is only three fights into his UFC career.  No matter, I’m going to go out on a limb with what many may think is a crazy prediction:  at some point in his career, Jones will wear UFC gold.

Within 24 hours, my inbox was filled with literally dozens of emails criticizing my praise of the young New Yorker. Those words don’t seem so crazy four fights later, do they?

Jones has been so dominant through his first seven UFC bouts that it is difficult to deny that this kid has a chance to beat anyone, including reigning champion Mauricio “Shogun” Rua on any given day. It is fitting, therefore, that UFC President Dana White rewarded Jones’ two-round annihilation of previously unbeaten Ryan Bader with an immediate title shot—and I literally mean immediate.

Rua-Jones will take place on March 19 in Newark, New Jersey, a mere 42 days following UFC 126. That is an insanely short turnaround for a UFC title shot.

If Jones is successful against Rua, he will set a new record for the shortest duration between two UFC bouts leading up to a successful title challenge. Rich Franklin currently holds that distinction with his 56-day layoff between defeating Ken Shamrock at the finale for the first season of The Ultimate Fighter on April 9, 2005, and winning the 185-pound title from Evan Tanner on June 4, 2005. Frank Shamrock rested only 22 days before becoming the inaugural holder of what became the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship, though his preceding bout was in Japan Vale Tudo, an organization that was not affiliated with the UFC.

I’m sure Jones is already champing at the bit to get into the gym and begin preparations for Rua, but his body needs time to recover. Not from the fight itself. Jones needs time to recover from the grueling training camp he went through in preparation for Bader. If he doesn’t give his body enough time to rest before diving back into training, then his gas tank will be far less than full come March 19, no matter how hard he trains between now and then.

It is the proverbial Catch-22. His body needs time to rest. Yet, at the same time, he must prepare himself for the first 25-minute fight of his career. I’m not sure that is possible.

Every champion will admit that preparing for a five round fight is different than preparing for a three round fight, both mentally and physically. Let’s assume that Jones take a week to rest and recover before beginning his preparations in earnest. That will leave him five weeks to condition his body to go 25 hard minutes, rather than 15 hard minutes—and there is no doubt that Shogun will push the pace against him, particularly in light of his short turnaround time.

I am convinced that Jones has the tools to win the fight, but is this a case of too much too soon? Whether he has sufficient time to get his body adjusted for a championship fight remains to be seen.

At the end of the day, this is a tremendous opportunity for Jones. Even if he comes up short, he will gain invaluable experience. The only real risks are injury or getting blitzkrieged in a way that ruins him mentally—I don’t see the latter happening. Maybe he doesn’t win UFC gold on his first try, but I stand by my initial words, with a slight adjustment:  Jon Jones will wear the belt sooner, rather than later.

CONTRASTING STYLES IN THE CORNER

Rob Radford and John Hackleman are two of the better trainers in the business. Both have trained champions. Radford has Rich Franklin in his stable. Hackleman rose to MMA fame by molding Chuck Liddell into a living legend. But the two take very different approaches to cornering fighters. That was evident during UFC 126.

Radford positively reinforced Franklin after the first round—a round that Franklin clearly lost - by stating that he was doing just fine and Griffin was rapidly tiring. We’re talking about Forrest Griffin, a guy who has possibly the deepest gas tank in the sport. In between the second and third rounds, Radford told Franklin, “The last round was yours.” He admitted that the first round was a bit “squirrelly because he held you down.” But the message was clear: win the third round and you win the fight. Franklin gave a spirited, effective effort in the third, so it is no wonder why he was shocked when Buffer announced Griffin as the victor. After all, if Radford was giving him accurate advice, he should have won the fight.

Hackleman’s messaging in between rounds to Antonio Banuelos was on the other side of the spectrum. He accurately told his fighter that he lost the first, stating that he “gave away” the round. He had a similar message after the second round, sending a clear message that his man needed a stoppage, if he wanted to win the fight. Banuelos didn’t do anything different in the third round, apparently uninspired by Hackleman’s words. As a result, he dropped a clear 30-27 decision to the former bantamweight champ.

