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Jul 24, 2005
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JONATHAN GOULET OUT OF PROPOSED UFC 85 BOUT

Thursday, May 08, 2008 - by Marco Antico -

After a long and sometimes rocky road, Jonathan Goulet has reached a new pinnacle of his career after defeating Kuniyoshi Hironaka in the “Fight of the Night” at UFC 83 in Montreal.

“That was one of the best moments of my life. I was happy and I was kind of surprised. In the same time I was proud of myself because I didn’t stop MMA last year to work full time,” stated an elated Goulet.

Unfortunately for Goulet, he’ll be unable to capitalize on his recent momentum as originally planned. Although it had yet to be officially announced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship, he had intended on fight Paul Kelly at UFC 85 in London.

“I have to cancel the fight against Paul Kelly for UFC 85 because of health reasons,” said Goulet, not disclosing the nature of his health concerns.

He added, “When I do fight him, I will stand and try to knock him out. If we have to go to the ground, I'm not scared at all of his ground game. I'll do my best to finish that fight as soon as I can.”

Asked about his future plans, Goulet stated, “I just want to fight hard and do a great show and be able to read and hear great things about me. I'm tired of being unknown. When I'll finish the UFC contract I will for sure sign another one and at that moment I will talk with them about fighters who I want to fight.”

Goulet denied rumors that he has parted ways with his longtime coach Steve Claveau and the Team Legion training gym in Victoriaville, Quebec.

“I didn't really split from Team Legion. I just moved to Montreal to train at J Sport Core Fitness Professionals (www.jsport.ca) and at TriStar gym (www.tristargym.com). I'm able to train there full time with personal trainers in every discipline
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Cesar Gracie: Diaz Bout Back On

by TJ De Santis


After days of confusion and frustration, it appears that Nick Diaz (Pictures) will be fighting Sunday in Japan after all.

"It was off, then on, then off again … now it's back on," said Diaz's trainer, Cesar Gracie (Pictures). "I won't really believe it until he is on the plane tomorrow morning heading to Japan."

Diaz will spend his last few hours in the United States cutting weight before heading to Japan to face former King of Pancrase Katsuya Inoue (Pictures) in Dream.

"Tonight we will be pulling an all-nighter cutting weight," Gracie said late Wednesday. "Nick was under the impression he wasn't fighting. So now we have to get the weight back down before he leaves."

At one time Diaz was set to compete on Dream's April 29 card, a date Gracie said was approved by EliteXC. However, Diaz's participation became uncertain after promoter Fight Entertainment Group moved the date of his bout to Sunday.

EliteXC President Gary Shaw originally pulled Diaz from this weekend's card because the contest was said to be too close to the June 14 EliteXC match between Diaz and Muhsin Corbbrey (Pictures) in Hawaii.

Gracie stated that ProElite CEO Doug DeLuca was to thank for making the Diaz-Inoue bout happen.

"He thought Nick sort of got screwed with the whole California Athletic Commission thing," Gracie said, referencing the California commission's removal of Diaz from a March matchup against Jae Suk Lim (Pictures).
 
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European Throwdown: Hardy to UFC

May 8, 2008
by Tim Leidecker

Top European welterweight Dan Hardy (Pictures) is the latest British fighter to land a contract with the UFC.

The 25-year-old kickboxer from Nottingham in central England will strive to follow in the footsteps of "Ultimate Fighter" season three winner Michael Bisping (Pictures) and become another showpiece for the United Kingdom.

After finishing seven of his last nine opponents -- including Japanese grappler Hidetaka Monma (Pictures), UFC veteran Chad Reiner (Pictures) and most recently German submission expert Daniel Weichel -- Hardy's management secured a deal that could see him fight four times in the Octagon.

With the UFC's fight cards completed through UFC 86 in July, the earliest Hardy can hope to make his debut in the big show will likely be in August on the undercard of the heavyweight bout between Brock Lesnar (Pictures) and Mark Coleman (Pictures).

Event Named After Fedor

Fedor Emelianenko (Pictures) is getting his own event courtesy of his home promotion, M-1 Mix-Fight. The Fedor Emelianenko Trophy will take place May 15 in Nizhniy Novgorod, an industrial city situated east of Moscow.

The fight card picks up the thread started by the M-1 Challenge events in the Netherlands and in Russia earlier this spring. In two country-versus-country contests, a team of Fedor's Red Devil teammates will take on a selection of fighters from Spain, and a combat sambo squad from Nizhniy Novgorod will challenge an all-star squad from all over Europe.

The winners of these battles will be matched up in the grand final in October 2008.

Complete card:

Undercard
Maksim Rozhkov (Russia) vs. Aleksey Cherepovsky (Russia)
Sergey Khramov (Russia) vs. Victor Nemkov (Russia)
Igor Savelyev (Russia) vs. TBA

Red Devil Sport Club vs. Equipo Español
Mikhail Malyutin (Russia) vs. Carles Valery (Spain)
Roman Potapov (Russia) vs. Juan Manuel Suarez (Spain)
Radmir Gabdulin (Russia) vs. Jonathan Leon (Spain)
Mikhail Zayats (Russia) vs. Daniel Tabera (Pictures) (Spain)
Kiril Sidelnikov (Russia) vs. Carmelo Molina (Spain)

Combat Sambo Team vs. Team Europe
Maksim Kuptsov (Russia) vs. Samuel Jude (France)
Vladimir Vladimirov (Russia) vs. Jaroslav Poborsky (Czech Republic)
Vasiliy Krylov (Russia) vs. Lopez Owonyebe (France)
Andrei Lisitsyn (Russia) vs. Christian N'Pumbu (France)
Dmitriy Zabolotny (Russia) vs. Ricardo Wondel (Holland)

Faverus Tries to Rebound at Cage Rage

Rodney Faverus, who five years ago was considered one of the brightest Dutch kickboxing talents, will have to bounce back from four consecutive defeats when he takes on British boxer James Zikic (Pictures) on Saturday at Cage Rage 26 in Birmingham, England.

