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Feb 7, 2006
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UFC Quick Quote: Dana White ‘disgusted’ with Elite XC and alleged fight influencing

It disgusts me. I’ve been busting my (expletive) for 10 years flying all over the planet to show everybody what a great sport this is and what amazing people are involved in it. Then CBS throws this guy who fights at people’s barbecues on the main event because they’re trying to compete with us, and he gets knocked out in (14) seconds by a guy who didn’t win ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ and couldn’t fight in the UFC. Then the guy turns around the next day and says, ‘The promoters actually paid me to not go to the ground with this guy. They paid me to stand up,’ which I’m pretty sure is illegal…. (Slice is) a joke. It was bound to happen. These guys have lost $60 million trying to get this thing off the ground. They’re building their promotion around a guy who can’t fight. It’s kind of (expletive) stupid, isn’t it? You’re in the fight business and you’re building your business around a guy who can’t fight…. When dirty people go out and do stuff like that, it hurts. Promoters have a bad rap as it is because of the last 100 years of boxing. We actually started to turn that around and were doing the right things and then you have these guys coming out and doing (expletive) like that. It hurts us.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Houston Alexander: ‘I have not lost my UFC contract’

“NO – I have not lost my UFC contract. NO – I have not fired my coaching staff. NO – I am not going to step down and fight for smaller organizations. The loss last month was tough, but life goes on. People need to remember that I have only been fighting professionally for a year and a half. I have made great strides during that time, as well as faced some setbacks. My training will continue and we are looking at visiting some of the larger camps for additional training and strategy for my next fight. I have a lot to learn and am hoping to have everything straightened out before I enter the cage next time. So no worries, I am not going anywhere!”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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JAY HIERON: "I'M DEFINITELY GOING TO GO OUT AND PUT ON AN EXCITING FIGHT"
link: http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content3575.html?PHPSESSID=d13620831e612cc5afa40a9b7a7a6680
"I'm going to go out there and, as always, put on an exciting fight. October 11th, I will be ready. Everything else that I can't control, I don't worry about. I'm definitely going to go out and put on an exciting fight," stated former IFL welterweight champion Jay Hieron as he talked about his upcoming October 11th clash with Bryson Kamaka at "Night of Combat II." Check out what he had to say about the fight, his opponent, his future plans and much more.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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KJ NOONS: "THEY MADE ME A FREE AGENT...I WOULD LOVE A GOMI FIGHT!"
link: http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content3587.html
"I mean, basically they wanted me to fight a guy that I already beat for three times less money. Okay, if I'm fighting him for three times less, what is there to gain for me? There is nothing for me to gain financially or in the fight game because I'm not winning financially because I'm getting three times less than what he is making and even if I beat him, it doesn't help my ranking. Obviously, the higher your ranking is, the more respected you're going to be. It wouldn't do anything for my career. That's why I asked for somebody like Eddie because he's a respected guy. If I were to fight Eddie, I would fight for what's on my contract because if I beat him, I get the respect in the rankings," stated former EliteXC lightweight champion KJ Noons as he spoke in detail about what went wrong with EliteXC and why he considers himself to be a free agent. You don't want to miss what else he had to say as he talks about his future plans in boxing and explains why he thinks Nick Diaz is acting like a "scared little kid". Check it out.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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QUINTON JACKSON'S DAY IN COURT POSTPONED

The pre-trial hearing scheduled for Thursday for former UFC light heavyweight champion Quinton “Rampage” Jackson has been reset to Oct. 24. Jackson and his attorney, Carol Lavacot, were present in court, but the Orange County chief prosecutor, Keith Bogardus, was held up in a preliminary hearing for another case and unable to attend, necessitating the postponement.

The pre-trial hearing is where parties are brought together to lay out future court dates for the proceedings. It is also an opportunity for the defense to change its plea.

A preliminary examination, where the prosecution presents its evidence in the case to the court, had been scheduled for Nov. 30. That date will also be rescheduled – although that date has not yet been determined – as Jackson will be in England on that date preparing for his Dec. 27 bout with Wanderlei Silva.

The court proceedings stem from Jackson’s arrest on July 15 – just one week removed from losing his title to Forrest Griffin – following a dramatic car chase ending in Costa Mesa, Calif. He was allegedly involved in several collisions with other vehicles and even driving the wrong direction on Newport Boulevard in Newport Beach after having crossed over a median in attempts to evade police.

The 30-year-old Jackson has been charged with one felony count of evading while driving recklessly, one felony count of evading a peace officer and driving against traffic, three misdemeanor counts of hit and run with property damage, and one misdemeanor count of reckless driving.