Granted, Banuelos was never in the fight against Miguel Torres. Franklin was never really out of the fight with Griffin. Maybe that is why Radford and Hackleman differed in their approaches. I tend to be of the opinion that a cornerman needs to be honest with his guy. Maybe that is because of my history with boxing, where “you’re blowing it son” speeches are common.

I’m not suggesting that Radford was wrong in the way he approached cornering his fighter. From his perspective, Franklin might have appeared to be even on the cards going into the final round. Nevertheless, I’d be interested to know whether Franklin would have taken a different approach to the third round if he knew that he was down on the cards.

WELCOME TO THE OCTAGON—GOOD AND BAD

Donald Cerrone has been a top lightweight contender in the WEC for years. Yet, he had to feel like he was in the “best of the rest” club than truly being one of the best lightweights in the world because he wasn’t fighting in the UFC.

Right or wrong, that was the perception. I’m sure guys like Cerrone, Ben Henderson, Anthony Pettis and others were thrilled when Zuffa announced the merger because they would have the opportunity to prove their doubters wrong.

Cerrone did just that on Saturday night. “The Cowboy” looked extremely sharp in his UFC debut, eschewing first-time UFC jitters for a thoroughly dominant performance against a very tough Paul Kelly. The win legitimizes him as a presence in the division. While he cannot yet be considered a contender, he certainly proved that he belongs in the UFC.

That isn’t the only reason Cerrone is celebrating the UFC-WEC merger right about now. He also took home an extra $75,000 for his Fight of the Night performance. He has now won that award for six of his last nine fights, an incredible streak that makes him one of the more entertaining lightweights in the world.

Norifumi “Kid” Yamamoto did not experience the same success as Cerrone in his UFC debut.

Once viewed as the best featherweight in the world, Yamamoto was soundly defeated by Demetrius Johnson in a rough three round fight. The bout was his second at bantamweight.

Yamamoto was yet another in a long line of former Japan-based fighters to badly struggle in their UFC debut. He suffered the same fate as Shogun, Takanori Gomi, Mirko Cro Cop, Denis Kang, Yoshihiro Akiyama (I don’t care that the judges awarded him the fight, Alan Belcher should have gotten the nod), Ryo Chonan and others.
Fighting in a cage versus a ring is a major transition for most fighters. Fighting in front of the raucous crowds of US can also impact opponents because they are not used to picking out their corner’s voices through the noise generated by the crowd.

The loss is Yamamoto’s third in his last four fights. That is a bad stretch by anyone’s definition of success. The positive is that he has not been stopped in any of those fights. It is possible that Kid is just in the midst of a tough stretch and will bounce back with the ferocity that made him a superstar in Japan long before he ventured across the Pacific Ocean for his US debut.

On Thursday, DiSanto returns with his thoughts on Anderson Silva's knockout victory over Vitor Belfort in the main event of UFC 126


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UFC® Announces That Jones Will Face Champ "Shogun" on March 19

UFC®ANNOUNCES THAT NEW YORK’S JON JONES WILL STEP IN TO FACE CHAMPION MAURICIO ‘SHOGUN’ RUA ON MARCH 19
JONES TO CHALLENGE FOR LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE FOLLOWING INJURY TO RASHAD EVANS

UFC® 128: SHOGUN VS. JONES
Saturday, March 19 from Prudential Center in Newark, N.J.

Tickets on sale NOW

Las Vegas, Nevada (USA) – The Ultimate Fighting Championship® announced that rising light heavyweight star Jon “Bones” Jones will replace Rashad Evans in the main event of UFC® 128 at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. on Saturday, March 19.

Jones will challenge reigning UFC light heavyweight champion Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, following Evans’ withdrawal due to injury. The 23-year-old native New Yorker, who ended the undefeated streak of Ryan Bader via second round stoppage at UFC 126 last Saturday, looks to capitalize on this championship opportunity by defeating one of the legends of the sport. He also looks to cement his billing as the fastest-rising star in all of UFC.

“My goal is to be considered the best light heavyweight fighter in the world,” Jones, who boasts a record 12-1, said. “I feel as if it’s my time. My confidence is already high, I’m already in shape and I have six weeks to make myself even better. I can’t wait for this opportunity.”

Eager to defend his crown, Rua sees similarities in Evans and Jones, who are training partners. Given Jones’ strong wrestling background and unorthodox striking, the 29-year-old champion plans on making a few adjustments, but overall, anticipates a similar fight.

