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Feb 7, 2006
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Jason Brilz and Phil Davis targeted for UFC 129 matchup

All may not be lost for Phil Davis (8-0 MMA, 4-0 UFC).

The light heavyweight is now expected to meet Jason Brilz (18-3-1 MMA, 3-2 UFC) on the main card of UFC 129, according to sources close to the event who told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that verbal agreements are in place for the fight. Contracts are expected to be finalized shortly.

UFC 129 takes place April 29 at Rogers Centre in Toronto and has already broken box-office records for a North American MMA event with 55,000 tickets sold and a live-gate tally of $11 million.

Davis had been expected to fight Matt Hamill at the event, but as MMAjunkie.com recently reported, "The Hammer" is now expected to fight Quinton "Rampage" Jackson on the card. That left Davis without an opponent until Brilz recently stepped up.

In his most recent octagon appearance, Brilz stepped up on short notice for the biggest challenge of his career when he faced Antonio Rogerio Nogueira at UFC 114. The full-time firefighter and part-time wrestling coach made the most of the opportunity and dominated the former PRIDE star on the mat during the 15-minute encounter.

Although he tired later in the fight, Brilz appeared to have done enough to eek out a decision victory. It was not to be, though, and Nogueira won the bout on two of the three judges' scorecards. The arena's audience was not happy, to put it mildly, with the split-decision call.

Despite the loss, the Midwesterner is 13-2-1 over his past 16 fights going back to 2002. Brilz was expected to meet Vladimir Matyushenko this past November at UFC 122 before a back injury forced him to withdraw.

Davis, a former NCAA Division I national wrestling champion for Penn State, has made a smooth transition since his pro MMA debut in 2008. After signing with the UFC in early 2010, he extended his undefeated streak with decision wins over Brian Stann and Rodney Wallace and submission victories over Alexander Gustafsson and Tim Boetsch.

The recent win over Boetsch, which came via a modified hammerlock that Davis jokingly calls "the Mr. Wonderful" after his fighting nickname, earned him a "Submission of the Night" award.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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First-fight jitters behind, Strikeforce's Ryan Couture comfortable with current progression

Strikeforce lightweight prospect Ryan Couture (1-0 MMA, 1-0 SF) knows a thing or two about living up to expectations.

The son of UFC Hall of Famer Randy Couture, Ryan carried the weight of his family's name through a seven-fight amateur career and into his August debut under the Strikeforce banner.

Now Couture takes another step forward with a main-card bout against Lee Higgins (2-0 MMA, 0-0 SF) at this weekend's Showtime-broadcast Strikeforce Challengers 14 event in Cedar Park, Texas. Despite the added attention that comes with his family lineage, Couture said things are progressing as planned.

"I just want to keep training and have a good time," Couture told MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio). "The rest will kind of work itself out.

"I'm just doing this because it's a lot of fun, and it's a good way to make a living doing something I love. I'm not going to stress too much about the rest of that stuff. I think it kind of works out on its own."

In his professional debut, Couture needed just 75 seconds to secure a win over Lucas Stark. Nevertheless, Stark did offer a suitable first test on the feet and also netted a takedown before falling prey to Couture's fight-ending triangle choke. Couture said he was satisfied with the effort, but securing the win was the most important accomplishment.

"It's always good to get those little tests along the way, especially when you pass them," Couture said. "It would be a bummer not to. It's all good experience in the cage as long as you get the right outcome."

And while Couture will always receive the added attention his name brings, he said the pressure of stepping into the cage as a professional is now behind him.

"The biggest thing for me, I think, was just getting that first pro fight out of the way," Couture said. "Getting a win under my belt was real nice. It kind of took the pressure off. I think I'll feel a little less pressure going into this one as a result."

In Higgins, Couture faces a fellow undefeated prospect making his first forays into the sport. Higgins owns two first-round tapouts in his two-fight career, and Couture knows he'll have to fight smart.

"He seems to be a real tough, tenacious grappler," Couture said. "He's got two first-round rear-naked choke wins on his pro resume. I've definitely got to be careful not to give him a dominant position because he'll make the most of it. But I think I'm more well-rounded, and I think I can grapple with him, too.

"I'm looking forward to a good challenge and a good fight, but I want to get the finish."

Where Couture goes with a win remains to be seen. The 28-year-old knows it's a long climb to the top of Strikeforce's talented lightweight division, but each fight provides him an opportunity to take on more step.

Couture hopes to fight as many as four times in 2011, but he'll let the organization decide his path.

"I just want to progress at the rate that I can," Couture said. "If I find that I'm just blowing through the smaller tests, then sure, step it up. I've just got to take each fight as it comes and try and improve and take what experience I can out of each one. The rest will kind of take care of itself."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jeremy Stephens vs. Jonathan Brookins likely for The Ultimate Fighter 13 Finale

A lightweight bout between veteran Jeremy Stephens (19-6 MMA, 6-5 UFC) and "The Ultimate Fighter 12" winner Jonathan Brookins (12-3 MMA, 1-0 UFC) is in the works for June.

A source close to the event told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) the two fighters are expected to meet at The Ultimate Fighter 13 Finale.

The fight, which will be one of the few not associated with the reality series' conclusion, takes place June 4 at The Pearl at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas.

Stephens vs. Brookins likely will be part of the Spike TV-televised main card, which also crowns a "TUF 13" show champion.

Stephens enters the fight on a 3-1 run in the organization, which included a recent third-round knockout of Marcus Davis at UFC 125. The win, which earned Stephens a third "KO of the Night" bonus check, followed a close split-decision defeat to Melvin Guillard in September. Prior to that loss, the Iowa native and California-based fighter earned back-to-back wins over Justin Buchholz and Sam Stout.

