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Feb 7, 2006
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Bellator 36 set for March 12 in Shreveport, La., lightweight tourney kicks off

Shreveport Municipal Auditorium in Louisiana plays host to Bellator 36, and the event features the opening round of the organization's eight-man lightweight tournament.

Officials today announced the venue, which is the third different Louisiana arena to host a Bellator show.

Tournament-quarterfinal pairings for the March 12 show will be announced in the coming days.

The tournament, which airs on MTV2 as part of Bellator's three-year deal with the cable station, has a set field. As MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) previously reported, one opening-round bout features two top prospects: Marcin Held (10-1 MMA, 0-0 BFC) vs. Mike Chandler (5-0 MMA, 2-0 BFC). Other participants include Rob McCullough, Carey Vanier, Lloyd Woodard, Ferrid Kheder, Toby Imada and Patricky Freire.

The tournament winner earns $100,000 in total pay and a guaranteed title shot.

The Shreveport Municipal Auditorium is a 3,200-seat venue built in 1929.

Bellator 36 is the second show of Bellator's fourth season, which kicks off March 5 in Lemoore, Calif. Tournaments are being held in the featherweight, lightweight, welterweight and light-heavyweight divisions. Many former tournament winner and current champs compete in non-title fights throughout the season.
 
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Gabe Ruediger Released by the UFC, Contemplating Move to 145lbs

Back-to-back losses in the UFC’s rapidly thinning lightweight division is tough to overcome, and so with that Gabe Ruediger was released from the promotion recently.

Sources close to the fighter confirmed the release to MMAWeekly.com on Monday.

Ruediger went 0-2 during his return stint to the UFC, with losses to Joe Lauzon and Paul Taylor.

The former “Ultimate Fighter” cast member had picked up six wins in a row to earn his way back into the UFC, but suffered a couple of tough losses upon his return.

While his release does mean Ruediger’s next fight won’t be in the UFC, it doesn’t mean he’s deterred from returning. The California based fighter is currently contemplating a potential move to featherweight after having very little weight to cut before his last bout at 155lbs.

No official move has been decided, but Ruediger may decide to try the weight class out in the future.

The UFC’s lightweight division will be a dog eat dog world for the next several shows after the promotion merged with the WEC and pushed the 155lb division to over 70 fighters under contract.

Multiple sources have told MMAWeekly.com that eventually the UFC wants the division to be with less than 30 fighters under contract.
 
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Bigfoot: “If Fedor returned, he’d have lost his eye”

Antonio “Big Foot” Silva has suffered a lot during his whole life. After facing some problems with his visa on Europe, cancelled fights, doping issues and lack of chances, the athlete reach the top of the world last Saturday, on the quarterfinals of Strikeforce’s Grand Prix. Fedor Emelianenko was no longer considered to be the best of the division, but the Brazilian still consider him to be the best ever. On an exclusive chat with TATAME, Big Foot commented the fight, revealed the request he did to Fedor after the fight and betted on what may happen on the tournament, making himself free to help on the trainings of Fabricio Werdum for his bout with Alistair Overeem. Check it:

Did everything go like you were expecting it to? Was the game plan to strike on the first round, than take him down and work on top of him?

Basically the game plan was this, but I wasn’t supposed to stand for so long on the first round, I had to do that for two minutes and then try to take him down, but I felt comfortable there. He punched me few times and I could tell they weren’t that strong, but I absorbed it quite well. When the second round started, (Andre) Benkei looked at me and asked: “do you want to win? Isn’t it your dream to be here? So, go there and beat him up”. Then I entered there focused to take him down, I could use my ground and pound, which was what I’ve trained the most.

Then, why do you think you couldn’t take him down on the first round?

I felt ok fighting standing, my head was good and I know that I’d get the takedown if I tried it. We also set a game plan of putting him against the grid and spend some time there, since I’m much heavier than him. I only didn’t take him down before, but the I’ve set the game plan and I used it.

Do you think the doctors were right to finish the fight?