Appearing before the court on Aug. 28, Jackson entered a plea of not guilty.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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QUINTON JACKSON'S DAY IN COURT POSTPONED

The pre-trial hearing scheduled for Thursday for former UFC light heavyweight champion Quinton “Rampage” Jackson has been reset to Oct. 24. Jackson and his attorney, Carol Lavacot, were present in court, but the Orange County chief prosecutor, Keith Bogardus, was held up in a preliminary hearing for another case and unable to attend, necessitating the postponement.

The pre-trial hearing is where parties are brought together to lay out future court dates for the proceedings. It is also an opportunity for the defense to change its plea.

A preliminary examination, where the prosecution presents its evidence in the case to the court, had been scheduled for Nov. 30. That date will also be rescheduled – although that date has not yet been determined – as Jackson will be in England on that date preparing for his Dec. 27 bout with Wanderlei Silva.

The court proceedings stem from Jackson’s arrest on July 15 – just one week removed from losing his title to Forrest Griffin – following a dramatic car chase ending in Costa Mesa, Calif. He was allegedly involved in several collisions with other vehicles and even driving the wrong direction on Newport Boulevard in Newport Beach after having crossed over a median in attempts to evade police.

The 30-year-old Jackson has been charged with one felony count of evading while driving recklessly, one felony count of evading a peace officer and driving against traffic, three misdemeanor counts of hit and run with property damage, and one misdemeanor count of reckless driving.

Appearing before the court on Aug. 28, Jackson entered a plea of not guilty.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Josh Koscheck vs Yoshiyuki Yoshida to headline ‘Fight for the Troops’ Dec. 10

The fantastic welterweight match up between Josh Koscheck and Yoshiyuki Yoshida, which MMAmania.com first passed along right here, will serve as the main event for UFC Fight Night 16: “Fight for the Troops” at the Crown Coliseum in Fayetteville, N.C., on Wednesday, December 10.

USA Today today confirmed the complete line up, as well as talked to “Kos” about his big 170-pound showdown with “Zenko.”

Here’s a snip:

“I really [don’t] know too much about him. I just know he’s a pretty good judo player. And he comes to fight. For me, at the level that we’re at, I’m just here to fight whoever they put in front of me and try to finish him quick, get the victory and move one step closer to becoming the UFC world champion.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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M-1 Challenge 8

On October 29th 2008, the M-1 Challenge will come to Kansas City, Missouri for the 8th installment of this new fight series. 3 time All American Wrestler of Missouri and UFC and IFL veteran Mike Whitehead (22-6) is slated to take part in the event as the superfight participant.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Mousasi talks possible fight vs. Akiyama

DREAM middleweight champion Gegard Mousasi tells the DREAM website that he wants to be placed in a fight fans want to see -- him vs. Akiyama.
Mousasi thinks the fight would be a great way for Akiyama to prove himself to the Japanese fans.

"I heard that he had been avoiding to fight someone competitive, and chosen easy opponents in his last 2 fights. If that is true, I think he is a good fighter, but he is not professional. As a professional fighter, he should fight someone who our fans wanted to see. He had some issue before, and so he definitely respect what MMA fans want to see."

Based on his prior experience against Judo-based fighters, Mousasi would be confident going into a fight against Akiyama.

"I have defeated three top Judo specialists before and I won all. I say I have 85% of a chance to win."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Bobby Lashley Signs With American Top Team

Former WWE Champion Bobby Lashley has officially signed and joined American Top Team.

Bobby started training with us a week ago and decided this is where he needed to be to take the next step in his burgeoning MMA career. Bobby comes to us with a great background in amateur wrestling where he was a mulitple NAIA National Wrestling Champion. Of course, most people know of him because of his time spent with the pro wrestling organization WWE and ECW.

Bobby is serious about the sport of MMA and will dedicate himself to being the best he possibly can.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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ARLOVSKI AGREES WITH STAND-UP, LOOKS TO FEDOR

Affliction heavyweight Andrei Arlovski says his fight with Roy Nelson didn’t work out the way he planned, but everything turned out okay.

A staunch perfectionist, Arlovski recently watched the fight at EliteXC’s “Heat” and saw a lot of mistakes. A call from his famed boxing trainer, Freddie Roach, confirmed that.

“Freddie called me after the fight and said, ‘congratulations, but you have to use more (of) your hands,’” he said in a recent video interview with MMAWeekly.com. “He wasn’t happy 100 percent, same reason as me. I already saw my fight and saw I did a lot of mistakes and I have a lot of work to do in the boxing gym and jiu-jitsu and wrestling.”