He'll serve as a stern post-"TUF" test for Brookins, the focused and likable winner from the recent 12th season of the reality show. Brookins, a one-time Bellator and WEC fighter, defeated Ran Weathers, Sevak Magakian, Sako Chivitchian and Kyle Watson to advance to the show's live finale, where he ultimately defeated Michael Johnson via unanimous decision back in December. He now owns a four-fight win streak in pro competition.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC boss: UFC 127's Penn and Fitch just one win away from title shot

Until a recent 21-second KO of Matt Hughes at UFC 123, B.J. Penn (16-7-1 MMA, 12-6-1 UFC) hadn't won a welterweight fight in more than six years, and he dropped his two most recent lightweight fights.

Jon Fitch (23-3 MMA, 13-1 UFC), meanwhile, has won five straight at 170 pounds and 21 of his past 22 bouts overall – the lone defeat coming in a title fight with welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre in 2008.

Despite their very different resumes, the UFC 127 headliners are fighting for the same thing later this month: a guaranteed title shot.

UFC president Dana White discussed the implications of the pay-per-view main event on Tuesday's pre-UFC 127 conference call.

UFC 127 takes place Feb. 27 at Acer Arena in Sydney, Australia. The night's main card airs live on pay-per-view (on Feb. 26 in the U.S. due to the time difference).

Fitch initially was booked for a UFC 126 bout with Jake Ellenberger, but following Penn's return to 170 pounds and a shockingly quick win over Hughes in November, White immediately announced that the Hawaiian and Fitch had been shifted to UFC 127's headliner.

While initially saying the winner of the fight would in the mix for title consideration, White immediately clarified an actual title shot in on the line.

"Either one of these guys who wins this fight is in the mix," White said. "(Actually), they’re the No. 1 guy.”

Despite the stakes, both Penn and Fitch, who kept Tuesday's call more than cordial, aren't looking ahead. Both declined to speak about a potential title shot and instead said they're focused on their impending matchup.

"I don't want to waste any time thinking about anything other than fighting B.J. right now," said Fitch, who suffered a decisive loss to St-Pierre at UFC 87.

Aside from moving up a weight class, though, Fitch simply has nothing left to prove. Outside of St-Pierre, he's dominated the welterweight division and defeated every major contender (outside of teammate Josh Koscheck, whom he's refused to fight). He simply can't keep spinning his wheels in the division, even if his first effort against St-Pierre proved a dud.

Meanwhile, after his title loss and subsequent rematch defeat to Frankie Edgar, Penn also was stuck in limbo. He held the UFC's welterweight belt in 2004 (but was stripped of it after signing to fight in Japan with K-1), and in recent years, he's focused exclusively on the lightweight division. He briefly considered retirement after the second Edgar loss until officials again sparked his interest with the Hughes fight.

The UFC 127 booking provides a quick fix for the veteran fighters, but sooner rather than later, White knows a championship bout has to be involved.

"Let's face it," White said. "The reality is B.J. Penn has held titles in both weight classes. Fitch has fought for the title and has literally dominated that division for a long time. (He) just couldn't win the title."

The winner of the fight undoubtedly will pay a mindful eye to April's UFC 129 event, a blockbuster stadium show in Toronto headlined by UFC welterweight champion St-Pierre and former EliteXC and Strikeforce titleholder Jake Shields. And that's where things could get interesting for the welterweight division.

If St-Pierre wins, he's likely heading to the middleweight division (for good) for an expected super fight with 185-pound champ Anderson Silva. If that happens, the Fitch vs. Penn winner could find himself in a fight for the vacated belt this summer.

But if the underdog Shields wins, St-Pierre likely puts off that move to middleweight. In fact, as No. 1 lightweight contender Anthony Pettis recently learned the hard way, officials may even skip over the Fitch vs. Penn winner and instead grant St-Pierre an immediate rematch. It'd be a tough pill to swallow for Fitch or Penn, though it's certainly justifiable from the UFC's perspective.

But whatever the scenario, the welterweights must first emerge victorious from UFC 127.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Strikeforce's Shane Del Rosario ready to test himself in big-show opportunities

Shane Del Rosario is pretty happy right about now that he didn't skip fighting to study psychology in grad school. His once-skeptical parents can breathe a little easier, too.

He's in the big show.

Rosario (11-0 MMA, 3-0 SF) earned that distinction this past Saturday with a first-round submission over Lavar Johnson (15-4 MMA, 3-0 SF) at "Strikeforce and M-1 Global: Fedor vs. Silva." The win also put him in line to step in to the Strikeforce heavyweight grand prix as an alternate should one of its six remaining competitors be unable to compete.

But Rosario said the second distinction is not as important as the first.

"This year I definitely want to try and get four or five more fights," he told MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio). "Even if I'm not in that tournament. I really don't care. I just want to get some work so that next year I can earn a spot in the tournament to start off, and not be an alternate."

Until recently, work was in short supply for Rosario. Several fights fell through on injuries and scheduling problems, and he ended up fighting just once in 2010 – a first-round TKO victory over Lolohea Mahe at Strikeforce Challengers 9. It's no secret that the pay and sponsorship opportunities available to those on the Challengers' circuit are not on par with the major events filled with big-name talent.

So there might have been times this past year when school looked like a good option. Instead, he he held out in pursuit of bigger opportunities such as the one this past Saturday, a major Showtime-televised event headlined by Fedor Emelianenko. But he definitely felt the pressure when he got in the cage with Johnson.

"It was my first fight in a while, so I had a little bit of nerves going into it," Del Rosario said. "I definitely wasn't looking past Johnson. He's a very tough guy. But definitely when you think about it a little bit, you could be fighting Alistair Overeem or Fedor or one of these huge guys coming up soon. I'm definitely stepping up, but that would be a huge step up."

When he passed his first big test with flying colors it was a relief, so much so that he didn't mind when Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker said after the event that Emelianenko might cut in front of him and two other heavyweights to take an alternate spot in the tournament.

