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Jul 24, 2005
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Jesse Taylor: "I kept calling Dana every single day

Jesse Taylor talks about his debut in the UFC against CB Dollaway, the second chance Dana White gave him and a bunch of other stuff.

On how he got the second opportunity...

"I kept calling Dana every single day. I called right after it happened and a couple of weeks later, which seems like a long time ago. I just kept calling and calling and begging for a chance. I was getting my stuff together, kept my head up and kept training and training..."

On training with Team Quest...

"Team Quest is a great camp. Every day we have the who’s who of MMA in there. We have world-class guys that we get to workout with every day and I feel like my fight game has come a long way from when I started and even from the show."

On his alcohol consumption...

"I don’t have an alcohol problem. I don’t have to drink or nothing like that. I was in the house and I was definitely in the wrong, but being in the house for 6 weeks, we were like caged animals..."

On his fight with CB...

"Usually when you have two wrestlers, they end up standing more. I’m going to do whatever it takes to win the fight."

More stuff in the full interview...

http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content2978.html
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Uno & Tokoro appeared in Fight Festival

Caol Uno and Hideo Tokoro showed up in Fight Festival sponsored by FEG on July 3.

Uno and Eiji Mitsuoka had a sparring session. Mitsuoka said, "I admire his great concentration. I'm certainly sure he will win the lightweight GP. I think he will have an exciting fight against Aoki." In a talk show with Tsuyoshi Kosaka, Uno was asked about his brilliant escaping skill which he showed whenever he was caught from his back. He said, "Putting my self in that position is not something to be applauded as a fighter. I 'm just desperately trying to get out." After the talk show, Kosaka and Uno agreed to spar. Kosaka took him from his back and he showed his original escaping technique, and then he finished Kosaka by submission at the end.

Uno:
I had a good fight with Ishida in DREAM.3, so I would like to do a better performance in my next fight. I want everyone see my fighting spirit. My game plan is to control the fight.

Tokoro showed up next.
Tokoro:
(He was asked about his last fight) I managed to defeat Darren Uyenoyama. I'm working to strengthen my endurance now because I ran out of stamina in my previous fight. I don't know when my next fight is, but I will prepare and improve myself for my next fight, then I want to challenge Kid Yamamoto someday.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Silva will get wrecked in the light heavyweight division there's just too much talent..I would rather see him and GSP go at it
I believe James Irvin poses a legit threat agianst Anderson. Both are Muai Thai fighters and have good striking. I do believe Irvins wrestling may be a factor in the fight but Anderson's jiu jitsu poses a threat to anyone in his guard.
 
Aug 31, 2003
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Irvin's only good against people that stand up and fight reckless .. or "stand and bang". He sucks on the ground and probably won't catch Anderson with one of his miracle punches. The only thing that poses a problem is how Anderson reacts at 205.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Irvin's only good against people that stand up and fight reckless .. or "stand and bang". He sucks on the ground and probably won't catch Anderson with one of his miracle punches. The only thing that poses a problem is how Anderson reacts at 205.
I feel Irvin has a punchers chance, as he is the naturaly bigger fighter, but unless he can impose his strength on Silva, he's in for a rough night.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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No Joke. Griffin on Serious Rampage for Jackson

A first-ever title shot can have a curious effect on a fighter's trademark sense of self-deprecating humor, propensity for practical jokes and rep for being more than a bit of a goofball.

It can make those traits disappear about as quickly as the latest upstart league trying to jump on the MMA bandwagon only to go belly up.

Just query Forrest Griffin (Pictures)'s trainers for the most important fight of his career, his title bout Saturday with reigning UFC light heavyweight champion Quinton "Rampage" Jackson at UFC 86 in Las Vegas.

Almost to a man, they say they've never seen Griffin more serious in the gym. Griffin is always intense while training for fights, with a second-to-none monster of a work ethic, but this time out, they note, there's a new sobering sense of purpose about him.

Wanna know just how seriously purposeful? He reportedly freakin' broke Wanderlei Silva (Pictures)'s nose during sparring a few weeks back. Now that's serious (more on that later).

"I'll tell you, getting ready for this fight, because of ‘The Ultimate Fighter' TV show, I've seen a more serious Forrest Griffin coming through the door," said Shawn Tompkins (Pictures), Griffin's MMA coach at Xtreme Couture.