The former pupil of notorious Dutch vale tudo fighter "Dirty" Bob Schrijber (Pictures) has been plagued by various injuries in recent years. As a result, he has only fought six times since 2004, losing to countryman Gilbert Yvel (Pictures) by knockout and UFC vet Renato Sobral (Pictures) via submission, among other defeats.

When he is in form, though, Faverus is as dangerous as they come. His list of wins includes fellow kickboxers Cheick Kongo (Pictures), Cyrille Diabate (Pictures) and Melvin Manhoef (Pictures).

Upcoming opponent James Zikic (Pictures) is trying to bounce back himself. The 31-year-old former cruiserweight boxer from Watford in the northwest of London lost the Cage Rage light heavyweight championship to Vitor Belfort (Pictures) last September. Before winning the vacant title in a dramatic fight against Evangelista "Cyborg" Santos in April 2007, the British pugilist had been inactive for two and a half years.

A clash of such experienced standup fighters will guarantee fireworks on the feet for the fans at the NEC Arena.

KSW Hosts Another Strong Show in Warsaw

Polish promoter Konfrontacją Sztuk Walki has put together another tremendous card full of top European talent for its light heavyweight tournament Friday in Warsaw.

Fighting in the one-night, eight-man grand prix will be an international cast of competitors. Among the most promising participants are previous winner Alexey Oleinik (Pictures) of Ukraine; local hero Antoni Chmielewski, who returns to the ring after a nearly three-year absence; and undersized German knockout artist Martin Zawada, who, despite a recent slump, is always dangerous.

In two non-tournament fights, the promotion's top ace, Mamed Khalidov, takes on Lithuanian Valdas Pocevicius, and Polish standout Maciej Gorski clashes with Slovenian newcomer Gregor Pongrac.

The sentimental highlight of the evening will undoubtedly be the last fight of Grzegorz Jakubowski's career. The "Mighty Bull" from Danzig has been a mainstay in the European fight scene for the past six years and will be calling it quits after one final battle with Bulgarian UFC veteran Jordan Radev (Pictures).

Complete card:

Light Heavyweight Tournament
Antoni Chmielewski (Poland) vs. Yusuke Masuda (Pictures) (Japan)
Martin Zawada (Germany) vs. Jan Blachowicz (Poland)
Alexey Oleinik (Pictures) (Ukraine) vs. Daniel Dowda (Poland)
Vitor Nobrega (Brazil) vs. Aziz Karaoglu (Turkey)

Single Fights
Maciej Gorski (Poland) vs. Gregor Pongrac (Slovenia)
Mamed Khalidov (Chechnya) vs. Valdas Pocevicius (Lithuania)
Grzegorz Jakubowski (Poland) vs. Jordan Radev (Pictures) (Bulgaria)
 
Jul 24, 2005
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SPOTLIGHT ON CANADA

ADRIAN WOOLEY CHALLENGES FOR THE TKO BANTEMWEIGHT TITLE



Adrian Wooley, from Toronto, Ontario, will challenge American Danny Martinez for the vacant TKO bantamweight title at TKO 34 on Saturday, June 7.



Wooley is renowned for his wrestling pedigree and has used those skills to build an impressive 4-0 professional record with three wins coming by technical knockout via ground and pound.



Martinez’s record is perhaps even more impressive, as he’s 9-1 with his only loss coming above his natural weight class to one of the better featherweights in the world, Mark Hominick.



“Things have been really busy lately with work, moving and training,” said Wooley. “It’s been no rest for the wicked, though I’m still finding ways to train every day. This is the first time I’ve fought another wrestler, so I look forward to potentially a grappler’s duel. I really don’t know a whole lot about Martinez other than he’s got a good record. He’s a bit of a wildcard in my mind in that no one really knows how good he is.



“I’ve been working hard on my standup by training and getting the s*** beat out of me at Iron Tiger gym in Hamilton, Ontario,” he continued. “Led by Kru Alin Halmagean, those guys at Iron Tiger are a bunch of Muay Thai studs! That’s not been my bread and butter in the past, so I’m trying to work with the best to round out my skills.”



Wooley is aware that experience isn’t on his side in this fight, but he’s not going to pass up the opportunity either. “In an ideal world, I would have liked a couple more fights before challenging for the title. But when I was offered this tremendous opportunity, I definitely couldn’t turn it down. The future now holds five-round fights for me against all really tough guys. I would have liked to have gotten a little more experience before moving to this level, but that’s fine. I’ll be ready!”





SEAN “THE PIMP” PIERSON ON THE COMEBACK ROAD AGAIN



Sean Pierson was one of the pioneers of Canadian MMA, competing in 1999 at the International Fighting Championships, one of the first MMA events ever held in Canada. He quickly made a name for himself as one of the most dominant middleweights in the country. But in 2003 he decided to part ways with the sport, get married, and begin full time work with Dell Canada.