His philosophy? Keep him working and he's happy.

"At this point, I have 11 fights, but I'm still a beginner in some respects," Del Rosario said. "I'm not making the huge paychecks yet. This one was a good one for me. I need that money from sponsors ... so I can solely train and not worry about a job. It's a relief that I'm set on the TV from here on."

Of course, if he gets a chance to show his skills in the tournament, he's cool with that, too.

"I'm down for the challenge," he said. "This is what I'm doing, and I've been working hard paying my dues, and I'm ready to get going and start testing myself with some real tough opponents."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jorge Santiago Signs Multi-Fight Contract For UFC Return

Former Sengoku middleweight champion Jorge Santiago, as expected, has signed to return to the UFC.

His imminent return had been widely reported, but as of this past weekend, Sakara was at the Srikeforce: Fedor vs. Silva event in New Jersey without a contract in hand. Although Santiago’s manager was not available at the time of publication, MMAWeekly.com sources close to the situation on Wednesday confirmed that a multi-fight agreement has received Santiago’s signature.

Although a recent MMAJunkie.com report mentioned Santiago’s return as likely for UFC 130 against Brian Stann, MMAWeekly.com sources believed that, while the fight could still happen, it has not yet been signed.

Santiago was being courted both by the UFC and Strikeforce. He has a history with both promotions.

The Brazilian had a stint with the UFC in 2006 that saw him go 1-2 overall before he exited the organization. Santiago then went on to win a one night, four-man tournament for Strikeforce in which he finished off Sean Salmon and Trevor Prangley.

He returns to the UFC following a 7-1 stint in Japan where he won the Sengoku middleweight title and defended it twice.

Amidst much speculation about the future of the Japanese fight promotion, Santiago and Dave Herman were both released from their contractual obligations to Sengoku.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Law Practice Set, Tyron Glover Takes MMA Return to MFC 28

It’s not often an athlete can take five years off from a sport and come back and compete at the same level they had before, let alone be better, but that’s something Colorado lightweight Tyrone “T-Money” Glover is intent on achieving.

Having spent five years off from MMA to concentrate on getting his law practice up and running, Glover returned this past November with an impressive win over Nick Buschman in the Fight to Win promotion.

“I thought I’d have a little bit of ring rust, but I kind of went right out there and did well,” said Glover to MMAWeekly.com.

“It helped that I had a good presence in the audience who came out to support me. I’m real big on feeling like the fans in the crowd out there are showing up to see a great performance and that’s what I delivered. I felt good and felt like I got right back in my groove and was good to go.”

When Glover left MMA in 2005, the lightweight division was in disarray with few promotions supporting the weight class and the UFC lacking a champion. With circumstances different in the present day, Glover felt he still had what it took to continue where he had left off.

“I really wanted to get back in there,” he stated. “I had a milestone I wanted to accomplish. I wanted to get my law career started and I felt that I still had the body; I still had the skills and resources that I should take another shot at it and give it another go.”

Not only was Glover intent on returning for himself, fellow fighter Josh Ford served as a form of inspiration for his return.

“He actually fought in July and I cornered him,” commented Glover. “He did all the training having a family and two businesses and was able to make it happen. So I figured if he could make it happen, I could make it happen.”

Enter the expert trainers and top tier training partners at the famed Grudge Training Center and Glover now finds himself competing on the upcoming HDNet televised MFC 28: Supremacy show on Feb. 25 against Robert Washington.

“He’s a real tough wrestler who definitely has the gas to go all three rounds and keep up the pressure,” said Glover of Washington. “What you should expect is that this guy’s gonna bring it and so am I.

“I’m a finisher. Five of my six fights have been finished in the first round by submission. I like to get in there and get out. I’m looking to finish hopefully in the first, but I’ll take it in the second or third (as well).”

For Glover, his success outside MMA means that he can focus on a very specific aspect of the sport.

“The overall goal is to make improvements in every training camp and fight I have,” he stated. “I don’t necessarily have a goal as far as how many wins I want to rack up, whether I want to grab a belt or not. I feel like making those sorts of goals are sort of out of your control.

“The things I can control is how much I’m improving between each fight, how much more focused I become with each fight, and how much a complete martial artist I become each day.”

Glover isn’t content on reveling in past glory, but instead wants to forge a new chapter for himself and be even better than before.

“I’d like to thank all my training partners at Grudge, Easton and Paragon Jiu-Jitsu; my sponsors: Full Tilt Poker, No Gi and Ink’d Out; and everyone that’s helped me,” he closed out. “Go to TyroneGlover.com for all the information on my next bout, Feb. 25, MFC on HDNet Fights.

“I go out there to perform and part of my performance is ending the fight. So look for me to go out there and win in impressive fashion.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Paulo Thiago will “kill or be killed” in the UFC, only after elbow surgery

Paulo Thiago was set to fight Johny Hendricks in March, on UFC on Versus 3, but an elbow injury forced him to cancel the fight. “I have two elbow calcifications because they’re smashing my cartilage, my arm hurts when it’s tight ou completely retiring”, explains Paulo, on a chat with TATAME, revealing that He might GO under surgery this week. “We’ll remove the edges of the bones, these things... Sometimes I was hit on the guard and it ache for a whole week”, tells.

Despite having loss his two last fights on UFC, Paulo guaranteed a new contract with the organization, especially after two extra bonus. The doctors predict that he’ll be back on the octagons in four months, ad Paulo promises to give his whole Best to keep his job. “I was helping everybody Who had a fight scheduled and UFC has scheduled mine, but I was trying to make something different and my arm started to ache, and I couldn’t keep on going. Now it’s kill or be killed, so I have to be on my Best. I can’t screw it up”, concluded the fighter of Constrictor Team.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Finally Something Road FC! Denis Kang Signs

Nothing has been heard from Korean MMA promotion Road FC since their inaugural event took place in October of 2010. However, Denis Kang, who last drew with Paulo Filho, just tweeted that he has signed a multi-fight contract with them. Quite a name they have landed.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jared Rosholt, UFC vet Jake Rosholt's brother, makes pro MMA debut on Feb. 26

Jared Rosholt is set to follow in his brother's footsteps.