Many said he could’ve returned for round number three, but I’ll tell you something… Because of Fedor’s heart and his attitude as a professional, he’d have returned for sure, but he hadn’t conditions to fight, because if he returned, he’d have lost his eye, because I’d keep trying to hit it all the time. The doctors are there for it, to talk with the athlete and don’t let him to get hurt. I was at the hotel and I say him getting there around 5am, and I think he has broken something because his face was pretty bad, he had a black eye. For the athlete he is, he’d have returned, but it maybe would have complicated things for him, because I was ready to fight round number three, I went into tears and a the entire story went through my mind: where I come from, where I am now, I had to hold so the tears wouldn’t go down. I got puffy, but I was crazy to fight the third round.

Do you believe the weight gap mattered the most or your technique?

After the fight, many people talked about this weight gap, but no fighter is obligated to fight if he doesn’t want it. If you accepted it, you know who your opponent is, the weight and the game he plays, and his manager accepted it. Fedor fought Zulu, Brett Rogers, Jong Man Choi and even heavier ones, but my work is different. I don’t believe on this weight gap thing, even because he’s fought many GPs without weight limit in Japan. Many people like to say he’s done… He’s only 34, he’s young and has great potential, he’s been beating up everybody he faces for 10 years. Only because he lost twice now people say he’s done. And the credits he earned? They’re gone?

Do you still consider Fedor to be the greatest heavyweight of all times on MMA?

For me, Fedor is the Pelé of MMA, besides being a very humble guy. When he left the hospital at 5am, I was at the hotel’s lobby and I talked to him and asked him not to stop fighting because he still have many things to show to the fans and that people still wanted to see him on the cage. And, after that, the guy came and kissed my forehead… Get it? He’s a wonderful guy, and everybody wants to see the best of all times in a good shape. He’s all about being humble.

You’ve been through many things during your career. You’ve had some visa issues in England and Minotauro helped you, you’ve had the doping thing on EliteXC, when you won the belt and the event went out of business… How is it like to fight again and shine?

God’s ways can seem messy sometimes, everything happens when it has to. I was supposed to fight Fedor a long time ago, but he didn’t accept it at the time, claiming I didn’t have a big name back then. I believe my moment was this and my mind is completely different now, because I’ve gone though much I’m more experienced now. I believe that if that fight had happened before the outcome wouldn’t be the same.

You were the underdog for this fight agianst Fedor, the favorite to win the Grand Prix. How do you see it now? Do you consider yourself to be the favorite to become the champion?

I’ve said before that if I’d win this fight I’d be the champion of this GP, it was like it already was the finale, but I can’t forget all fighters I’ll still have to face on this GP, and they’re top ones. Now Werdum will fight Overeem, and the winner will fave me, and any of them would be a very tough opponent. But I think now I’m the favorite. This win gave me extra motivation to win and I’ll train exactly this much or more for my next fight.


You and Werdum had become great friends. How it’d be like to confront him on the semifinals?

Me and Werdum laugh a lot, we jokes about everybody, I can’t even describe how great he is. He’s a very nice guy, we get along well and we party every time we see each other. We’ve lunched, had dinner, went shopping together, when I was on my room I called him to run at the gym, but we’re professionals. I have my family, two daughters, and he has his wife, his daughter, and if we fight each other it’s for the business. We can’t not fight each other just because we’re friends. Two friends play against each other at soccer, even two brothers, even father and son and it won’t be any different on MMA because it a sport like the others. If we have to do it, then we’ll go out for pizzas, like it happened now, and I guarantee you that the one who’s on the finale will have the other’s support, praying and cheering so that Brazil is the champion. We want Brazil to get the first place, and that’s what matters.

Do you consider helping Werdum for his fight against Overeem?

If Werdum needs me, I’ll go there and help him. A training is a training, and today we’re professionals, and you end up fighting your training partner, that’s how it works. Of course I can’t know his game plan for when we fight each other, but when he fights other guy I can help him. If he needs it, I’ll help him and then we fight, the training is different than the fight.

What message would you like to tell the fans that cheered for you? What they can hope of you on this GP?

I’d like to thank for the prayers of you all, to TATAME, the good vibes that you sent me. The ones who didn’t, it’s ok too. We have to earn people’s trust, and I think I’m getting it. Many people didn’t cheer for me, I’m sure many will start now and you can hope I train more and give my best. With God’s help, I’ll be on this finale to win this GP’s title to Brazil.
 
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Feb 7, 2006
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Reuben Duran Steps Up To Face Takeya Mizugaki At UFC On Versus 3

Takeya Mizugaki is getting a new opponent for UFC on Versus 3 and his name is Reuben Duran.