Four years later, in 2007, Pierson returned to TKO making quick work of an overwhelmed, Chester Post. Next, he accepted a fight on short notice against a formidable Jesse Bongfeld (currently the TKO welterweight champion). After a back and forth affair, Pierson was stopped by strikes with only seconds left in the second round.



“I had shoulder surgery a couple of months ago and I’m only now able to begin with rehab,” said Pierson. “I’ve been back in the gym doing very limited things. I’m still a few months away from full sparring. I think the earliest I could return would be late July, perhaps in TKO if they do a summer event. If not, I’ll have my ears open for Hardcore Championship Fighting in late summer. Worst case scenario, you’ll see me back on TKO’s show on Oct. 3.



“I’m currently training at the United Martial Arts Club (UMAC) in Stouffville, Ontario, since it’s close to my home. I’m working with the usual guys like Adrian Wooley and Sam Zuckula. I’m definitely planning to check out Xtreme Couture Toronto when it opens up. Just like they’ve been doing for years in Quebec, it’d be good if we could get all the top Ontario fighters together at one place for some regular training sessions.”





HALF OF THE BELL CENTRE WAS FROM THE GREATER TORONTO AREA



Sources from the Montreal Bell Centre have indicated that over three quarters of the 21,000 fans in attendance for UFC 83 purchased their tickets through the UFC Fight Club. In fact, half of the tickets were sold to individuals with postal codes in the Greater Toronto Area. All of which contributed to the biggest live gate in Canadian combat sports history, $5.1 million.





CHARGES LAID AGAINST PROMOTERS OF NATIVE RESERVE EVENTS IN ONTARIO



Charges have been laid against five promoters from the Iroquois Mixed Martial Arts events held near Hamilton, Ontario. The Six Nation’s police say it was the Ontario Athletic Commissioner, Ken Hayashi, who initiated the official complaint. The complaint resulted in one charge being laid against each of the promoters for holding a “prize fight,” which is in violation of section 83 of Canada’s Criminal Code and punishable by summary conviction. Section 787 states that the maximum penalty for a summary conviction offence is a sentence of six months of imprisonment, a fine of $2000, or both.



“We have precedence set in Ontario in that we’ve charged someone in the past for holding an event of this kind on native land,” explained Hayashi. “It’s in the hands of the courts now.”



Hayashi seemed resolute when asked about what impact the success of UFC 83 in Montreal might have in Ontario. “It has absolutely no impact whatsoever,” he stated. “Money does not factor into this equation. It’s not even a blip on the radar screen for the province. When it comes to the economy, Ontario’s main concerns are over manufacturing jobs, the automotive industry, housing and so on, not MMA. Besides, what no ones talks about is the potential cost to the government if one of these athletes were to suffer a severe injury and would have to be cared for by our provincially paid for health care system.



“The correct first step is to try to set up amateur MMA to get the province comfortable with the sport and also to establish a good track record,” Hayashi elaborated. “I don’t have any say in amateur sport, as that’s run by the Ministry of Health Promotions. But, I will inquire on behalf of the Canadian Mixed Martial Arts Association as to the status of their application review.”





CANADIAN MMA CALENDAR



May 9 – MFC16: Anger Management at the River Cree Resort and Casino in Enoch, Alberta
May 17 – Xtreme MMA at Jonquiere, Quebec

May 30 – Colosseum Fighting Championships VIII: at the Convention Center in Winnipeg, Manitoba

May 31 - The Fight Club 3 at the Shaw Convention Centre in Edmonton, Alberta
June 7 – TKO 34 at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec

July 19 – King of the Cage at the Rexall Place in Edmonton, Alberta
July 26 – Freedom Fight: Title Quest at the Robert Guertin Arena in Gatineau, Quebec
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Who cares what you think -- it's the judges' call

By
Josh Gross

Ringside seats don't necessarily guarantee the best view of a fight. Especially, thought Renato Verissimo, if you don't know what you're watching.

It wasn't just that judges for Verissimo's June 2004 welterweight showdown against Matt Hughes unanimously dissented his performance. No, what bothers the Brazilian welterweight to this day is that he did exactly what he wanted, what he was bred to do. And it was as if his fighting philosophy had been rendered moot.

"Your jiu-jitsu is no good here," yelled two judges through 30-27 scorecards.

"You feel like, what you were thinking -- what it takes to win -- wasn't the same for the judges," Verissimo said. "I thought that I did more than [Hughes] tried to do in the fight."

By most accounts, Verissimo's right.

Verissimo caught Hughes -- a two-time UFC champion and, until further notice, the most decorated welterweight in mixed martial arts history -- in a tight triangle choke. Bound by the jiu-jitsu black belt's long legs, there was little else for Hughes to rely upon but instinct. He squirmed and wiggled, sat back and ceded position. It was either that, or surrender the precious little line between consciousness and unintended naps.

To most spectators, round one belonged to Verissimo. Ten minutes later, the same held true when it came time to declare a winner. But to the surprise of many, the victor wasn't the Brazilian.

"It definitely changed my whole career," said Verissimo, who as a result couldn't fight for the vacant UFC belt Hughes recaptured four months later against a green Georges St. Pierre. "You put so much into it, and when you lose in that kind of a way, it really kind of messes with what you think of being a fighter and performer."