The younger sibling of ex-UFC middleweight Jake Rosholt makes his professional debut next Saturday, Feb. 26, against fellow headliner Dee Burchfield at "Cage Fight Champions presents: Art of War Cage Fights."

The event takes place at Hutchins Memorial Auditorium in Ponca City, Okla., a short drive from the brothers' alma mater, Oklahoma State University.

A runner-up in the 2010 NCAA Championships, Jared Rosholt was signed this past July by Team Takedown boss Ted Ehrhardt, who helped his older brother make the transition from standout amateur wrestler to professional fighter.

Jared, though, has quite a bit of size on his older brother.

"He's a pretty good-sized heavyweight," Ehrhardt told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "He's around 265 (pounds) when he's walking. He'll end up probably around 280, 285 pounds, and he's real fast. He runs like a 4.7 (40-yeard-dash). I don't know, but I've heard he's bench-pressing around 700 pounds. He's big, he's strong, and he's fast."

Jared Rosholt currently is training alongside his brother with Cobra Kai Jiu-Jitsu head Marc Laimon in Team Takedown's 30,000 square-foot training facility in Arlington, Texas.

Rosholt finished his collegiate career with an overall record of 125-27, which qualified him as the winningest heavyweight in the storied history of the Oklahoma State wrestling program. The 125 wins also qualify as the fifth-most victories by a wrestler in any weight class in the school's history.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Tachi Palace Fights champ Gomez focused on title defense, open for return to Bellator

Following a September 2010 win over Travis Reddinger in the quarterfinals of Bellator Fighting Championship's first-ever bantamweight tournament, things seemed to be going just right for Ulysses Gomez (7-1).

Slated to fight Zach Makovsky in the tournament's semifinal, things took a turn for the worse when Gomez developed a staph infection that forced him to withdraw from the field.

Following a six-month layoff, Gomez returns to action in the co-feature of Friday's "Tachi Palace Fights 8: All or Nothing" event in Lemoore, Calif. "Useless" insists he's solely focused on the task at hand, but a return trip to the Bellator cage isn't out of the question.

"I was supposed to fight Zach, and he ended up winning the tournament," Gomez told MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio). "I always told people that me and him were the two best fighters in the tournament, and whoever won that fight would have won the tournament, in my eyes. I wouldn't mind fighting him just to prove to myself that I could have beat him, and I could have won the tournament."

In the meantime, Gomez is dropping back down to his preferred fighting weight of 125 pounds to defend his flyweight title against Millennia MMA product Darrell Montague (8-1). The fight takes place at the Tachi Palace Hotel and Casino and streams live on MMAjunkie.com.

Gomez said he's impressed with the 23-year-old "Mongoose," especially in the striking department. However, Gomez also believes his extensive grappling background, bolstered by years of training at Las Vegas' Cobra Kai Jiu-Jitsu, will ultimately prove the difference in the fight.

"[Montague] has got good standup – southpaw, quick hands, moves in and out a lot," Gomez said. "He's good wrestler. He's not known for his grappling, but I think he's better than people give him credit for.

"Can he hang with me in grappling? Can I hang with him in striking? We'll find out. Wherever the fight goes, I'm not worried. If it ends in the first round or ends in the fifth round, I'm ready."

While the fight with Montague represents Gomez's first attempt at defending the Tachi Palace Fights title he earned this past May, there's also more on the line in the fight. Brazilian flyweight Jussier da Silva also competes on the TPF 8 fight card, and a "Formiga" win will likely secure a title shot for the man widely considered the best 125-pounder in the world.

It's a massive opportunity for the winner of the Gomez-Montague matchup, but the champion insists he doesn't need any additional carrots to chase.

"I think if you need extra motivation for a fight, you probably shouldn't take the fight," Gomez said. "I'm a firm believer when I fight to the best of my ability, nobody can beat me, and I'm going to prove that on Friday night."

If he can make good on that promise, Gomez will certainly find himself in high-demand. For now, though, it's all about Friday night.

"If Bellator invites me back, it's something that I'll certainly consider, but as of right now, my only focus is Friday night with Darrell," Gomez said. "My whole thing is don't bother me with stuff like that until after this fight.

"Nobody likes a loser. They could promise me the world, but if I lose this fight, it's gone. That's my only focus."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Hesdy Gerges, It's Showtime Heavyweight champion arrested for drug trafficking (128 kilos of cocaine)

The kickboxing world suffered another huge blow today, as It's Showtime and K-1 fighter Hesdy Gerges was arrested for drug trafficking earlier today. The arrest of Gerges was in relation to a raid by Belgium officials in May, where Hesdy's half brother, Ashraf and his friend were caught with 128 kilos of cocaine in Antwerp, Belgium. Gerges, as well as four more suspects were arrested today at the behest of Belgium officials, who will demand extradition.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jay Hieron Is Back in the Game and Back on the Grind

"Man it's the same old thing here," Hieron began. "I'm training hard and getting ready to rumble."

Hieron made news when he signed with Strikeforce midway through 2009 but after two impressive showings his calls for a title shot against Nick Diaz went unanswered. With no title shot and the promise of fighting in televised bouts broken he decided to take his talents to Bellator Fighting Championship.

"I like the tournament format," Hieron answered when asked about his decision to sign with the Chicago based promotion. "I definitely wanted to get as many fights as possible right now and the tournament format is situation is the best situation for that. In my career I've fought everywhere. I feel that I've had a lot of organization's collapse around me or sell their company off...I've been through that. I hope Bellator is around for awhile and I'd like to think I could call that my home but only time will tell."