Griffin and Jackson were opposing coaches on the SpikeTV show's recently concluded seventh season, which saw Griffin fighter Amir Sadollah besting Jackson fighter CB Dollaway (Pictures) in the June 21 finale to be crowned the Ultimate Fighter and win one of Dana White's highly touted six-figure UFC contracts. Naturally there were tensions and even some flare-ups between the rival coaches, though not nearly to the degree of some previous seasons, most notably the hugely entertaining hate-fest between Tito Ortiz (Pictures) and Ken Shamrock (Pictures).

"Not that I'm saying Forrest is taking it as a personal vendetta or anything," Tompkins continued, "but he knows he's in for a big fight and there's no goofing around. Even in his previous camps, he was just such a carefree guy. But I see in this camp, he's taking this one to heart. He comes in and does his job -- just like it is a job -- and he leaves without leaving anything in the gym. I just have to say I've known Forest for probably four years now since he's been out here, and he's a real serious guy when it comes to this fight.

"He's gonna prove that not only did he coach 90 percent of the guys on his ‘Ultimate Fighter' team to win, but that he's gonna win this title." (Oddsmakers disagree, making Griffin a heavy underdog.)

Ron Frazier, one of Griffin's boxing coaches at Xtreme Couture, agreed with Tompkins' assessment of the new, no-nonsense Griffin.

"I've been with Forrest probably the longest of all the coaches and yeah, he's definitely shown a new focus," Frazier said. "When I first started training Forrest, Forrest was a guy who would fight anyone and he didn't worry about winning or losing. And now he's a guy who's like, ‘Yeah, I can go out there and be champion.' And because of that, we've seen a newfound focus and a newfound dedication to his sport to really go out there and win.

"So yes, he's all business. He's very focused on his game plan. And doing the things he knows he's capable of doing. He realizes a championship is within his grasp and it's something he wants to do. He feels confident that he can win this fight and become champion."

Tompkins said Griffin has trained at three different gyms daily, ending up at Xtreme Couture five days a week for 4-6 p.m. sessions.

"I'd have to say he's working out no less than six hours a day every day," Tompkins said. "Between his strength and conditioning, his technical jiu-jitsu, his technical Thai boxing, and then putting it all together here: his technical with his standup and his ground game. The main thing we work on is live training -- sparring, grappling, putting it all together and being able to spar with the small gloves as well."

Added Tompkins: "We all know Forrest is a workaholic, but he's been real healthy, so that's a key with a guy like him."

"There's nobody that works harder in the gym than Forrest does, ever," said Xtreme Couture's namesake owner, MMA legend Randy Couture (Pictures), who also is helping train Griffin for Jackson. "As far as sparring goes, he's wide open. Not that he lacks control, but he just goes very hard all of the time. The unsuspecting partner that doesn't know that or has never gone with Forrest before is going to be in for a rude awakening.

"He's been that way since I first met him and watched him spar and train on the show. That was one of my rubs with him in the first season of ‘The Ultimate Fighter,' that he was a little out of control," said Couture, who, along with Chuck Liddell (Pictures), coached on the debut season of the show. "In the training environment, people are going to get hurt."

Indeed.

Fighter Gray Maynard (Pictures), who has sparred with Griffin at Xtreme Couture, said Griffin stepped up his training intensity for this fight so much so that he broke Silva's schnozzola during sparring shortly after The Axe Murderer made devastatingly quick work of Keith Jardine (Pictures) at UFC 84 on May 24.

"The last several weeks, he's just gone so freakin' hard," Maynard said, noting that while he didn't actually witness Griffin breaking Silva's nose, he knows it to be true. "He's going through people. KOing people in practice. Breaking people's noses. I'm like, ‘Damn, man, you're freakin' ready to go."

Noted Frazier: "I'm not sure where Wanderlei was when he got his nose broken, but it could definitely have been when he was in there with Forrest for sure."

Without commenting on Silva's reported busted-up nose at the hands of Griffin, Couture said, "We get guys like [Ronaldo] ‘Jacare' [de Souza] and Wanderlei in there, that again, are pretty wide-open guys, and they end up in groups with Forrest and sparks are going to fly. People just stop and watch cause it's a full go.

"We'll do five or six rounds of sparring," Couture said, "then a warm-down and he's grabbing someone else to grapple or grabbing me to wrestle. He wants to go more. He's pretty much worn out every guy that would be willing to go. He's had days when he's had his strength coach meet him in there at the end of practice. It's ridiculous."

A first-ever title shot is all the motivation a fighter should need, right?