“I’ve been training hard for a fight on this date and I was prepared to fight Rashad,” Rua, who owns a record of 19-4, said. “I face this new challenge as motivation to train even harder. I’m a fighter and I don’t pick opponents. I’ll be ready for Jon Jones.”

Tickets for UFC® 128: SHOGUN vs. JONES are on sale now and priced at $500, $350, $225, $150, $100 and $60, not including applicable service charges. Tickets can be purchased at all Ticketmaster locations and at the Prudential Center box office. Ticket sales are limited to eight (8) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000. Tickets also are available for purchase at www.prucenter.com or ticketmaster.com.

UFC® 128: SHOGUN vs. JONES, which is presented by Affliction, will be available live on Pay-Per-View on iN DEMAND, DirecTV, DISH Network, Avail-TVN, BellTV, Shaw Communications, Sasktel, and Viewer’s Choice Canada for a suggested retail price of $44.99 US/$49.99 CAN for Standard Definition and $54.99 US/$59.99 CAN for High Definition.

A bantamweight clash between former WEC champions “The California Kid” Urijah Faber and Eddie Wineland will also be featured at UFC 128. Faber is considered one of the most dominant fighters in the history of the lighter weight classes, and once held the featherweight title for over two years. With a submission win over Takeya Mizugaki in his bantamweight debut in November, the 31-year-old has his sights set on Wineland, a former WEC bantamweight champion boasting four consecutive wins, including back-to-back Knockout of the Night victories.

For more information, or current UFC fight news, visit UFC.com


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Will Youth Be Served on March 19?

23 years and eight months. If Jon Jones defeats Mauricio “Shogun” Rua in the newly made main event of UFC 128 in Newark, New Jersey on March 19, that’s all it will have taken for the light heavyweight phenom to win a UFC championship belt. 23 years and eight months. If Jon Jones defeats Mauricio “Shogun” Rua in the newly made main event of UFC 128 in Newark, New Jersey on March 19, that’s all it will have taken for the light heavyweight phenom to win a UFC championship belt.

That’s better than Carlos Newton and Josh Barnett, both of whom won their UFC titles at the age of 24, as well as current featherweight boss Jose Aldo, who took the WEC championship at 23 but was awarded his UFC belt last November at 24.

In this sport, that means something. Because while other sports celebrate youth and regularly produce All-Stars and phenoms in their early 20’s, mixed martial arts has never been a young man’s game. Sure, there will be shooting stars like Jones, BJ Penn, and Vitor Belfort, but for the most part, this is a complex game that takes years and years to even come close to mastering.

And even the wunderkinds, like the aforementioned Penn and Belfort, had to take their share of lumps before reaching the top. Penn, at 23, lost his first title shot to Jens Pulver in 2001. Belfort, at 20, got his first taste of defeat against Randy Couture in 1997 and it would take him seven years to get revenge and a world championship. Even today’s top guns – Anderson Silva and Georges St-Pierre - tasted the sting of defeat before winning their titles at the age of 31 and 25, respectively. As UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes put it, “if you’re undefeated, you’re fighting the wrong people.”

But then there’s Jones, who only began training in MMA in 2007, and has since compiled a stellar 12-1 record that has a loss on it in name only. When he was disqualified for an illegal elbow against Matt Hamill in 2009, he was dominating the fight and, in reality, nine out of 10 referees would have stopped that fight and awarded Jones the TKO victory several moments before the DQ took place. And while the “1” remains in his loss column, he took the defeat with grace, well aware that it was anything but that.

The Hamill fight is just one example of what Jones has been doing to quality fighters since his Octagon debut in 2008 – he’s turning them ordinary. Stephan Bonnar, Jake O’Brien, Hamill, Brandon Vera, Vladimir Matyushenko, and Ryan Bader have all gone down to defeat against Jones and the New Yorker has won these fights without getting hurt by punches or kicks, without being put on his back and held there, without having to defend a debilitating submission, and without having to dig deep to pull off a miraculous comeback.

Yeah, he’s made it look easy. So after submitting Bader in their UFC 126 bout last Saturday night, it was no surprise that he accepted a championship fight against Rua on six weeks’ notice after his teammate Rashad Evans was forced from the bout due to a knee injury.