The specter of suspect decisions, like the occasional swarm of gnats on an otherwise pleasant evening, is something of a chronic problem in MMA. Let a fight go the distance, fighters say, and you get what you deserve.

Or sometimes you don't.

"Every other established sport puts so much emphasis on their officials as far as training goes ... they realize the sport rests on what the officials do or don't do," said Nelson "Doc" Hamilton, a veteran referee and judge who's officiated fights from Tokyo to London. "If you continue to have bad decisions come down, or poor decisions on the part of a referee, late stoppages and things like that, it affects the sport and the crowd's perception of the sport."

Hamilton's pleas don't imply an epidemic. For the most part, scorecards ring true in today's regulated MMA. But the issue of performances like Verissimo's, where skill fails to be properly rewarded, remains a concern.

A general lack of understanding surrounding the game's submission portion -- particularly when fighters work from the bottom -- has led some to openly complain about those judging mixed martial artists' performances.

UFC lightweight champion B.J. Penn was stunned when Verissimo, Penn's jiu-jitsu instructor, fell prey to the shortage of sophisticated officiating. On May 24, Penn will defend his belt against powerhouse wrestler Sean Sherk in Las Vegas. There is a real chance the Hawaiian could be forced to fight from his back through much of the 25-minute bout.

His concern: there's no way to win from the guard via points.

"I believe this with all my heart and hope somebody proves me wrong one day, but if you're a jiu-jitsu fighter and you're on the bottom the whole fight, you're going to lose," he said. "If you do not submit [your opponent] -- you can attempt all these submissions -- you're going to lose


That's not always the case.

Just this week, Shinya Aoki earned a decision over Gesias "JZ" Calvancante in Tokyo. The slender Japanese grappler stifled his brutish opponent, frustrating from the bottom with submission attempts springing from a beautiful defensive guard. Conversation in the aftermath hinged on an interesting hypothetical: Would Calvancante, who scored with enough punches from the top to make Aoki comment afterward that he thought he might die get the nod from American judges?

Said Penn, "I think it's just hard for us, being Americans, to sit there and think that the guy on the bottom is winning. There's a real, present danger when somebody on the bottom has you caught in an armlock or a triangle. Does you pulling your arm out or escaping your head after nearly being passed out and landing three rabbit punches say you won the fight? It's not an easy thing."

"When you get an armbar and it's fully extended," he added, "shouldn't that be just as good as almost finishing someone with punches but they survive?"

Controversy has also come when fighters manage to win from underneath. Fighting from the top? The general consensus would have us believe, you win. Bas Rutten happily knows that's not the truth.

Said the Dutchman who captured UFC heavyweight gold in 1999 fighting primarily from his back against Kevin Randleman: "The person that works on the ground the whole time should get the victory, whether it's punching or going for submissions."

"The bottom fighter can win if you have a perfect storm and all things come together," Hamilton said. "You've got the right judges in place, they recognize what's going on. The bottom fighter's jiu-jitsu is better than the top fighter's ground-and-pound. All those factors come together, and there's no submission within the allotted time, then you would hope he gets that decision."

Yet because of verdicts like the one rendered against Verissimo, today's fighters -- particularly those competing in bouts that allow elbow strikes to the head of a downed opponent -- rarely risk what Rutten suggests.

"If you go for an armbar when somebody is in your guard, there's a high possibility he's going to escape and be in side mount, which is going to be worse for you," Rutten said. "So if that person on the bottom attacks with a submission that means he's really going for it because he takes a big risk of the losing position."

Worse, yet, for submission-inclined fighters like Penn, Hamilton believes "many judges still don't understand or appreciate the ground game."

"The submission attempts are a lot more subtle," he said.

Despite being one of the most respected Brazilian jiu-jitsu players on the planet, Penn said he won't rely on his bottom game in MMA competition.

"My whole game now is centered on not being on my back because I don't want to be stuck on the bottom and have time run out on me," Penn said. "What you see a lot with this type of style, it's not even mixed martial arts anymore. ... It's striking with takedowns. I think it'll be years before mixed martial arts comes up with an answer."

Having been regulated in many states, including Nevada, California and New Jersey, the perception of MMA has dramatically shifted from pariah sport to something palatable enough to appear in primetime on CBS.

With state licensing of fighters has come state licensing of officials. Yet too few offer more than a boxing background while attempting to understand what's happening during an armbar, or why a butterfly guard could render a submission as easily as a sweep.

Since taking on the task in 2001, Nevada has played host to many of MMA's biggest fights. Currently, the state has 13 licensed judges, and it's up to each individual to "seek out ways to self improve," said the commission's Executive Director, Keith Kizer. Seminars with groups such as "MMA REFS," created by Hamilton in 2000 to help elevate the quality of officiating, along with post-event group discussions also serve to improve Nevada officials' understanding of the sport.

Where will MMA's second generation of judges and referees come from? Many of boxing's top officials worked their way up just as the fighters did -- through amateurs. MMA has no such luxury. As Penn suggested, the duty of refereeing could fall to retired fighters who matriculate from the puncher to watcher. And in the end, it's only the "watching" that matters.

"If they don't see it then it doesn't exist," said Hamilton. "Even though it does."

Verissimo knows this all too well. He dropped five of eight bouts following the Hughes contest and briefly retired. He came back to the sport when money demanded it, and his focus now is fixed on preparing Penn for Sherk, whom like Hughes has made a career of grinding opponents into the canvas.