Absolutely, said fighter Rory Singer (Pictures), one of Griffin's closest and oldest friends in the game.

"I mean, it's the most important fight that he's had in his already stellar career," Singer said. "He's got a five-rounder for the first time and a super-tough opponent and so, you know, he doesn't mess around with any of his fights and especially not this one."

Said Tompkins: "He's ready for a ten-rounder."

"He seems to be all business," noted fighter John Alessio (Pictures), who also trains at Xtreme Couture. "He just comes into the gym and gets his workout on and then you see him leave. Not much clowning around going on right now. If you catch him on a good day, you might see him smile. But other than that, he's all business."

Frazier agreed.

"I don't know if his training is more intense than normal, but I mean he's more serious. You don't get all the joking that he normally does, but when it's training time, Forrest didn't joke anyway. It was like before and after you would see that side of him. But no funny anecdotes this time. Not from Forrest. Maybe from some other clowns in the gym," Frazier said chuckling, "but not from Forrest. Not this time."

So Shawn, you wouldn't want to tell us what Griffin's game plan for Rampage is by any chance, would you?

"Same game plan Forest always has," Tompkins said, without missing a beat. "Go in there and beat him up. But definitely, we've trained specifically for Quinton. And put a game plan together. We can't really release what that is. But as great a fighter as Quinton is, there are weaknesses in his game."

Griffin told the UFC's "Countdown to UFC 86" preview, airing on Spike this week, that he plans to use his height and reach advantages to tie Jackson up in the clinch and pound him with knees and elbows.

Whether Griffin's plan of attack will be able to exploit Jackson's perceived weaknesses to the point that he'll be crowned the UFC's new light heavyweight champion should become clear sometime after 9 p.m. Vegas time Saturday.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC 86: CHRIS LYTLE NOT LOOKING FOR ANY HELP

After disposing of Kyle Bradley in 33 seconds at UFC 81 in February, Chris "Lights Out" Lytle wanted to get back in the Ultimate Fighting Championship Octagon and compete again as soon as possible. When he was told he'd have to wait until July to fight the Indiana resident was disappointed, but the disappointment quickly diminished when he was told he'd be taking on top-five ranked Josh Koscheck.

"I'm really excited. After my last fight I wanted to fight immediately," said Lytle. "I told them I wanted to fight in May. They were like, 'yea, yea, yea.' They kind of pushed it back until June. I was like, all right. Then they told me July. I was like, awe man. After they told me who I was fighting I was pretty fired up, so I said, ‘Yea, I'll wait until July.’

"At first I was kind of thinking, huh? I was surprised a little bit. Then the first thing that popped in my head was he's a wrestler who is going to try to hold me down. After about three seconds, I thought this could be an exciting fight. He's not just one-dimensional anymore. He's turned into a complete fighter, so I got real excited then. I was like, yea, that's a good fight."

We've seen Lytle matched up against strong wrestlers in the past. He fought former UFC welterweight titleholder Matt Hughes at UFC 68 in March of 2007. Hughes secured several takedowns and was able to grind out a decision win.

"As we all know, I've lost a lot of decisions, a lot of split decisions, a lot of close decisions. Part of my problem was thinking the refs were going to stand it up more," commented the Ultimate Fighter Season 4 finalist.

"Now I'm not counting on the refs. I'm not counting on the judges. I'm not counting on anybody to help me. If I get down, I'm not going to wait around. I've been working on getting back to my feet so I can punch people. I'm not counting for anyone for help. You don't know what's going to happen in a fight. You can't really count on anything helping you out, so I'm going to count on myself."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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WHITE SAYS UFC 86 PAVES THE WAY FOR 205 FUTURE

UFC light heavyweight champion Quinton Jackson defends his belt on Saturday night against Forrest Griffin at UFC 86 in Las Vegas. Not only is the future of both star fighters on the line, but so is the direction of the sport’s “money division.”



And with the entrance of middleweight king Anderson Silva into the 205-pound class pending, the value of fights in the division continues to rise.



“The (light heavyweight division) is so stacked right now. What's going to happen in the light heavyweight division is going to depend on what happens Saturday night,” stated Ultimate Fighting Championship president Dana White on Thursday. “Obviously if Forrest Griffin wins the title, there's a ton of different things that could happen. If Rampage Jackson wins it, there's a ton of different things that could happen.



“It depends on who wins. There's a lot riding on the light heavyweight division on Saturday night.”