"To tell you the truth I have no idea," Hieron answered when asked about the Diaz fight. "To me that's the past and I'm focusing on the future right now so that situation is in my rearview mirror."

Originally Hieron was slated to face Steve Carl in his Bellator debut but on the day of the interview the news came that Carl was injured and would be replaced by Anthony Lapsley. Despite the last minute change Hieron remained unaffected.

"I feel I match up great with anybody right now," Hieron stated. "I'm in tremendous shape, my skills are A-level and I'm going to go out and do my job on fight night."

By entering the Season 4 welterweight tournament Hieron will automatically be one of the favorites to win the tournament. If Hieron is successful in his bid he will earn a title matchup with current champion and wrestling standout Ben Askren.

"Being the champion is the plan and that's what I signed up for," Hieron stated. "Whenever I sign on for a fight I sign on to win and I want to be the champion. That's why I'm in this game. I want to be the best that I can be. It's definitely one fight at a time and I'm looking forward to March 5th. It's my comeback fight. I haven't fought in awhile and I'm excited man. I'm back in the game."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Askren Meets Thompson in Non-Title Bout at Bellator 40

Bellator welterweight champion Ben Askren will lock horns with UFC veteran Nick “The Goat” Thompson in a non-title affair at Bellator Fighting Championships 40, the promotion announced Wednesday.

The event, which goes down April 9 at the First Council Casino in Newkirk, Okla., will air live on MTV2.

Askren has not seen action since capturing Bellator’s 170-pound crown last October, when he took a five-round unanimous decision over the promotion’s first-ever welterweight champion, Lyman Good, at Bellator 33. “Funky” earned a shot at the title by winning Bellator’s second-season welterweight tournament in spring 2010, defeating Ryan Thomas in both the quarter- and semifinals before outpointing fellow finalist Dan Hornbuckle at Bellator 22 in June.

A 2008 U.S. Olympian in freestyle wrestling, Askren is a two-time NCAA champion, winning national wrestling titles for the University of Missouri in 2006 and 2007. Undefeated as a mixed martial artist, the 26-year-old has submitted three of his seven career victims and holds a perfect 4-0 record in Bellator competition.

“I come to fight every single time,” Askren said in a release. “Whether you’re good or you’re bad, I still want to smash you, and it’s going to be the same thing when I fight Nick Thompson. It doesn’t matter what his record is. I’m looking to kick his ass.”

A former BodogFight welterweight champion, Thompson ran off 12 consecutive victories from 2006 to 2008. Recently, however, the Minnesota-based veteran has fallen on hard times, losing three straight bouts to tough competition. Thompson last stepped in the ring against Taisuke Okuno, losing by knockout at Sengoku Raiden Championship 14. Prior to that bout, the 29-year-old was finished by former Strikeforce title challenger Tim Kennedy and the aforementioned Hornbuckle.

Thompson began his career in 2003 and made his UFC debut in 2005, earning a 1-1 record before parting ways with the promotion. Thompson’s last victory came against current Strikeforce welterweight contender Paul Daley, as the Minnesota Martial Arts Academy product earned a unanimous decision over the Brit at Maximum Fighting Championship 20 in 2009.

“I think the biggest advantage for me in this fight with Ben is the fact that I’ve fought more than 50 fights,” said Thompson. “I’ve fought in every organization. I’ve fought against the best fighters in the world, and I’ve been ranked in the top ten. Ben hasn’t been there. I plan on hitting him like he’s never been hit before, and I’m excited to find out how he’s going to react.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Unbeaten Spang Inks 4-Fight MFC Deal, Expects April Debut

Unbeaten middleweight Andreas Spang has joined the rapidly-expanding roster of top Canadian promotion Maximum Fighting Championship.

The Swedish-born 32-year-old signed a four-fight deal with the company this week and is expected to make his promotional debut in early April at the as-yet-unannounced MFC 29.

A former professional boxer and kickboxer who has competed under the K-1 banner, Spang made the transition to MMA in 2008. Since then, the “Sweet Sweed” has compiled a spotless record of 5-0, including three first-round finishes. Last June, Spang earned the biggest victory of his nascent career with a crushing knockout of touted Brazilian jiu-jitsu player Chaun Sims at Ring of Fire 38.

Spang currently resides in Las Vegas and splits his training time between One Kick’s Gym, J-Sect MMA and Sergio Penha Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. Previously pestered by lingering injuries and tentative bouts which failed to materialize, the rejuvenated Spang now looks forward to building on his perfect ledger and making a name for himself in his new home.

“I have a great training camp,” Spang told Sherdog.com on Wednesday. “I’ve stayed in the gym the whole time, but now I’m pushing myself hard. I had some disappointing months with fights that didn’t happen, so it’s nice to have something to focus on.”

While not officially announced by the promotion, MFC 29 is expected to take place in the company’s home base of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. MFC President Mark Pavelich in January told the Canadian Press that British middleweight Tom “Kong” Watson will likely compete on the card.
 
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Alvarez to Defend Bellator Title Against Curran on April 2

Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez will defend his title for the first time on April 2 against second-season tournament winner Pat Curran.

A source close to the fight informed Sherdog.com on Wednesday that the title bout is set to headline Bellator Fighting Championships 39 at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn. Bellator Chairman and CEO Bjorn Rebney first spoke of the matchup with MMAFighting.com.

Alvarez and Curran were originally slated to meet last October at Bellator 33, but Curran was forced to withdraw after suffering a shoulder injury in training. UFC veteran Roger Huerta replaced Curran and the bout was changed to a non-title affair, which Alvarez won via doctor stoppage between the second and third rounds.