The pupil, it seems, has learned from his coach.

"If I'm on my back I gotta land a submission or I gotta get back up to my feet," Penn said. "I only have two choices. There's not much more you can do to impress the judges while you're on your back
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Randy Couture Talks Non-Exclusivity

With Afflicition starting their own promotion and organizations like Adrenaline dabbling in non-exclusive contracts, do you think this new trend of non-exclusivity and fighters competing in multiple organizations is the wave of the future for MMA, or do you think the exclusive system that the UFC uses will ultimately win out in some form?
I think it has to change. The exclusivity has to go away or else we're going to have the same problems with becoming a fractured sport the way boxing has. The top guys have to be allowed to fight each other. That needs to happen in this sport. Even if it means that you have to put your champion out there and sometimes you lose, it's still great for marketing the sport and it's necessary for the integrity of the sport. For the sake of our fan base, that needs to happen. WAMMA is one group that has the potential to help make that happen, and I hope it will.

WAMMA does indeed have the potential to make it happen, but they are also facing incredibly difficult odds. I find the idea of a sanctioning body in a sport based heavily on the professional wrestling business model to be an incongruity, notwithstanding that the key player in the matter - the UFC - most certainly will never join their efforts. That inability to capture the most important and meaningful fish in the big pond will significantly reduce WAMMA's legitimacy if not remove it altogether.

And as a fan of the sport I'd like to state I would want to see the best fighters face each other. But part of the push for non-exclusivity is clearly a business move by smaller organizations to practice "unite and conquer". In other words, I absolutely do not buy the argument that the promoters of non-exclusivity are merely interested in preventing the sport's fracturing or rewarding the fan base. They are interested in being more significant and active players in the sport and use the non-exclusivity line to attract high-level free agents who don't want to overcommit to a smaller show and to leverage themselves against the might of the UFC.

I'm sure everyone is well-intentioned, by and large. But you have to see this for what it is: there's no reason or incentive for the UFC to ever join WAMMA and trying to do business without them as a sanctioning body is almost as good as not doing business at all.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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IFL to unveil six-sided ring during Aug. 15 show

International Fight League revealed plans on Thursday to debut a six-sided ring as the fight promotion’s fighting surface. The new ring has been branded as “The Hex” and will debut on August 15 for a show at the Izod Center in East Rutherford, N.J.

The prototype of the new ring is still being constructed. Upon completion, it will be stored in Las Vegas.

While not addressing the issue directly, it’s likely that the IFL’s decision to use a six-sided ring is based on claims by critics that their product looks too much like boxing on television. Publicly, the IFL is indicating that its audience enjoys the ring and that they are going with a six-sided version in order to create a larger fighting environment.

“From a production and live event standpoint, the ring has proven to be the most fan and media friendly environment, as well as providing the safest possible environment for our athletes,” IFL CEO Jay Larkin is quoted as saying in a press release. “The Hex allows for the larger surface that is utilized in other MMA organizations while still retaining the advantages we have enjoyed with the ring.”

No matches for the Aug. 16 card have been announced. The promotion may start revealing matchups to the public in June.
 
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Coming soon to an MMA promotion near you?

Dave Meltzer is reporting on the Wrestling Observer website that Bobby Lashley’s non-compete clause with World Wrestling Entertainment ended yesterday.

Many readers of this site are hardcore MMA fans who hate it when pro wrestling and MMA coverage cross paths, but the undeniable truth is that Lashley could be an impact player in MMA — should he choose to go down that path.

Being a former WWE U.S. champion and ECW heavyweight champion is meaningless when it comes to MMA, but I think his credentials as a former NAIA wrestling champion in college and his past training at the American Kickboxing Academy in San Jose, Calif. are very relevant. The fact that he also served the U.S. as a member of its Army is also a plus for him.

At age 31, time is against Lashley. However, he has an existing fanbase thanks to his WWE background and he’s really a great athlete. He’s without question someone who could really make some money for an MMA promotion if he was managed properly.

According to Meltzer, Lashley’s first non-WWE appearance will be for Booker T’s PWA promotion on May 23 in Pasadena, Texas. While getting to wrestle on a smaller show in order to help out your buddy is nice, Lashley is eventually going to have to decide what he wants to do long-term. My assumption that he has two options: continue wrestling and sign with TNA, or train full-time in MMA.

Personally, I’m hoping he chooses MMA. Like Brock Lesnar, I think he can bring a lot of new fans to the sport.

Comments (7)
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Hughes wants to prove his time hasn’t passed

By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports

One of the classic symptoms of an aged, or aging, fighter is seeing openings and being unable to take advantage of them.

It’s no different than a running back who once could burst through a hole for a 15-yard gain when he ran a 4.4 40, but who now runs a 4.65 and can’t hit it quick enough to get more than three yards before the pile collapses upon him.

And what Matt Hughes was describing as a problem in his loss to Georges St. Pierre in December sounded suspiciously like a man losing the battle with time.

But the two-time former UFC welterweight champion, who saved the UFC yet again when he agreed on short notice to fight Thiago Alves in the main event of UFC 85 in London on June 7, insists he’s far from through.

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He’s lost two of three and was dominated in the defeat to St. Pierre at UFC 79 on Dec. 29, but he is undaunted. Hughes plans to make a point with his performance against the fast-rising Alves, who is coming off an impressive stoppage of Karo Parisyan.