“I’m not scared of this at all, let’s do this,” said Jones, beaming with the precociousness of youth. “Shogun’s great. I grew up watching Shogun, but I’m not worried about him. I’ve got six weeks to train, and it’s gonna be me against myself in this training camp, and we’ll see what happens in my title shot.”

Also responding without hesitation was Rua, who, at 29, is now a seasoned veteran of the sport.

“As a champion I have to fight everybody,” said the Curitiba, Brazil native. “In all of his fights he’s winning convincingly and he’s the guy who deserves to fight for the belt the most right now.”

And if anyone knows what it’s like to be young, gifted, and tearing through everyone in his path, it’s Rua. Just 21 when he made his debut in Japan’s PRIDE organization, Rua did have one submission loss on his record (to Babalu Sobral), but as soon as he stepped between the ropes to fight and stop Akira Shoji in October of 2003, it was clear that he had the raw talent to be something special.

He would win 12 of 13 bouts in PRIDE, with the only loss a fluke TKO due to injury against Mark Coleman in 2006 (later avenged in the UFC). His shining moment was a four bout run that saw him defeat Quinton Jackson, Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, Alistair Overeem, and Ricardo Arona to win the 2005 Middleweight Grand Prix, and despite the world-class talent in the UFC, there were many who considered Rua to be the premier 205-pound fighter in the world, a state of the art mixed martial artist who would remain on top forever.

Of course, we know what happened next. Rua, plagued by knee injuries, would lose his UFC debut to Forrest Griffin and look less than stellar against Coleman before righting his ship with a knockout of Chuck Liddell in 2009 and then engaging in a two fight series with countryman Lyoto Machida that culminated in a 2010 knockout of “The Dragon” that earned him the title he wears today.

Some would say those setbacks have made Rua a better fighter, more dangerous, and again, capable of reigning atop the division as long as he wants to. Others believe that once Jones steps into the Octagon in the Prudential Center on March 19th, the coronation of the sport’s greatest ever will be a mere formality. That’s the beauty of watching a dominant athlete who appears to be at the top of his game, with no one able to stop him. We said it about Mike Tyson, we said it about BJ Penn, and 20 years from now there will be someone else who receives such lofty praise.

But fights aren’t won and lost on internet message boards or in heated barroom debate. They’re settled in competition, and one day, Jon Jones will meet his Waterloo in the one fighter he can’t hurt and who can hurt him, the one who won’t take no for an answer. That fighter may be Shogun Rua, who has learned that being invincible is nice, but that it can be more satisfying to come back from adversity and show that knowing you’re human just may be the strongest motivational tool in terms of making yourself a better fighter.

Whatever side you’re on, it looks like March 19 is going to be one of those days fight fans will talk about for years. Will it be too much too soon, or is Jonny Bones Jones right on time?


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UFC 126 Post-Fight Press Conference

UFC 126's winners spoke to the media after the fights. Dana White announced the $75,000 bonuses: Jon Jones scored with his second-round, title-shot-clinching Submission of the Night of Ryan Bader; Anderson Silva won Knockout of the Night; and Donald Cerrone and Paul Kelly took home Fight of the Night honors.

Watch the post-fight press conference


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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Title-Bound: Jones Submits Bader, Faces Shogun in March

Jon Jones defeated Ryan Bader at UFC 126 and will now replace Rashad Evans against Mauricio Rua in the main event of UFC 128 LAS VEGAS, February 5 - Right after Jon Jones scored the biggest win of his career by submitting Ryan Bader in the second round of their UFC 126 bout at the Mandalay Bay Events Center Saturday night, he told color commentator Joe Rogan “I feel like it’s my time.”

He had no idea how prophetic those words would be, as UFC President Dana White offered him a shot at Mauricio “Shogun” Rua’s light heavyweight title at UFC 128 in March after it was revealed that Rua’s original opponent, Rashad Evans, was forced out of the bout due to  knee injury.

Needless to say, Jones accepted.

“I feel great,” he said. “I’m going for a world title, baby.”

And after his performance against the previously unbeaten Bader, it’s clear that the 12-1 Jonny “Bones” is ready for his first championship bout.