A world-ranked 155-pounder, Alvarez has not been defeated inside the Bellator cage. The Philadelphia native ran through Greg Loughran, Eric Reynolds and Toby Imada in 2009, submitting all three to capture Bellator’s inaugural lightweight title. Since then, the 27-year-old has taken part in two non-title matches for Bellator -- Huerta and Josh Neer, whom Alvarez choked out last May -- and submitted Deep lightweight champion Katsunori Kikuno under the Dream banner. Alvarez has lost just one of his last 12 outings, a December 2008 heel-hooking from Dream ace Shinya Aoki.

Curran, 23, was last seen earning a narrow split decision against Toby Imada in their June 2010 tournament final. The Team Curran fighter reached the final by knocking out touted Georges St. Pierre training partner Mike Ricci and out-pointing Huerta. He also holds victories over former King of the Cage lightweight champ Tony Hervey and Daniel Straus, who is set to take part in Bellator’s upcoming featherweight tournament.

Bellator’s fourth season will air live on MTV2 each Saturday night, beginning March 5 with Bellator 35 at the Tachi Palace Hotel and Casino in Lemoore, Calif.
 
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John Gunderson eyes return to UFC, says featherweight may be in his future

Following a three-fight stint in the world's biggest mixed martial arts promotion, nine-year veteran John Gunderson has his eyes on a return to the UFC.

And if he makes it back, it may very well be in a new division.

While he's competing in a lightweight bout at this weekend's Tachi Palace Fights 8 event in Lemoore, Calif., Gunderson today told MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio) that he hopes to make it back to the octagon, and he might do so at 145 pounds.

"I don't want to be one of those guys that jumps on the bandwagon," Gunderson said. "I see all these guys saying, 'I can make 145. I'm going to 145.' Bull[expletive]. You can't even make 155, and you're whining about making 155. 'Put me back in the sauna.' Come on, you're not making 145. I can make 145.

"I walk around at 160 right now, so I'm real light. I have some training partners that get up to like 190 or 195 between fights. I don't get higher than 165. I can make 145 if I wanted to. If it's right, and if [the UFC] would have me back at 145, I'd definitely go back."

Gunderson was released by the UFC following a September 2010 loss to Yves Edwards. The defeat ended a three-fight run for Gunderson in the organization in which he went 1-2.

He's since racked up a submission win over Alejandro Solano Rodriguez at "Xtreme Vale Todo 5: Franca vs. Kheder" and looks to continue the streak against Dominique Robinson at Tachi Palace Fights 8.

Gunderson said he feels comfortable competing at 155 pounds on the regional scene, but he learned a valuable lesson during his time in the UFC about the size of athletes competing in the sport's top promotion.

"That's one thing I noticed about the UFC; when it comes to weigh-in day, I'm pretty good size because I don't really lose a bunch of weight," Gunderson said. "But when it comes fight day and I'm standing across from the other guy, I've been like, 'Holy [expletive]. There's a big size difference here.'

"All three of my UFC fights, I was like, 'Damn, these are big guys.'"
 
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Barnett Interview

NEW YORK — Strikeforce might be Josh Barnett's final path to prominence.

"It just seemed like the way things are coming together, it was going to be the place to be," Barnett says of Strikeforce. "My chance to really make a huge mark on this sport, and perhaps the last big opportunity I'm really going to get."

The heavyweight has accomplished almost everything possible for him in mixed martial arts, both good and bad. He captured belts in the Ultimate Fighting Championship and Pancrase. He won major fights in Pride Fighting Championships. He's tested positive multiple times for banned substances, though he denies using them. He's beaten some of the best heavyweights of his generation, including Randy "The Natural" Couture and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. He's trained some of the best fighters, such as women's MMA superstar Megumi Fujii.

Josh Barnett is No. 11 in the USA TODAY/SB Nation consensus rankings for heavyweights.
CAPTION
By Jessica Rinaldi for USA TODAY
But eight years after capturing UFC's title, Barnett is back in the hunt for some kind of championship. He's scheduled to face Brett Rogers on April 9 in the first round of the Strikeforce World Grand Prix, with the winner taking on Sergei Kharitonov, who beat Andrei Arlovski on Saturday in East Rutherford, N.J.

USA TODAY spoke to Barnett last week after a press conference in New York to promote Saturday's show. Excerpts from the conversation:

Q: Seemed like every time they needed someone to say something articulate at the press conference, they handed the mike to you. Are you used to that by now?

Barnett: A bit. I understand my lot in this whole promotional scheme of things.

Being able to be a good mouthpiece, it's not really hurting me. I've used it for commentary and other TV gigs like that before.

Everybody's got their niche. I just happen to have that, that works for me, or at least I think it does. Others, whatever their gimmick, their deal that they bring to the table, that's them -- they've just got to learn how to maximize it.

Conventional wisdom says you got the easy side of the bracket. How much would you agree with that perception?

I understand the perception. I see the paper trail that they would make people think that way.

The funny thing is, nobody knows how it's going to turn out. I'm sure everyone thought Fedor would kill Brett Rogers in 10 seconds. That was a pretty knock-down, drag-'em out fight. Anything is possible with these guys. All of them are tough, and all of them have risen to the occasion at some point or other.

I like the fact that people think it's the easy side of the bracket , that they think I'm going to mow through these guys. I think it's great. I think I'm going to mow through them, but I think I'd mow through anybody. That's the position that I've got to keep for me. The only thing to do is to go out there and fight the fights and try to make it look easy, I guess, if I can.

Hell, every other tournament I've been in, they've put me on the stacked side paper-wise. So forget it -- I could deserve a break.

How do you see Brett Rogers?

Big. He's kind of like a juggernaut. Just comes forward. Lots of force, lots of pressure, always forward momentum. It's not about always the technique or the skill; it's just about trying to go through something. A big guy like that, moving with that kind of gusto -- dangerous. I'm not going to be in front of it.