Hughes, 34, has been one of the sport’s most active stars. He’s awaiting a grudge match against long-time rival Matt Serra and didn’t need to fight in London. But when the card in England was in danger of falling apart because of injuries, Hughes answered the call.

“I’m a fighter and that’s what I’m supposed to do, fight,” said Hughes, who is remarkably free of the ego and demanding persona that define superstars in most sports. “They called me and needed me to fight. This is what I do, so of course I said yes.”

UFC president Dana White had long wanted to make UFC 85 a blockbuster card. And with the original main event of Chuck Liddell vs. Shogun Rua, it would have been regardless of what other fights were added.

It lost a little bit of its luster when Rua was injured, but Liddell is a big enough star that the replacement main event with Rashad Evans would not have impacted sales much, if at all.

But when Liddell suffered a badly torn hamstring last month, what had been a Liddell-Rua main event suddenly looked as if it might become an Evans-James Irvin main. And that was nobody’s idea of a bout that could carry a card.

That prompted White to get on the phone and plead with Hughes to save him again. And, just like he did a few days after Thanksgiving, Hughes saved the UFC again. When Serra injured his back in November, Hughes quickly agreed to face St. Pierre instead, saving the card. And now, with the Liddell-Rua bout off and the UFC 85 card in jeopardy, Hughes agreed to take the bout with Alves with the stipulation that he get Serra later in the year, win or lose against Alves.

It didn’t hurt, though, that Hughes perceives the fight as one he can win. Alves hasn’t lost since being stopped by Jon Fitch at Ultimate Fight Night 5 nearly two years ago and has quality wins since over Parisyan, Chris Lytle and John Alessio.

But Hughes, whose only losses in the last seven years are to St. Pierre twice and to B.J. Penn, sees this as a fight he can win impressively.

“To be honest, I like the matchup,” Hughes said. “He’s a stand-up guy. On the ground, he’s not nearly as dangerous. I’ll be stronger, I believe I’ll be the better wrestler and I like the fact he’s kind of a slow starter. I think I can wear him out before he gets going.”

It was Hughes, though, who never got going in the main event at UFC 79. St. Pierre dominated from the opening punch in a bout that many have seen, not without some justification, as a changing of the guard in the UFC’s pecking order.

Hughes had difficulty explaining what happened other than he couldn’t take advantage of openings he saw.

“I got into a couple of positions I wanted to be in and I didn’t pull the trigger,” Hughes said. “Walking away from the octagon that night, I said to myself, ‘That wasn’t me.’

“Obviously, Georges is a tremendous fighter, but I had a real bad night at the same time he had a real good night. When that happens, you saw what the result can be. But I did get into some good positions and I saw some things, but I couldn’t do what I knew I needed to do.”

Hughes said he’s doing more drilling in his training. He’s trying to avoid getting too relaxed and is working on technique at a very basic level.

He points out he’s much younger than other high-level fighters like Liddell and erstwhile UFC heavyweight champion Randy Couture, so he doesn’t think age or time has caught up with him yet.

“They can still do it, so there’s no reason why I can’t,” Hughes said. “I’ve pulled out some of the old Matt Hughes tapes and I’m trying to get back to being that fighter.”

And while he wouldn’t flat say it, don’t be surprised if Hughes pushes for a fourth fight with St. Pierre if he’s successful in his bouts against Alves and Serra.

The competitor in Hughes won’t let him believe he’s fallen that far behind St. Pierre, who is No. 2 in the Yahoo! Sports rankings. But he’s got too much business in front of him to think that far down the road. Hughes needs to defeat the rising Alves to make the point that he’s still a factor in one of the UFC’s most stacked divisions.

“I feel like I have a lot of good fights still left and I’m excited about it,” Hughes said. “I’m thankful this opportunity came along with Thiago, because Serra’s not going to be ready to fight for a while after his fight with Georges and I’m anxious to get back. Nobody should write me off just yet.”
 
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Kit Cope chosen for second "MTV True Life" show

MTV will feature Kit Cope, a champion Muay Thai veteran and one-time UFC fighter, for a second time as part of its "MTV True Life" documentary series.

Cope was featured in "True Life: I'm a Muay Thai Fighter" four years ago, and the program was one of the most popular episodes in series history.

Cope's management, KO Dynasty, recently told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that Cope has been filming for the new episode, "MTV True Life: I'm an MMA Fighter," and cameras will catch his World Fighting Championships debut, which takes place May 30 in Atlantic City.

Cope (1-4), who recently signed a three-fight deal with the organization, meets Dave Cochran (14-17) in the night's main event. (NFL defensive tackle turned MMA fighter Marcus Jones has also been booked for the event.)

Although he's excelled in Muay Thai and won a few titles, Cope's MMA career hasn't been as successful. He debuted in 1999 and suffered two losses, but after a three-year layoff, he claimed his first victory -- a TKO of Mike Lucero in Valor Fighting. That performance earned him a ticket to the UFC, where he fought -- and lost to -- Kenny Florian in the main event of The Ultimate Fighter 2 Finale.
 
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After freak hand injury, John Kolosci returns to action

A freak hand injury has kept him sidelined for nearly half a year, but "The Ultimate Fighter: Team Serra vs. Team Hughes" semifinal fighter John Kolosci is ready to return to action.

Kolosci (8-5), who stepped up to replace semifinalist Matt Arroyo when no one else would, next fights Steve Reyna (4-3-1) at the May 31 Duneland Classic.