Nelson was first out of the gate, reversing a takedown and working for a Kimura. For a minute, the former UFC heavyweight champ looked helpless. Much has been made of the ensuing standup in the first, but Arlovski maintains it is standard operating procedure for refereeing.

“Before the fight we had a meeting with the ref and he said, so guys – and the UFC have the same and Affliction – you have 30 seconds to improve your position,” he said. “So I was pretty comfortable, I knew that I am safe. He was on top of me, but I controlled the situation.”

A fast flurry of hands was Arlovski’s ticket to victory, as it usually is. In the post-fight press conference, Nelson said he wanted a re-match. Arlovski says it’s up to Affliction, but it’s “no problem.”

Arlovski expects to know what the future holds for him in the next week. Many have speculated that the EliteXC fight would determine Fedor Emelianenko’s next opponent. It doesn’t matter to “The Pitbull” – he’ll take Emelianenko or Josh Barnett.

“Like I said before, if you want to be the best, you have to fight the best fighters,” he said. “Obviously, he’s the best fighter right now. Nobody (has) beat him yet, so of course I want to fight Fedor, or Josh Barnett. They’re both tough, they’re both great fighters. It’s up to Affliction. If my next fight will be against Fedor, great. Against Josh, same thing.”

Arlvoski will return to the gym next week after relaxing in Vegas this weekend. If he fights Fedor on Affliction’s January card, there will be a lot to perfect.

“I have to improve my boxing,” he said. “I want to strike with him, but I have to be ready for clinch, for wrestling, for jiu-jitsu, so I have a lot of work to do.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Boxing On Hold for Affliction Event

With Affliction’s January show still a mystery outside of a few rumored bouts -- including a proposed headliner between world-ranked heavyweights Fedor Emelianenko and Andrei Arlovski -- Affliction Vice-President Tom Atencio said that the card would not include boxing matches as earlier planned.

“The January show is going to be an all-MMA card,” Atencio told Sherdog.com Thursday. An announcement is forthcoming next week, Atencio said, with a full fight card, dates, and details.

Sherdog.com has learned the event has been proposed for Jan. 24 at the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif., site of Affliction’s inaugural “Banned” event last July. Both date and venue are still subject to change.

Days after postponing an Oct. 11 event in Las Vegas, Affliction announced its affiliation with boxing’s Golden Boy Promotions and released limited details of a collaboration to include co-inhabited events in the first quarter of 2009.

A rematch between Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito was rumored as a candidate to anchor the first crossover card, with a strong supporting cast of MMA bouts filling out the night, including a middleweight bout between recent Dream grand prix winner Gegard Mousasi and Vitor Belfort. Mousasi’s U.S. representation has confirmed that they are considering the bout.

Atencio said Affliction and Golden Boy are still on par to co-promote, just not as early as expected.

“It’s just not something we could work out (by January),” Atencio said of the mixed-sport card. But it is something they will “absolutely” do in the future, he added.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Ken Shamrock Issues Open Letter Regarding EXC Situation

From KenShamrock.com:

Open Letter From Ken Shamrock on CBS Fight
Published Thursday, October 9th, 2008 at 11:51 am


On October 4th, I was set to fight Kimbo Slice on the EliteXC/CBS Saturday Night Fights in a highly anticipated event. Unfortunately, because of a training accident and the intervention of the Florida State Boxing Commission, our fight did not happen. I suffered a cut above my left eye that required six stitches, and the cut was significant enough to cause the Florida State Boxing Commission to refuse to allow me to fight.

The scheduled bout with Kimbo on the EliteXC/CBS Saturday Night Fight card was a great opportunity, and it is unfortunate that I was unable to face Kimbo as planned. I want to apologize to all of my fans, and to the EliteXC and CBS executives who worked so hard to put this fight together. I also want to apologize to Kimbo, Bas Rutten and their entire camp for what happened. I recognize that I put them in a very bad situation, particularly Kimbo. It’s difficult to walk into the ring after training for one opponent only to find out hours before the fight that you have to face some you don’t know or have never seen fight.