Duran’s agency, Iridium Sports Agency, made the fight announcement via its official Facebook page Monday night. In addition, Duran signed a new contract with the UFC consisting of five fights – the first fight being against the Japanese fighter on March 3.

MMAWeekly.com originally reported that Mizugaki was slated to fight Francisco Rivera on the Versus card, but an undisclosed injury during training recently forced Rivera off the event. MMAJunkie.com was the first to report on Rivera’s withdrawal.

Duran (7-2-1) has spent some time fighting for the King of the Cage promotion in addition to some smaller Southern California promotions, such as All-Star Boxing and Long Beach Fight Night. He’s currently on a four-fight winning streak with three of those four wins being finishes. The Redlands, Calif. native started his professional career in 2006.

Mizugaki (13-5) is no stranger to the Zuffa cage. The former WEC bantamweight is coming off a submission loss to Urijah Faber at WEC 52, dropping his record to 2-3 since joining the organization in 2009. The fight at UFC on Versus 3 will be Mizugaki’s first in the UFC since the company merged with the WEC at the beginning of 2011.

UFC on Versus 3 is scheduled to take place in Lousville, Ky., and is headlined by a welterweight match-up between Martin Kampmann and Diego Sanchez.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jon Fitch Done Talking About Title Shots Until After UFC 127

For the last couple of years, Jon Fitch has become the forgotten contender in the UFC’s welterweight title picture.

The American Kickboxing Academy standout has an astonishing 13-1 record in the UFC, with his lone loss coming to the current 170-pound champion Georges St-Pierre.

Fitch has also never backed down from proclaiming his goal of wanting another crack at St-Pierre and the title. He was even supposed to get that title shot after beating Thiago Alves last August, but it never materialized.

The former Purdue wrestler also stated, when he made an initial trip to Australia to promote his upcoming fight against B.J. Penn, that he believed it should be him fighting St-Pierre in Toronto at UFC 129 and not Jake Shields, who got the shot.

“I think I’m better than Jake. I think I should be fighting for the title,” Fitch said.

With his fight against Penn now just a couple of weeks away, Fitch has stopped talking about title shots or potential rematches against St-Pierre. He’s not even worried about being considered the top contender anymore.

All of that falls by the wayside now because he knows Penn is someone you can never underestimate.

“This fight is such a huge fight with B.J. and I have a lot of responsibility to carry with this fight being the main event in Australia my focus is B.J. Penn. That’s all I’m worried about or thinking about right now,” Fitch said in an interview with MMAWeekly Radio.

Even with the premise that St-Pierre may leave the division if he beats Shields in April, again Fitch isn’t taking the bait. He’s only got one concern in mind, and it’s a former champion from Hawaii who wants to take his head off in Australia.

“For right now, all I see in front of me is B.J. Penn,” Fitch stated.

His new state of mind doesn’t mean Fitch has stopped thinking about becoming the champion in the welterweight division.

Far from it.

If anything the division is more wide open now than ever before. He’s long been hounded about a possible fight against close friend and teammate Josh Koscheck, but with his loss to St-Pierre last December, they won’t be facing each other for the belt any time soon.

Fitch will always have his eyes on the prize, but he’s not going to fall off a cliff at UFC 127 by reaching for the stars right now.

“I’ll think about what comes next after my hand’s raised in the Octagon,” Fitch said.

He will travel to Australia later this week to finish up his camp and get ready for the UFC 127 showdown against B.J. Penn.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Scott Coker Hints at Fedor vs. Loser of Overeem-Werdum

Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker anticipates Fedor's return on MMA Fighting's The MMA Hour

"If the fighter doesn't want to fight the promoter doesn't make him fight. And if he wants to retire then it's time to walk away. But I don't think that's the case ... and I think the loser of (Alistair) Overeem and (Fabricio) Werdum, that would be a great fight for Fedor (Emelianenko)."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Granted Sengoku Release, ‘Pee Wee’ Herman Signs with UFC

Dave “Pee Wee” Herman has been released from his contract with Japanese promotion Sengoku and has reportedly signed with the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

Herman’s manager, Shu Hirata, confirmed the heavyweight’s release from Sengoku with MMAFighting.com early Tuesday. MMAWeekly.com now reports that Herman’s Octagon debut is already lined up, and that the Indiana native will face Brit Rob Broughton as part of UFC 131 June 11 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Sporting an impressive record of 20-2, with 19 wins by way of knockout or submission, Herman has long been considered one of the most desirable heavyweight free agents in MMA. Along with Sengoku, the 26-year-old is a veteran of EliteXC and Bellator Fighting Championships. Herman was locked in a contract dispute with the latter promotion for the better part of 2010, but finally returned to the Bellator cage in September with a first-round omoplata submission of Poland’s Michal Kita.