White indicated that the UFC middleweight champion’s arrival at 205 isn’t a one-trick pony. He feels that Silva wants to continue defending his current belt, while working to capture light heavyweight gold at the same time. And for the first time in the promotion’s history, he’s okay with that. Never before has a UFC champion been allowed to chase another belt in another weight class.



“He wants to hold both the 185 and the 205 pound belt and he wants to defend them both. Normally I won't let guys do stuff like that because it's just… stupid. I'll let Anderson Silva do it,” White told MMAWeekly.com.



But first and foremost in the division, there’s the matter of Saturday’s championship bout at UFC 86 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center.



“Forrest Griffin is the American Dream, man. He literally didn't want to do (The Ultimate Fighter). He came out, tried out for it, and then had second thoughts. We had to get on the phone with him and get him out there,” explained the UFC president.



“He had basically made up his mind, he was going to retire. (He) comes on the show, wins it, and fights the most significant fight in UFC history, which I 100 percent believe we might not be here today having this conversation if that Forrest Griffin-Stephan Bonnar fight didn't happen.”



For all his appearances as a laid back, homebody, White says Griffin is quite serious when it comes to fighting. “He's a guy who has really taken this thing seriously. He showed in his fight against Shogun how serious he is, how talented he is, and how bad he wants it.”



He has just as much esteem for his current champion, too. “I bought the WFA, basically just to get Rampage Jackson’s contract,” stated White.



“He came over here and his first fight was against Marvin Eastman, knocked him out. Then went in and knocked out the most famous and one of the best fighters ever in UFC history in Chuck Liddell and did it in literally seconds. Then Dan Henderson, the only man in Pride to hold two belts at the same time. He went five tough rounds with him and beat him,” White proclaimed.



“And this weekend, he faces Forrest Griffin in an amazing fight…”



So how this fight measures up in the landscape of the division is simply… big. With all of the fighters crowding the light heavyweights, and the coming addition of Silva, this fight will lay the foundation for near term.



“This thing sold out and we're doing closed circuit,” said White. “This is a big fight.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jackson, Griffin on Weight for UFC 86

UFC light heavyweight champion Quinton "Rampage" Jackson and challenger Forrest Griffin (Pictures) made weight Friday in Las Vegas ahead of their title fight scheduled for tomorrow at the Mandalay Bay Events Center.

Jackson, 28-6, stepped on the scale at 205 pounds. He was flanked by trainer Juanito Ibarra, who led the 30-year-old native of Memphis, Tenn., to the light heavyweight title with a victory over Chuck Liddell (Pictures) in May 2007. Jackson has defended the belt once, outpointing Dan Henderson (Pictures) last September.

Griffin, 15-4, also weighed 205 pounds. The Xtreme Couture-trained fighter, whose preparation for the bout has solidified his reputation as one of the hardest working athletes in MMA, will be competing in his first UFC title fight.

Champion and challenger squared off briefly for photographers. At 6-foot-3, Griffin had a 2-inch height advantage. Jackson glared up at him. Griffin smirked back at the titleholder, and the fighters did not shake hands before separating until they meet again Saturday night in the Octagon.

In addition to Jackson and Griffin, all other UFC 86 participants made weight.

Lineup:
Quinton Jackson (Pictures) (205) vs. Forrest Griffin (Pictures) (205)
Patrick Cote (Pictures) (185) vs. Ricardo Almeida (Pictures) (185)
Josh Koscheck (Pictures) (170) vs. Chris Lytle (Pictures) (170)
Tyson Griffin (155) vs. Marcus Aurelio (155)
Joe Stevenson (155) vs. Gleison Tibau (Pictures) (156)
Gabriel Gonzaga (Pictures) (249) vs. Justin McCully (Pictures) (236)
Jorge Gurgel (Pictures) (155) vs. Cole Miller (Pictures) (155)
Melvin Guillard (Pictures) (155) vs. Dennis Siver (Pictures) (155)
Corey Hill (155) vs. Justin Buchholz (Pictures) (155)
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Justin McCully "close to 100 percent" for Gonzaga clash

Eleven-year veteran and one-time Team Punishment fighter Justin McCully (8-3-2 MMA, 1-0 UFC) will enter his second heavyweight bout in the UFC much as he did the first -- a decided underdog. But McCully is relaxed and ready on the eve of his UFC 86 undercard bout with Gabriel Gonzaga.