It'll be Kolosci's first fight since a December 2007 loss to Arroyo at The Ultimate Fighter 6 Finale, and he told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) he's just happy to be healthy again.

Kolosci suffered a loss to eventual show champion Mac Danzig in that semifinal fight, and during the subsequent loss to Arroyo at the show's finale, he suffered an elbow injury. Then he and the UFC mutually agreed to terminate his contract so he could get gain some more experience. And then to make matters even worse, he suffered a baffling hand injury.

"I started training again the first week of February and fell into a Canary Island Date Palm tree... which has thorns the size of toothpicks," Kolosci said. "One went through my hand and out the back, and another went deep in my finger. The one in my finger never seemed to heal, and my doctor told me a thorn must have went through a tendon.

"After two months and no improvement, I finally went to see another doc, and he cut me open and found a half-inch piece of thorn in there."

It was one bad break after another. Now healed, though, the 33-year-old says the fight with Reyna is the perfect bout to start his return.

"(I) feel it's a good fight after a six-month layoff," Kolosci said. "As I mentioned before, I want to improve my overall game and plan to stay busy -- and injury free -- throughout the year as I work my way back up."

The May 31 event, which features many area prospects, takes place at the Porter County Fairgrounds in Valparaiso, Ind. Doors open at 7 p.m., and the fights start at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at the door or by contacting organizer Keith Wisniewski at [email protected].
 
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Adrenaline MMA card set for inaugural event at Sears Centre in Chicago on June 14
Adrenaline MMA officially announced its debut event, which takes place at the Sears Centre in Chicago, Ill., on June 14, featuring the heavyweight showdown between former UFC number contender, Jeff Monson, and relatively unknown but talented local product, Mike Russow.

According to the press release, 12 other bouts are slated for the show that will feature some familiar names and faces.

Here’s the rest of the card:

Terry Martin vs. Daiju Takase
Brian Gassaway vs. Tony Fryklund
Alberto Crane vs. Clay French
Jeff Cox vs. Bart Palaszewski
Taiwon Howard vs. Rory Markham
Jame Giboo vs. Mark Miller
Herc Hayes vs. Kerry Schall
Rob Kimmons vs. Hector Urbina
Aaron Rosa vs. Ron Fields
Dom O’Grady vs. Mike Stumpf
Joe Jordan vs. Ryan Williams
Christian Reynosa vs. John Hosman

Not bad at all for an inaugural event. And that more than likely has much to do with longtime MMA manager and Adrenaline MMA CEO, Monte Cox.

He and others started the promotion after M-1 Global collapsed without ever staging an event, enlisting the services of former UFC heavyweight champion ,Tim Sylvia, and undefeated IFL star, Ben Rothwell, to anchor the organization.

In addition, it appears that Adrenaline MMA is in cooperation with the IFL — Bart Palaszewski, Mark Miller and Zac George were all granted permission to compete on the card. And, according to the release, EliteXC provided striker Aaron Rosa and all-around standout Hector Urbina.

Sylvia and Rothwell, on the other hand, will be loaned out to other organizations such as the new Affliction upstart brand. In fact, “The Maine-iac” is expected to fight the last man to hold the Pride FC heavyweight title, Fedor Emelianenko, at the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., on July 19.

It’s apparently all about sharing.

Doors for the first ever Adrenaline MMA event will open at 5:30 p.m. ET and fights are set to begin at 6 p.m. ET. To purchase tickets click here or call (888)-SEARSTIX.

For more information head over to the official Adrenaline MMA Web site right here
http://www.adrenaline-mma.com/
 
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Mirko Cro Cop: Leg injury and schedule change not a factor in upcoming fight against Jerome LeBanner

Former UFC and PRIDE heavyweight Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic will fight K-1 superstar Jerome LeBanner on at DREAM 5 on July 20 — not at DREAM 4 on June 15 as originally planned — according to Nokaut.com.

While it was reported by Javno.com that Cro Cop suffered a minor knee injury during training, X-Rays revealed no damage and the Croat is continuing his preparations as normal.

Quoteworthy:

“Yes, I’m going to fight on July 20. I was looking forward to appearing on the DREAM 4 card on June 15 and I based my preparations on that. I suffered a minor leg injury last week, but it doesn’t affect my trainings. During a wrestling session, I slipped and felt pain in my left knee, but the medical exams have confirmed that no damage was done. I’m wearing a special bandage just as a precaution.”

Cro Cop most recently recovered from back-to-back losses inside the Octagon (Gabriel Gonzaga and Cheick Kongo) to take out Tatsuya Mizuno with ease during the inaugural show for DREAM last month. He has vowed to put together at least three consecutive wins and return to the UFC as early as January 2009 to redeem himself.

However, a rematch with Fedor Emelianenko on New Year’s Eve possibly stands in his way, as well as the French-born, LeBanner.

LeBanner has not competed in mixed martial arts since 2006. And although his MMA experience is limited, his kickboxing resume is not. In fact, he’s been in against the best, including Ernesto Hoost, Peter Aerts, Semmy Schilt, Mark Hunt and others.

Cro Cop and LeBanner have actually competed against one another during a K-1 event in 1996, which the Croatian won via unanimous decision. Expect a similar bout: Striking, striking and more striking. It would be a total shock if this match hits the canvas.
 