When you say "not going to be in front of it," what does that mean? Are you going to moving laterally a lot, or trying to clinch with him?

It means he's going to make a mistake and I'm going to capitalize on it. I'm not there to get hit upside the head by anybody.

So will the fight with Rogers be more like your last fight with Pedro Rizzo or your fight with Geronimo Dos Santos?

It'd be more like dos Santos.

Rizzo has a tendency to get on a bicycle and take off. He's hard to pin down. He'll settle a little bit, look for his countershot or whatever, and then if you give him too much forward pressure, he bails; he's gone. He's pretty quick on his feet.

So for Rizzo, it was a just matter of trying to get him, chip away, wait for him to give me that opening. I got into quite a few clinches, but I didn't try to take him down that hard, but I figured, "I'm not going to waste the energy here. He's going to fight so hard to keep distance and avoid the takedown; well, I'm not going to combat that by expending more energy. Instead, I'll keep it on the fight and clip him on the break."

Eventually he gave me that jab I was looking for, and I just popped over the top, stunned him and then finished it off with the left hook. I just didn't need to be in a hurry.

Brett, he's more like Mondragon (dos Santos). He's going to come hard, forward with big right hands. Half his punches are going to come from his hip, but you don't want to get in the way of him.

The Strikeforce press kit has a quote from Brett saying that catch wrestling is great, but if you don't get the catch, you're screwed. What do you make of that?

I haven't seen it, and I think it's hilarious, because his coach claims to be a catch wrestler.

Maybe he knows what he's talking about then.

Yeah, maybe he does. But I guess only thing to do is give him a firsthand lesson. Honestly, I think once I get a hold of him, he's not going too far.

Your lead trainer, Erik Paulson, is off for six weeks helping Brock Lesnar coach guys on The Ultimate Fighter. How much does that hinder your preparation for Brett?

It's kind of a bummer, but I've been doing this a few years at this point. I've actually trained my own world champions.

I feel in other circumstances with another guy, it could be really detrimental. But with me, I know what it takes to run a camp. How training needs to be; what's necessary of me and my trainers.

I've got great trainers back home still: Oscar "The Boxer" Muniz, my boxing coach; Lucious Smith, my strength and conditioning coach; Nicolas Saignac -- good luck trying to spell that just on phonetics...

Yeah, I'll have to doublecheck that.

He's French, my savate coach.

I've got great wrestlers all around me, great grapplers and great strikers. Some folks I might have to bring in for sparring partners, but for me, all I'm really concerned about is being sharp and being healthy. (If) those two are accomplished, then there ain't nothing that's going to stop me.

What does savate give you that you can't get otherwise?

Easiest explanation I can say is, Muay Thai is more like a blunt-force trauma; sort of a, you hit me, I hit you back. Savate is like Floyd Mayweather; I hit you, you don't hit me at all.

I like that. I like being light on my feet. Lateral (movement), angles, head movement. They actually use their lead leg like a boxer uses his lead hand: jabs, distance measuring. Yeah, they throw knockouts with it too, but in general, it's to set up your power shots.

It's like classic boxing, but with your feet. Nicolas, he's like a surgeon with his feet. He'll just pick you apart. You block one place, he hits you in another. It's just a matter of a difference of inches.

Was the kick that you used on Mighty Mo (Siala-Mou Siliga) a savate kick?

It was, but not intended to hit him in the groin. I throw a kick a lot similar to the one Anderson (Silva) threw (at Vitor Belfort). Use a snap kick with the ball of the foot; in savate, that's called a chasse. You can land it a number of places: to the jaw; to the liver; to the solar plexus. You can kick the inside of the leg with it; that's a really nasty one. You can even kick the outside of the leg with it. Karate has a similar kick, as well.

Honestly, I was peppering his mid-section with it, and he just happened to open up on a kick as soon as my leg was coming up, and the trajectory just popped it right in. I've never hit anybody in the groin like that before either, so it was quite the surprise.

Anderson claims he perfected the technique with Steven Seagal. (jokingly) Did you get any movie stars to refine your kick?

I actually do train some movie stars. A guy named Victor Webster; he just wrapped up on the latest Scorpion King movie. He's doing a whole stint on Castle. He trains with Eddie Bravo in jiu-jitsu as well as with me in catch wrestling.

How do you reconcile the two?

One's got to feed into the other. You've got to add many elements to the pot. You stir it up, and what kind of soup you're going to make in the end is up to you, because everybody's got their physical attributes that work better one way or the other, or mindset.

So the rubber guard can work with the guy who teaches ways to snap it?

Exactly.

Techniques and moves, they're all the same anywhere you go. It's just a movement.

Philosophies change, and I impart my philosophy to a guy like Victor or anybody that I train, and they make the most of it. I believe in my style A-number one, but I'm not going to tell anybody else not to train in other things, or not to learn, not to expand their horizons. They've got to create what's best for them.

It's more like a JKD (jeet kune do) mind-set. You know, eat the meat, spit out the bone.

I know you said speculation is meaningless, but who do you like to come out of the other side of the bracket? (Note: The interview took place before Saturday's Strikeforce show, when Antonio Silva defeated Fedor Emelianenko)

Well, Fedor. He's my friend. That's the fight everybody feels they're owed, and I'd like to give it to them.

Do you feel the MMA audience is owed that fight?

I think I'm owed that fight.

How much did the chance to finally get that fight play into your decision to sign with Strikeforce?

It was pretty big.

But also, it just seemed like the way things are coming together, it was going to be the place to be, and my chance to really make a huge mark on this sport, and perhaps the last big opportunity I'm really going to get.

You talked about training champions before. When will we see Megumi Fujii back in action?

Good question. I'm not sure quite yet, but I guarantee that she'll be out there at some point before the end of the year.

How much do you want a rematch with Zoila Frausto?