McCully discussed the challenges he faced in the 15 months since his latest UFC appearance while a guest on a today's edition of TAGG Radio (www.taggradio.com), the official radio partner of MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

"I'm in shape right now, so I'm ready to get in there and do this," McCully said. "After eight hard weeks of training, you just want to get it over with. Now's the moment where you're going, 'Come on. Just hurry up and get here.'"

McCully has had plenty of time to plan his return to the octagon. An injury suffered in his April 2007 victory over Antoni Hardonk forced the 32-year-old out of action.

"I got caught in an armbar at the end of the first round with Antoni Hardonk," McCully explained. "He was bending my arm backward. It was a good thing we were face down and Herb Dean couldn't see my arm pulled backward, so he didn't stop the fight. ... I had to have surgery and fix it up."

McCully said the procedure to remove bone spurs and repair ligament detachments was a success.

"I'm back probably at as close to 100 percent as you can be," McCully said. "I'm ready to get in there and bang."

A surgically repaired elbow won't be the only enhancement McCully brings to the cage tomorrow night. A freshly cropped head of hair will be on display, as the corn rows worn by McCully in his previous bout proved to be a problem.

"[My hair] kind of presented a problem in the last fight against Hardonk," McCully admitted. "(I) took [Hardonk] down, had him up against the cage, and he was holding on to my hair like it was a handle. Those braids just kind of made a little lip there for him to wedge his glove in between my neck and my hair. I had a hard time lifting up to get separation so I could punch and elbow and do different things, and it kind of cost me a little bit there. So I wanted to eliminate anything negative that somebody could do to me."

Gonzaga enters the contest after two straight defeats. McCully, despite riding a four-fight win streak, is picked by most to end up on the losing end of the contest. No longer with Team Punishment, McCully has devised a game plan with his new instructor, Allan Goes, to take out "Napao."

"[Gonzaga] is a big guy," McCully said. "I'm giving up some size to him. I'm probably giving up 15 to 20 pounds and maybe an inch in height. But I'm obviously going to do my best to use my speed and not let him trap me underneath him."

McCully, despite never having earned a knockout in his eight career victories, felt the fight could be won on the feet.

"I know everybody is scared of that big, vicious head kick he caught 'Cro Cop' with," McCully said. "But it came after [Gonzaga] softened him up with a good ground-and-pound assault. I'm looking forward to not letting him get on top of me, and pound him out on our feet."

McCully also discussed the state of Team Punishment, his time in professional wrestling, and why he returned to MMA after a three-year layoff. To hear the full interview, download Friday's edition of TAGG Radio, available for free in the TAGG Radio archives.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Andrei Arlovski to Make September Pro Boxing Debut on HBO

MMA star Andrei Arlovski, the former UFC heavyweight champion from Belarus, has been training for a boxing career under the tutelage of trainer Freddie Roach. Arlovski, who has an MMA bout July 19, likely will make his professional boxing debut Sept. 13 (HBO PPV) in the opening fight on the Casamayor-Marquez card in Las Vegas, according to Golden Boy.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Sengoku fighters trained with Olympic wrestling team

SENGOKU fighters such as Yoshida, Takimoto, Gomi, Kitaoka and Kawamura trained with Japanese Wrestling Olympic team on July 4th.

"This is my second time to have a real wrestling training" said Yoshida. He brought his own wrestling shoes today. Fighters except Gomi , who has a wrestling background, had a different training menu with others. even so, they warmed up, sparred and learned top level techniques for 2 hours. Yoshida and Takimoto, who are former gold medalists, had an opportunity to spar with Shingo Matsumoto, who is an 84kg weight class Olympian. Gomi said "Their sparing was really worth seeing."

Kawamura:
Wrestling was a lot harder than I expected. I had such a great experience today that I would like to make a use of what I learned in my regular training and fights.
Takimoto:
I suppose everybody is under huge pressures by other people's expectations; although, they should stay focused on their training and I hope they have good performance in the Olympic.
Gomi:
Training with top level wrestlers stimulated me to work harder for my next fight. While I cannot go to watch their game because my fight is coming soon, I wish them luck in the Olympics. I know it is hard to obtain a chance to fight in a main event. I won't compromise my performance, I mean I'm not going to disappoint anybody but also show a great fight. This training was a good start for me to achieve that.
Yoshida:
It was very hard training and I was even ordered to do better by a coach. I had a full day of great training. I'm impressed to see top level wrestlers. Everyone was very powerful and energetic. I thank everybody to give us such a great opportunity. I hope they have great game in the Olympics without getting injured.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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WAMMA heavyweight belt completed

Designers have completed the heavyweight championship belt commissioned by the World Alliance of Mixed Martial Arts for its first-ever title fight.