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FIGHT CARD FINAL FOR SOLD OUT UFC 84

The Ultimate Fighting Championship on Wednesday confirmed the final four bouts for its upcoming UFC 84 event scheduled for May 24 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

The 11-bout fight card is headlined by B.J. Penn defending his UFC lightweight championship from former titleholder Sean Sherk.

Bouts officially confirmed on Wednesday include Rich Clementi, making a quick turn around having fought on the recent UFC 83 card in Montreal, facing Terry Etim, who hasn’t fought since losing to Gleison Tibau last September.

Also announced were Yoshiyuki Yoshida vs. Jon Koppenhaver, Dong Hyun Kim vs. Jason Tan, and heavyweights Shane Carwin vs. Christian Wellisch.

Tickets for UFC 84, according to the promotion, are sold out. It will air live on pay-per-view in the United States.

Main Card Bouts:
-B.J. Penn vs. Sean Sherk
-Lyoto Machida vs. Tito Ortiz
-Keith Jardine vs. Wanderlei Silva
-Thiago Silva vs. Antonio Mendes
-Wilson Gouveia vs. Goran Reljic

Preliminary Bouts:
-Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou vs. Kazuhiro Nakamura
-Yoshiyuki Yoshida vs. Jon Koppenhaver
-Rousimar Palhares vs. Ivan Salaverry
-Shane Carwin vs. Christian Wellisch
-Dong-hyun Kim vs. Jason Tan
-Terry Etim vs. Rich Clementi

*Fight card and bout order subject to change
 
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Bas Rutten tries to silence the Kimbo haters

Ben Fowlkes has a new article up about Kimbo Slice at SI.com where he gets a great quote from Bas Rutten, one of Kimbo’s trainers, regarding the hate that Kimbo has to deal with now because EliteXC has put him in a main event:

“I don’t see anything that he does wrong for these people to talk about him like this,” Rutten said. “Is it just because of the way he dresses that they call him a thug? If he dressed however they told him to dress, just to make people happy, that seems more like a slave to me. More people know him than know some other fighters, and some guys don’t like that, but that’s not his fault.”

Exactly the point. None of this hype is Kimbo’s fault. He’s just a fighter who likes to fight. Chuck Liddell was the first one to take shots at Kimbo, not the other way around. People are quick to forget that. People are also quick to forget that Kimbo didn’t put himself in commercials, didn’t put himself in the main event, and didn’t ask to fight cans. And since when did being a heavyweight prospect early in your MMA career become a bad thing?

If you asked Kimbo to fight Chuck Liddell, I’m sure he would have no problem with that but his handlers would. A lot of this stuff is totally out of his control, so the hate is completely unwarranted.
 
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Coming soon to an MMA promotion near you?

Dave Meltzer is reporting on the Wrestling Observer website that Bobby Lashley’s non-compete clause with World Wrestling Entertainment ended yesterday.

Many readers of this site are hardcore MMA fans who hate it when pro wrestling and MMA coverage cross paths, but the undeniable truth is that Lashley could be an impact player in MMA — should he choose to go down that path.

Being a former WWE U.S. champion and ECW heavyweight champion is meaningless when it comes to MMA, but I think his credentials as a former NAIA wrestling champion in college and his past training at the American Kickboxing Academy in San Jose, Calif. are very relevant. The fact that he also served the U.S. as a member of its Army is also a plus for him.

At age 31, time is against Lashley. However, he has an existing fanbase thanks to his WWE background and he’s really a great athlete. He’s without question someone who could really make some money for an MMA promotion if he was managed properly.

According to Meltzer, Lashley’s first non-WWE appearance will be for Booker T’s PWA promotion on May 23 in Pasadena, Texas. While getting to wrestle on a smaller show in order to help out your buddy is nice, Lashley is eventually going to have to decide what he wants to do long-term. My assumption that he has two options: continue wrestling and sign with TNA, or train full-time in MMA.

Personally, I’m hoping he chooses MMA. Like Brock Lesnar, I think he can bring a lot of new fans to the sport.
 
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DREAM 3 Betting Odds

Tatsuya Kawajiri -350 Luis Buscape +280
Mitsuhiro Ishida -275 Caol Uno +215
Joachim Hansen -170 Eddie Alvarez +140
Jason Miller -1150 Katsuyori Shibata +650
Jung Buk Yung -115 Daiskue Nakamura -115
Melvin Manhoef -370 Kim Dae Won +300

Odds to win the tournament

Tatsuya Kawajiri +200

Shinya Aoki +250

Mitsuhiro Ishida +350

Joachim Hansen +450

Eddie Alvarez +550

Luis Buscape +700

Katsuhiko Nagata +1300
 
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SHONIE CARTER: "THERE IS AN INNER CIRCLE WITHIN THAT ORGANIZATION"
link: http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content2606.html?PHPSESSID=2ff46d4ad485c16ca1c84b9e7e0a08dd
"I'm out of the UFC and they don't want me back in the UFC and I'm saying that to be nice, but I'm telling it like it is. There is an inner circle within that organization. If you don't know it, fans out there around the world wake the f**k up," stated MMA veteran Shonie Carter as he revealed his conspiracy theory regarding an inner circle within the UFC that favors specific fighters. You don't want to miss this exclusive as Carter discusses Pat Militech, Matt Hughes, Rich Franklin, Jens Pulver and more. Plus, check out what he had to say about his recent win over John Cronk, his next fight, how he spent his birthday, what he thinks about boxing's pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather Jr. and much more.