Jones looked a lot bigger than Bader as the two squared off to start the bout, and the New Yorker decided to test his foe on the mat as he scored a quick takedown. Jones, showing even more facets to his game, quickly transitioned to north-south position, where he locked in a tight choke. Bader stayed calm and eventually found his way out of danger, making it back to his feet moments later. While standing, Jones stalked his foe, and after landing with a kick, Bader shot for a takedown but was turned back. Jones followed up the stuff with ground strikes, then got the crowd into it with a leap over Bader that turned into a takedown and more ground strikes up until the bell.

Bader was tentative with his striking in round two, with Jones confidently walking forward and throwing and array of punches and kicks. As the round progressed, Bader gained confidence as he tagged Jones with a couple shots, but Jones was unfazed as he continued to mix his aggression with the presence to stop Bader’s takedowns. With 1:30 left, Bader was able to pull Jones to the mat, but Jones remained on top, controlling the action. Suddenly, Jones locked in a guillotine choke, and just as quickly, Bader was forced to tap, ending the bout at the 4:20 mark.

With the win, Jones improves to 12-1; Bader falls to 13-1.


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THQ Launches UFC Facebook Game

THQ ANNOUNCES LAUNCH OF UFC® UNDISPUTED™ FIGHT NATION™ INTERACTIVE FACEBOOK GAME

Distinguished Sports Videogame Franchise Expands Product Portfolio into Social Networking Space with Release of Engaging and Competitive Interactive Experience

THQ Inc. (NASDAQ: THQI) and Zuffa, LLC today announced the latest edition to the prominent UFC® Undisputed™ sports videogame franchise with the launch of UFC Undisputed Fight NationTM, the first official Facebook game based on the world’s leading mixed martial arts (MMA) organization, the Ultimate Fighting Championship®.  The interactive experience, developed by Embassy Interactive and available on Facebook at apps.facebook.com/ufcfightnation, allows players to take control of their virtual UFC careers in a fun and engaging environment by training moves, competing against others and sharing their results on Facebook, as well as enabling them to successfully manage their progress for the opportunity to compete against many of the UFC’s most renowned fighters.

“We are excited about the tremendous opportunities available in the social networking space to deliver key franchises to our core audiences in unique and compelling ways,” said Danny Bilson, Executive Vice President, Core Games, THQ.  “UFC Undisputed Fight Nation delivers a great combination of gameplay, competitive spirit and replay value, making it the perfect fit for millions around the world to enjoy on Facebook.”

“We are really excited to offer the UFC Undisputed Fight Nation game on Facebook,” UFC President Dana White said. “We understand the power of Facebook and this is a great way for fans to connect to the UFC.”

About UFC Undisputed Fight Nation
In UFC Undisputed Fight Nation, players train with guidance from UFC President Dana White to master moves from multiple mixed martial arts disciplines, compete against friends and other Fight Nation members inside the virtual Octagon™ and share their results on Facebook as they progress from student to professional in their virtual careers.  Players are given access to a number of mixed martial arts camps to build their arsenal of moves, including wrestling, kickboxing, Muay Thai and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, as well as the ability to decide which moves are taken into each fight.

Through successful management of fight experience and training, players will “level up” their fighters to reach new career milestones, unlocking access to items such as new training camps and more skill points to build fighting and training needs, including energy, health and stamina.  Players will also earn Cred for their achievements, enabling them to acquire items from the in-game store to train specific moves, access new camps, replenish health and increase stamina.  A UFC Points system is available for those who wish to progress their careers faster and purchase the items through monetary transaction, while a Gifting option lets players show respect to their friends by sending them complimentary boosts of energy, stamina or health to aid their progress.

As part of the UFC Undisputed Fight Nation experience, the accomplished player will earn opportunities compete against and learn moves through Pro Fights from a number of today’s most prominent UFC fighters, including current champions Cain Velasquez, Anderson Silva, Georges St-Pierre and Frankie Edgar.  As well, players will have access to a live Twitter feed, keeping them up to date on the latest UFC news and events.

For more information on UFC Undisputed Fight Nation, please visit community.ufcundisputed.com, facebook.com/UFCUndisputed and twitter.com/UFC_Undisputed.


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