Trevor Prangley: Strikeforce, Affliction and DREAM all on horizon
LOS ANGELES -- South African middleweight Trevor Prangley (17-5) was on a tear.
After back-to-back decision losses to Jeremy Horn and Chael Sonnen forced Prangley out of the UFC in 2006, the 36-year-old won five-straight fights with BodogFIGHT and Strikeforce. However a surprising loss to Jorge Santiago in the finals of Strikeforce's November 2007 four-man tournament was the last time Prangley has stepped in the cage.
But as Prangley told MMAjunkie.com (
www.mmajunkie.com) at Friday's "Strikeforce at the Mansion II" weigh-ins, a return to more frequent activity is on the way.
"I took a couple months off after the (Strikeforce) tournament," Prangley said. "I had been fighting a lot. When I came back, Bodog fell apart.
"I've just been looking for a home. Now I'm ready to get back on track here now that I've got a contract with Strikeforce, Affliction, and I could possibly be fighting in DREAM here pretty soon.
"I'm excited. I'm ready to get busy again. I've been sitting outside for a little bit too long here."
Prangley had been in training for the now-rescheduled "Affliction: Day of Reckoning." With his scheduled fight with Matt Lindland pushed back to January, Prangley was tapped as a late replacement for tonight's event.
"I was still training because I knew I had to get busy," Prangley said. "I haven't worked in a year, and I need to make some money. So I kept on training and [Strikeforce] was good enough to put be on the card.
"It was an easy transition. I'm a few weeks away from where I would like to be in shape. It is what it is. Being a fighter you've got to do what you've got to do, and this is one of those times that I've got to step up. I'm not 100 percent happy with my conditioning, but I'm definitely conditioned enough to win the fight."
Prangley will be taking on Anthony Ruiz. The two met once before, with Prangley earning a submission victory in October 2006.
The South African said transitioning from planning for Lindland to Ruiz wasn't difficult.
"I don't really care about my opponent," Prangley admitted. "I've always said that in my interviews. I go out there to control the fight and do as much damage as I can regardless of what my opponent does.
"Obviously there's certain fundamentals -- I don't ever want to get taken down, and I don't really want to get punched in the face too much. But I normally try and stick to my game plan, which is aggressive, coming forward, and inflicting as much damage as I can in the first round or two rounds, and hopefully get him out of there.
"If I don't, then I have to go the third and get a decision or whatever. But I'm definitely in there to get him out in the first or second round."
With plans to continue fighting for Strikeforce, as well as making a DREAM debut, Prangley plans on staying very busy. But a January fight with Lindland "Affliction: Day of Reckoning" is still on his radar.
"Of course," Prangley answered when asked abut the fight. "It's Matt Lindland. He's still ranked very high in the world. I want to fight the guy. Good friend of mine, but I want to fight him.
"You get a chance to fight somebody of that caliber, and that highly ranked, I really wanted that. I've always believed that I should be in the top-10 at 185 (pounds), and that was my chance."
After fighting four times in each of the previous four years, tonight's bout with Ruiz will be Prangley's first of 2008. But with multiple contracts in place, Prangley plans to rectify that in the coming months.
"[Fans] should see me, I would think, every two months," Prangley said. "I just want to get busy and keep fighting like I did last year. I was super-busy. I improved a lot doing it that way.
"Early on in my career I'd fight once or twice a year, and I had a hard time improving. The more I fight, the better I get."