Herman was last seen competing at Sengoku’s Dec. 30 “Soul of Fight” event, where he took a unanimous decision over Pride veteran Yoshihiro “Kiss” Nakao. The 6-foot-5, 240-pounder’s professional ledger includes victories over the likes of Don Frye, Ron Waterman, and “Big” Jim York.

Broughton, a former Cage Rage British heavyweight champion, made a successful UFC debut at UFC 120 in October. Despite falling behind early, “The Bear” came back to score a third-round rear-naked choke submission against Vinicius Kappke de Queiroz, who later allegedly tested positive for banned substances. Prior to entering the UFC, the Liverpudlian notched wins against Britain’s biggest names at heavyweight, including Neil Grove, Neil Wain and James Thompson, twice.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Bellator Champ Makovsky Returns Against Robichaux on April 16

Bellator bantamweight champion Zach Makovsky will return to the cage at Bellator Fighting Championships 41 on April 16 in a non-title bout against undefeated veteran Chad Robichaux.

Sherdog.com has confirmed the fight with a source close to the bout; MMAJunkie.com first reported the matchup on Tuesday morning. The promotion has not yet announced the bout or the event, the location of which is currently unknown.

Makovsky was last seen at Bellator 32 in October, outpointing Ed West over five rounds to capture Bellator’s inaugural bantamweight title. The victory marked the sixth consecutive win for “Fun Size,” who also defeated Nick Mamalis and Bryan Goldsby on his path to the tournament crown. A former NCAA Div. I wrestler at Drexel University, Makovsky is a veteran of the defunct EliteXC promotion.

The twice-beaten Philadelphian made his Bellator debut in June, submitting Eric Luke with a kimura to qualify for the season three bantamweight tournament. Makovsky owns seven of his 12 career victories by decision and has never been knocked out.

Robichaux began his career in 1999, winning two fights in a single night at Reality Combat Fighting 2. “Robo” would go on to win six more bouts before taking a four-year hiatus from the ring. The Gracie Barra Woodlands instructor would return to active competition in 2009, rattling off back-to-back victories before making his Strikeforce debut in August 2010 and earning a split decision win over Humberto DeLeon.

Robichaux will take his first steps into the circular Bellator cage on April 16, having recently inked a three-fight deal with the promotion.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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"Strikeforce: Silva vs. Fedor" breaks ratings records, peaks with 1.1 million viewers

Saturday's "Strikeforce: Silva vs. Fedor" event shattered the organization's ratings records on Showtime.

Overall, the Feb. 12 event averaged 741,000 viewers and peaked with 1.1 million for the Antonio Silva vs. Fedor Emelianenko headliner. Both broke Strikeforce's previous bests on Showtime.

MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) today confirmed the numbers with an industry source.

"Strikeforce: Silva vs. Fedor" took place at IZOD Center in East Rutherford, N.J., and kicked off the organization's highly anticipated eight-man heavyweight grand prix. The event received perhaps the biggest pre-event publicity push in Strikeforce history.

The new ratings records break those previously held by "Strikeforce: Carano vs. Cyborg," an August 2009 event headlined by female fighters Gina Carano and Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos that averaged 576,000 viewers and peaked with 856,000.

The organization recently had built momentum with a January event featuring welterweight champ Nick Diaz vs. Evangelista "Cyborg" Santos. That event averaged 561,000 viewers and peaked with 853,000. It now ranks third behind "Fedor vs. Silva" and "Carano vs. Santos."

Saturday's peak audience came with the second of the night's two opening-round grand-prix matchups. Silva shocked the Russian with a second-round TKO (due to a doctor's stoppage) and punched his ticket to the semifinals of the tourney.