The belt -- which features copper, gold, diamonds, leather and fur -- will be wrapped around the waist of either Fedor Emelianenko or Tim Sylvia. The heavyweights meet at July 19's "Affliction: Banned" event in a five-round WAMMA title fight.

The project was completed by Johnny Najjar of the New Jersey-based Masis Boxing Belts.

According to a story posted by Najjar on WAMMA's official website, the belt has "a new-school look but an old school-production."

Rather than the usual metals, Najjar went with the more-expensive copper, which underwent 72 hours of waxing and polishing to give it the desired gold look. The plates were then dipped with 18k gold. Right before hand painting the belt's five medallions, more than 500 diamonds were hand set. All the pieces were put into a black leather belt and backed with fur.

Total production time: 150 hours.

WAMMA formed in November of last year as MMA's first self-proclaimed sanctioning body with goals that include creating greater visibility for the sport and recognizing world champions in each weight class.

Many fight promotions have joined forces -- except the most important one. The UFC (and it sister promotion, the WEC) have shown virtually no interest in working with WAMMA.

Still, as WAMMA struggled to gain any real traction within the indusry, CEO Mr. Michael Lynch contacted Affliction Vice President Tom Atencio and pitched the idea of creating the first-ever "undisputed champion" in MMA.

While the notion of an undisputed champion would ordinarily pit the top two ranked fighters against one another, No. 1 versus No. 5 is as close as WAMMA can get. According to WAMMA's own rankings, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira is ranked No. 2 and Randy Couture is No. 3, and both are under contract to the UFC. However, Josh Barnett (No. 4) is also fighting for Affliction and could meet the Emelianenko vs. Sylvia winner later this year.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Quinton Jackson’s ascent a matter of divine intervention

LAS VEGAS – There are, as they say, two sides to every story.

In this case, there's Juanito Ibarra's story of how he connected with Quinton "Rampage" Jackson and became the UFC light heavyweight champion's trainer.

Ibarra said the men had known each other for years from connections in the fight game and that they had gotten together after Ibarra telephoned Jackson and the two talked, mostly about their religious faith, for two-and-a-half hours.

"It was a very powerful, memorable conversation," said Ibarra, who is convinced Jackson will be at his career peak on Saturday when he defends his title at UFC 86 at Mandalay Bay against Forrest Griffin. "I get (goose) bumps thinking about it."

The irreverent Jackson, who is equally confident in his chances of victory, doesn't recall things exactly the same way.

That telephone call Ibarra made? Jackson has no recollection of it.

"Why would I remember talking to some dude for two hours on the phone?" Jackson said.

Jackson said he doesn't believe he knew Ibarra before they had gotten together. Ibarra once had trained ex-UFC light heavyweight champion Vitor Belfort and said he got to know Jackson as a result.

Jackson? Nope, doesn't remember.

"Juanito is always saying we knew each other, but I'm telling you, I don't remember knowing him," Jackson said. "I don't think I did, to be honest with you."

That's no surprise to Ibarra, who said Jackson is so caught up in his own world that he knows few people outside of his inner circle. The two went to the ESPY Awards together last year and Ibarra said he repeatedly was embarrassed as Jackson was unaware who many big stars were.

Reggie Bush, the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner from USC, recognized Jackson and came over to say hello. Jackson looked at Ibarra for help, Ibarra said.

"He had no idea who Reggie Bush was," the Orange County, Calif.-based Ibarra said. "None. That's just Rampage. All these stars, the celebrities, they all knew him and would speak to him and ask him to take a picture, and he didn't know who any of them were. He knows Shaq, but that's about it. And Shaq would tell him, ‘Hey, Rampage, this is so-and-so. He's big. You ought to know him.' But he didn't know any of them."

That's likely because, as Jackson said during a media day workout on Wednesday, he does nothing other than raise his children, play video games, go to night clubs, train and fight.

He long has been one of the elite big men in mixed martial arts, parlaying brutal power, quick hands and desire into a lengthy career at or near the top of the game.

He's only 30 but already has a relatively high 34 fights, going 28-6 with two wins over Chuck Liddell and victories over other luminaries such as Dan Henderson, Matt Lindland, Ricardo Arona and Kevin Randleman, among others.