We'd love that. I don't know if she'll ever dare get down to '15 again. I think she sort of feels like she's done enough down there that she can just abandon it and ride the coattails of it.

Not to say that she's wrong for thinking so. I don't know how it is for her to be a 115-pound fighter, but I also think if you're going to get there, you've got to back it up. Don't fight there if you don't intend to stay there.

You could just take it at '25, couldn't you?

Potentially, but even at '15, Zoila was huge. At '25, it'd be ridiculous. It's hard enough for me to get Megumi up to even something like 125 pounds, so it's not the kind of situation I'd put Megumi in.

How frustrating was it watching Megumi being stubborn about trying to prove something with her stand-up?

(jaw tightens). It made me want to shoot myself in the face.

As far as I can tell, normally she's pretty good about listening to instructions.

She is, normally.

So what happened that night?

Don't really know. It could make me just have an aneurysm just sitting here.

Sorry to bring it up.

It's alright.
 
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Featherweight Ronnie Mann Signs With Bellator

Highly touted featherweight Ronnie Mann has signed an exclusive contract with Bellator, CEO Bjorn Rebney informed MMA Fighting on Wednesday. The 18-2-1 fighter has been released from his Sengoku Raiden Championship contract and will compete in Bellator's upcoming fourth season in a televised non-tournament bout. He will then be a part of the following season's 145-pound tournament.

Mann, the current Shark Fights featherweight champion is 7-1 in his last 8 fights. He lost to Hatsu Hioki via submission in the second round of SRC's featherweight grand prix in May 2009.

The 24-year-old British fighter had expressed interest in signing with WEC last year, but no deal was ever finalized. His featherweight title win over Doug Evans was his first fight in North America in 21 professional fights.

No date or opponent has been signed for Mann's Bellator debut.

According to Rebney, Joe Warren, the current Bellator 145-pound champion, will compete in a non-title fight against a yet-to-be signed opponent on April 16. Rebney said Warren still hopes to compete in the 2012 Summer Olympics.

"We are going to support him and hopefully he can pull it off," he said.
 
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Ben Rothwell Wants Fresh Start After Long Layoff

UFC heavyweight Ben Rothwell and Andrei Arlovski aren't friends, exactly. Not in the strictest sense of the word. They spent a little over ten minutes in the ring together back in July of 2008. Since then the two heavyweights haven't talked much.

Still, Rothwell said, it was a strange feeling watching the latest stop on Arlovski's precipitous decline last Saturday night. Watching his former foe laid out on the canvas after getting knocked out by Sergei Kharitonov in the first round of the Strikeforce Grand Prix, he felt sick to his stomach, though he's not entirely sure why.

"Seeing him knocked out like that, it makes me feel bad," Rothwell said. "I couldn't even be like, hey, awesome knockout. It's like seeing that happen to a friend, and I don't even know Andrei all that well. I just know him from when we fought, and before he was really cool to me and after he was really cool to me. I haven't really talked to him since, so I don't know why I feel that way, but you just have that kind of connection with someone you fought a war with. I don't want to see him like that."

Rothwell (31-7) has had a lot of time to sit around and think about stuff like this over the last eight months. Maybe too much time. After injuring his knee in the first round of his UFC 115 fight with Gilbert Yvel, Rothwell has been on the sidelines. He had surgery in late July, and now has rehabbed it to the point where he can finally do just about everything in the gym.

"I'm just trying to hold [UFC matchmaker] Joe Silva off," he joked. "They want you to fight tomorrow, you know what I mean? They want you back as soon as they can get you. ... I think right now if I was a lightweight they'd be telling me, 'Fight or get out of here.' But being an experienced heavyweight, they're going to keep me on the roster and keep me in the mix. Experienced heavyweights are a little harder to come by."

But Rothwell isn't rushing himself. Realistically, he expects to make his return to action this summer, approximately a year from his last fight. If that means whatever momentum he may have gained from the decision over Yvel will have evaporated – or even if it means that fans might have completely forgotten who he is – so be it.

In fact, maybe that's even what he's hoping for.

"I kind of like that, because maybe it means I'll get a fresh start. People might not just look at me like, here's this can who got beat up by Cain [Velasquez] and then won a boring decision against Gilbert Yvel. Good. Give me a year off, forget all that, and let me come back as something new. Because this is it, man. I've got to come back, do something exciting, become a contender, or else I need to think about something else to do with my life."

Rothwell turned 29 in October. He has nearly 40 pro fights to his credit, but is a meager 1-1 in the UFC. The fact that his loss came against the current champion, who is now widely considered the world's best heavyweight, doesn't do much to comfort him.

"A loss is a loss," he said. "I lost to some guys I shouldn't have. I lost to arguably the best Andrei Arlovski and I lost to the best heavyweight in the world right now in Cain. But it's still a loss."

By his own metric, he can hardly even consider himself a real UFC fighter until he racks up at least ten bouts in the organization, he said.

"Having ten or more fights in the UFC, to me, is a big deal. I've got two now. If you have ten fights where you had to win just to keep getting invited back, that means something. That's a real UFC veteran. You have guys saying, 'Oh, I fought in the UFC.' Yeah, you fought one time and lost. Don't tell anyone that anymore. But if you look at a guy like Chris Lytle, I love guys like that. That's a real UFC veteran. That's a big deal, and I would like to be able to walk away from the sport being able to say that about myself."

He recently partnered with Gracie Barra to open his own gym – Rothwell MMA in Kenosha, Wisconsin – and says he could see himself settling into the life of a full-time coach somewhere down the road.

For now though, Rothwell is focused on making his impact felt in the UFC. After so long out of action, he knows he'll be expected to justify his roster spot when he finally makes it back into the Octagon in the coming months, he said.

"By then I'll be everything I can be and there'll be no excuses. I'll have to perform."