The main card also saw Sergei Kharitonov knock out Andrei Arlovski in the first opening-round matchup. Additionally, Shane Del Rosario, Chad Griggs and Valentijn Overeem all won tourney-reserve fights in convincing fashion. The tourney's opening round continues on April 9 with Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum and Josh Barnett vs. Brett Rogers.

Strikeforce first began airing on Showtime, a premium-cable station with approximately 18 million subscribers, in April 2009. A total of 26 Strikeforce events have aired on Showtime (and an additional two on CBS), including both "Arena Series" and "Challengers Series" shows.

"Strikeforce: Silva vs. Fedor" re-airs Wednesday on Showtime Extreme at 10:30 p.m. ET/PT.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Fedor Emelianenko wanted Strikeforce bout to continue, hints at future fights

Fedor Emelianenko apparently has had a change of heart.

After suggesting an imminent retirement following Saturday's doctor's-stoppage loss to Antonio Silva in the opening round of Strikeforce's eight-man heavyweight grand prix, the fighter today changed his tune.

In a series of Twitter messages, Emelianenko stated he wanted the fight to continue and said he hasn't decided whether he's going to retire.

The 34-year-old Russian headlined Saturday's Showtime-televised "Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Silva" event at IZOD Center in East Rutherford, N.J. After a close first round that Emelianenko won on two of the three judges' cards, the much-heavier Silva got him to the mat and unloaded a vicious ground-and-pound assault. Emelianenko's right eye became badly swollen during the exchanges, and prior to the third round, the cageside physician declared the fighter unable to continue.

As a result, Silva earned a TKO win and now advances to the semifinals with fellow weekend winner Sergei Kharitonov.

Conflicting reports then surfaced as to whether Emelianenko called for the fight to be stopped.

"I would have liked to continue to fight," Emelianenko stated in Russian via Twitter. "The doctor did everything possible, but it did not (continue) unfortunately."

He said a decision about whether to continue fighting or instead retire "will be resolved in the near future."

Emelianenko went unbeaten from 2000 to 2010 with a perfect 27-0 record against many of MMA's elite. However, the former PRIDE champion suffered a June 2010 submission loss to Fabricio Werdum, and with the defeat to Silva, now has suffered back-to-back losses. They're the only two legitimate losses of his 11-year pro career.

Despite his opening-round loss, Emelianenko could re-enter the grand prix as an alternate. Although three fighters earned wins in tourney-reserve fights, Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) Emelianenko could be the top alternate if a spot does open.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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WEC's former GM Reed Harris now UFC vice president of community relations

As expected former World Extreme Cagefighting General Manager Reed Harris is sticking around following the organization's recent merger with the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

And he now has a new job title: UFC vice president of community relations.

Harris today stopped by the MMAjunkie.com Radio (www.mmajunkie.com/radio) studio with UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz and briefly discussed the position.

"I'll handle all the community work with the UFC," the longtime fight executive said. "I've been really busy trying to get this moving."

Harris and other officials knew it would be a good fit for the WEC co-founder, who helped launched the former California-based organization in 2001. The popular regional promotion has employed some of the biggest MMA stars in the sport today. The UFC eventually bought out the promotion in late 2006, put the events on Versus, visited a host of new event sites, and ultimately merged with the organization following December's promotion-ending WEC 53 event.

Harris, who joined other former WEC executives such as Sean Shelby (matchmaking/fighter relations) and Dave Sholler (communications) in the UFC front office, now works closely with the fighters on event weeks and during community projects. In fact, he helped corral both Cruz and UFC heavyweight champ Cain Velasquez for today's edition of MMAjunkie.com Radio.

Thus far, the new position has been a success.

"It's working out really well," he said. "It's been great."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC 126 officially draws 9,667 for a live gate of $3.6 million

This month's UFC 126 event, which took place Feb. 5 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, officially drew 9,667 attendees for a live gate of $3,605,725.

Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Director Keith Kizer today emailed the results to MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

The attendance figure dropped slightly from the fight-night estimate (10,893), though the gate figure is slightly higher ($3.6 million).

As expected, the gate figure ranks third all-time in UFC-Mandalay Bay Events Center history.

Featuring a middleweight title fight between champion Anderson Silva and hard-hitting challenger Vitor Belfort, UFC 126 marked the company's first event at the Mandalay Bay since February 2010. The event was the UFC's annual Super Bowl-weekend show.