Ibarra began working with Jackson in 2005, not long after it was obvious to everyone that Jackson and ex-trainer Colin Oyama were at odds. After Shogun Rua beat Jackson in a bout in which Jackson swears he was injured and that he shouldn't have taken, he was ready to part ways with Oyama.

Things weren't going well; he felt the trainer ignored serious injuries and generally was unhappy with the relationship.

"I used to see him fight in PRIDE, and I was always a fan of his," Ibarra said of Jackson. "I used to say, ‘This kid, if he only knew how to be a professional … ' His mouth was like trash. His antics in the ring were, well, let's say I don't think he knew what he was doing. But it was obvious there was a lot of raw ability there.

"I reached out to a guy I knew who knew him and asked if it would be OK if I could call him. I got the green light, and so I reached out and called him."

The resulting conversation, regardless of who remembers what, led to one of the sport's most successful partnerships.

Jackson finally has fulfilled his seemingly limitless potential and run off six consecutive wins, including back-to-back victories last year over Liddell to win the title and then Henderson to unify the PRIDE and UFC belts.

He finally looks like the fighter everyone felt he could be when he first took up mixed martial arts. He jokes that he took up the sport because he found out "I got to beat up white guys, and no cops were around to get me in trouble for it."

Jackson has blossomed into a star since hooking up with Ibarra. And while a large part of that is due to Jackson's wit and magnetic personality, just as much is about how well he can fight.

"I've always felt Rampage had the ability to become as big a star as there is in this sport," UFC president Dana White said. "As a promoter, you're looking for guys who are charismatic and who people are drawn to, and Rampage is that kind of guy. But you're never really going to make it that big in this sport, no matter how good a guy you are or how funny you might be, if you don't perform.

"The fans know this sport, and you can't fool them. Rampage has always had a great deal of natural ability and you'd see it a lot when he was in PRIDE, but he's really taken it to another level now."

Jackson still was fuming after losing to Rua on a PRIDE show on April 23, 2005, when he said he barely could walk and his conditioning was horrendous.

He answered his phone, and Ibarra was on the other end. Though Jackson insists with a straight face that he doesn't remember the call, Ibarra said the two bonded as they spoke of Christianity and their deep faith.

He said he began to trust that Jackson was committed to being the best and that Jackson began to suspect Ibarra was meant to be his trainer.

"We had a 2½-hour talk, and it was about Christ and being people of Christ, and talked very emotionally with each other," Ibarra said. "He was talking about how he felt, and I told him I felt really bad about how he was treated in the fight (with Rua). I said, ‘Your corner cussed you out, and it looked to me like you had an injury and something was really wrong.' I would have thrown the towel in. Forget the fight. The man wasn't right.

"He said he felt like he needed to go somewhere new, and I said, ‘Hey, if you want to try it, let's try it.' And here we are."

A win over Griffin, one of the UFC's most popular fighters, would go a long way toward cementing Jackson's status as one of the sport's biggest names.

And he grudgingly gives Ibarra his respect, even though he doesn't remember their initial phone call or even knowing him prior to teaming up.

"If Juanito tells you he's the one who made me and built me into this fighting machine, it must be true," Jackson said, snarling playfully. "I'm Juanito's laboratory creation."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Quinton Jackson’s ascent a matter of divine intervention

LAS VEGAS – There are, as they say, two sides to every story.

In this case, there's Juanito Ibarra's story of how he connected with Quinton "Rampage" Jackson and became the UFC light heavyweight champion's trainer.

Ibarra said the men had known each other for years from connections in the fight game and that they had gotten together after Ibarra telephoned Jackson and the two talked, mostly about their religious faith, for two-and-a-half hours.

"It was a very powerful, memorable conversation," said Ibarra, who is convinced Jackson will be at his career peak on Saturday when he defends his title at UFC 86 at Mandalay Bay against Forrest Griffin. "I get (goose) bumps thinking about it."

The irreverent Jackson, who is equally confident in his chances of victory, doesn't recall things exactly the same way.

That telephone call Ibarra made? Jackson has no recollection of it.

"Why would I remember talking to some dude for two hours on the phone?" Jackson said.

Jackson said he doesn't believe he knew Ibarra before they had gotten together. Ibarra once had trained ex-UFC light heavyweight champion Vitor Belfort and said he got to know Jackson as a result.

Jackson? Nope, doesn't remember.

"Juanito is always saying we knew each other, but I'm telling you, I don't remember knowing him," Jackson said. "I don't think I did, to be honest with you."