The average ticket price for the show was $372.99.

The sold-out event also generated $45,100 from the 1,046 attendees who viewed the fight via closed-circuit broadcast at Mandalay Bay.

The venue's all-time top UFC gates as compiled by MMAjunkie.com include:

1. UFC 100 (Lesnar vs. Mir II): $5,128,490 gate (10,871 attendance)
2. UFC 79 (St-Pierre vs. Hughes III): $4,994,000 (11,075)
3. UFC 126 (Silva vs. Belfort): $3,605,725 (9,667)
4. UFC 57 (Liddell vs. Couture III): $3,382,400 (11,000)
5. UFC 61 (Sylvia vs. Arlovski II): $3,350,775 (11,167)
 
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"The Ultimate Fighter" goes international with the Philippines, possibly this year

The first international edition of "The Ultimate Fighter" likely will feature fighters from the Philippines, and the show could begin this year.

That's according to UFC president Dana White, who today laid out the plans during a media conference call.

"TUF," which launched in 2005 on Spike TV, kicks off its 13th season next month, but each installment has been based in the U.S. Officials, though, are putting together an aggressive expansion plan to spread the reality series across the globe.

Spike TV is unlikely to air the international editions, but whether it's online or another broadcast outlet, White expects fans worldwide to be able to watch the shows. To date, "TUF" has produced stars such as Forrest Griffin, Diego Sanchez, Josh Koscheck, Rashad Evans, Michael Bisping, Ryan Bader, Joe Lauzon and others, but few non-American fighters have been found by the series.

Recently, White has hinted at many options for "TUF" international editions, including Brazil, Canada, England, Mexico and the Middle East. But the Philippines was only mentioned sporadically.

This isn't the first time the UFC has targeted the Philippines, though. Back in 2008, UFC officials announced plans to host an event in the country in mid-2009, and an open workout with Chuck Liddell drew more than 4,000 fans. Brandon Vera, whose father is Filipino, also held one of his own that drew 10,000 attendees.

The plans for an event in the country, which has a population of approximately 92 million, ultimately were scrapped due to the global financial crisis.

"We were going to go to the Philippines," White said in the summer of 2009. "We had a deal done to go to the Philippines, and then when the world collapsed, the sponsors that were going to help us get down there, everything fell apart. Nobody has any money anymore. It's a lot trickier to figure out how to navigate throughout the world without money."
 
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Dana White Declares Winner of Fitch vs. Penn is the No. 1 Contender at Welterweight

The upcoming main event fight for UFC 127 just got a little more interesting as UFC President Dana White on Tuesday announced that the winner between Jon Fitch and B.J. Penn would be considered the No. 1 contender at 170lbs.

While the proclamation for the top spot in the title hunt has been declared before, White was willing to state that he believes the winner of Penn vs. Fitch has earned the shot.

“They’re definitely in the title picture. Either guy that wins that fight, let’s face it, 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, just couldn’t win the title,” White said on Tuesday.

“Either one of these guys that wins this fight is in the mix. They’re the No. 1 guy.”

Jon Fitch has said numerous times in the past that his goal is to get back to the title shot and eventually wear that gold belt around his waist.

For this fight however, Fitch doesn’t want to talk about title shots, he doesn’t want to hear about being a top contender. Even if the UFC President is saying it, Fitch is focused on B.J. Penn and nothing else.

“I don’t want to waste any time thinking about anything other than fighting B.J. right now,” Fitch stated.

How much difference does one fight make when looking at B.J. Penn as well? The Hawaiian icon seemed at a crossroads a few months ago after back-to-back losses to UFC lightweight champion Frankie Edgar.

Now after knocking out former welterweight champion Matt Hughes in emphatic fashion last November, he could be one fight away from fighting for the 170lb title for a third time.

Penn, much like Fitch, isn’t talking title shots though because none of that happens if he doesn’t win in Australia.

“As of now I’m not even thinking about that,” Penn said about a potential title shot. “I’m not thinking about titles, I’m just happy to fight an opponent of Jon Fitch’s level and Jon Fitch’s stature.”

Penn and Fitch will square off on Feb 27 in Australia, and when the dust settles, it will be interesting to see where the winner fits in the welterweight divisional title picture.