That's no surprise to Ibarra, who said Jackson is so caught up in his own world that he knows few people outside of his inner circle. The two went to the ESPY Awards together last year and Ibarra said he repeatedly was embarrassed as Jackson was unaware who many big stars were.

Reggie Bush, the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner from USC, recognized Jackson and came over to say hello. Jackson looked at Ibarra for help, Ibarra said.

"He had no idea who Reggie Bush was," the Orange County, Calif.-based Ibarra said. "None. That's just Rampage. All these stars, the celebrities, they all knew him and would speak to him and ask him to take a picture, and he didn't know who any of them were. He knows Shaq, but that's about it. And Shaq would tell him, ‘Hey, Rampage, this is so-and-so. He's big. You ought to know him.' But he didn't know any of them."

That's likely because, as Jackson said during a media day workout on Wednesday, he does nothing other than raise his children, play video games, go to night clubs, train and fight.

He long has been one of the elite big men in mixed martial arts, parlaying brutal power, quick hands and desire into a lengthy career at or near the top of the game.

He's only 30 but already has a relatively high 34 fights, going 28-6 with two wins over Chuck Liddell and victories over other luminaries such as Dan Henderson, Matt Lindland, Ricardo Arona and Kevin Randleman, among others.

Ibarra began working with Jackson in 2005, not long after it was obvious to everyone that Jackson and ex-trainer Colin Oyama were at odds. After Shogun Rua beat Jackson in a bout in which Jackson swears he was injured and that he shouldn't have taken, he was ready to part ways with Oyama.

Things weren't going well; he felt the trainer ignored serious injuries and generally was unhappy with the relationship.

"I used to see him fight in PRIDE, and I was always a fan of his," Ibarra said of Jackson. "I used to say, ‘This kid, if he only knew how to be a professional … ' His mouth was like trash. His antics in the ring were, well, let's say I don't think he knew what he was doing. But it was obvious there was a lot of raw ability there.

"I reached out to a guy I knew who knew him and asked if it would be OK if I could call him. I got the green light, and so I reached out and called him."

The resulting conversation, regardless of who remembers what, led to one of the sport's most successful partnerships.

Jackson finally has fulfilled his seemingly limitless potential and run off six consecutive wins, including back-to-back victories last year over Liddell to win the title and then Henderson to unify the PRIDE and UFC belts.

He finally looks like the fighter everyone felt he could be when he first took up mixed martial arts. He jokes that he took up the sport because he found out "I got to beat up white guys, and no cops were around to get me in trouble for it."

Jackson has blossomed into a star since hooking up with Ibarra. And while a large part of that is due to Jackson's wit and magnetic personality, just as much is about how well he can fight.

"I've always felt Rampage had the ability to become as big a star as there is in this sport," UFC president Dana White said. "As a promoter, you're looking for guys who are charismatic and who people are drawn to, and Rampage is that kind of guy. But you're never really going to make it that big in this sport, no matter how good a guy you are or how funny you might be, if you don't perform.

"The fans know this sport, and you can't fool them. Rampage has always had a great deal of natural ability and you'd see it a lot when he was in PRIDE, but he's really taken it to another level now."

Jackson still was fuming after losing to Rua on a PRIDE show on April 23, 2005, when he said he barely could walk and his conditioning was horrendous.

He answered his phone, and Ibarra was on the other end. Though Jackson insists with a straight face that he doesn't remember the call, Ibarra said the two bonded as they spoke of Christianity and their deep faith.

He said he began to trust that Jackson was committed to being the best and that Jackson began to suspect Ibarra was meant to be his trainer.

"We had a 2½-hour talk, and it was about Christ and being people of Christ, and talked very emotionally with each other," Ibarra said. "He was talking about how he felt, and I told him I felt really bad about how he was treated in the fight (with Rua). I said, ‘Your corner cussed you out, and it looked to me like you had an injury and something was really wrong.' I would have thrown the towel in. Forget the fight. The man wasn't right.

"He said he felt like he needed to go somewhere new, and I said, ‘Hey, if you want to try it, let's try it.' And here we are."

A win over Griffin, one of the UFC's most popular fighters, would go a long way toward cementing Jackson's status as one of the sport's biggest names.

And he grudgingly gives Ibarra his respect, even though he doesn't remember their initial phone call or even knowing him prior to teaming up.

"If Juanito tells you he's the one who made me and built me into this fighting machine, it must be true," Jackson said, snarling playfully. "I'm Juanito's laboratory creation."