Over the years there have been many great times as well as disappointing times and I know Saturday the fans were as disappointed as I was. I was worked up so I decided to train with my partners in order to stay focused on the fight. I was just doing a light roll to check holds when I got caught by a head butt. It was a freak accident and I didn’t think anything of it until I saw drops of blood. It appeared to be a deep laceration so I had my physician look at it and we immediately went to the emergency room. When they said the cut would require stitches, my heart sank because I knew that the Florida Boxing Commission would not let me fight. I was disappointed because I knew this was an opportunity to give the fans, my friends, and my family something to cheer about. It has been a hard couple of years for me, and for my fans. I have suffered some disappointing losses. I definitely regret my decision to train on the day of the fight.

I promise that I will make this up to all my fans. I know that there is nothing I can do about what occurred, but I plan to get back into the ring soon. I would like it to be against Kimbo Slice. Hopefully EliteXC/CBS will still be able to put a fight together. It’s is the right thing to do. The fans want it and I want it.

I would also like to congratulate Petruzelli on his win. He did a phenomenal job. Seth not accepted the challenge of facing a new opponent; he also had to move up in weight class. He came in, dominated Kimbo and walked away with a great victory.

To the fans, I appreciate all of your support.

Thank you and God Bless.

Ken Shamrock
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Murilo "Ninja" Rua hoping to face Radach or Lawler again

After another loss coming in the form of a KO, former PRIDE fighter Murilo “Ninja” Rua stated that he plans to return in 2009. “I’m waiting, but I think I’ll fight again next year. I hope I have a chance against Radach again and then fight (Robbie) Lawler” the Brazilian told Tatame.
The elder Rua’s career started out promising in Pride but he hasn’t been able to string together enough wins to put himself back into the top 10.

It will clearly be tough for Rua to get either Benji Radah or Robbie Lawler upon his return because he has now lost to both of them but it may be possible for him to face someone like a Jake Shield who is planning to move up to middleweight for some fights.

A fight with Shields would keep him out of danger from suffering another KO loss and give him a chance to get back into the middleweight picture.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC 89: VERA READY FOR 205 AND JARDINE

Brandon Vera is scheduled to take on Keith Jardine at UFC 89 in Birmingham, England on Oct. 18. It will be his second appearance as a light heavyweight. He doesn’t make predictions for his upcoming fights, but he does believe that somebody is getting knocked out.

He just doesn’t know who.

“I believe in Karma and everybody who’s said that they’re going to knock (their opponent) out has ended up flat on their face lately,” Vera told MMAWeekly.com.

He spent his last days of training at Team Lloyd Irvin in Camp Springs, Md., and made the trip to the U.K. earlier this week.

So far, Vera has adjusted well to his new weight class. His debut at light heavyweight was rough, a last minute fight against Reese Andy at UFC Fight Night 14 that failed to produce a finish. Vera says he cut 28 pounds in three weeks for the match. That was the reason, in his words, he “looked like (expletive).”

“Cutting that much weight and performing was the problem,” he explained. “I didn’t think it was gonna be, but I hadn’t cut weight in nine years.”

Vera has tapered down more gently this time, and has been watching a lot more film than usual in preparation for Jardine. He says Jardine’s style necessitates a lot more studying.

“He’s got great hands and a super awkward style,” Vera said. “An unorthodox, offbeat style; that’s a problem for almost every fighter. But it’s just something we’ve been working on in the game plan. Just making sure I execute the game plan that’s been set forth by my coaches.”

With a variety of footage for him to study, Vera could take a multitude of approaches in fighting “The Dean of Mean.” Some of them have been over in a flash, for better or worse, and others have been slow, methodical breakdowns of his opponents. Vera thinks Jardine is at his best when opponents are chasing him, and he doesn’t plan on obliging that request.

“Stick to the game plan and don’t fall into the trap of chasing him around,” he said.

And if Jardine doesn’t come forward?

“I guess we’re just going to stand there and hang out, man,” he continued. “I’m cool with that.”

Vera will have one fight remaining on his UFC contract after this upcoming match so it would seem that his motivation to finish the fight will be strong. The UFC insists that fighters finish their fights and not leave it in the hands of the judges.

“If (the fans) wanted to watch a sparring match, they could just turn on boxing,” Vera concurs. The question that remains now is how can he impose his will without drifting into Jardine's territory. According to him, that's part of the plan, and off limits.

The trap is thinking Jardine is a gatekeeper, a mistake many have made before.

“Nobody ever respected him or gave him the time of day until he started putting people to sleep,” Vera said. “I’m glad I didn’t do the same before I have to fight him. I just look at him as somebody that could knock me out. So I’ve got to be on my p’s and q’s.”
 
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Shamrock: EliteXC Made Mistake with Slice

Frank Shamrock always has an opinion. Since returning to the mixed martial arts scene on a full-time basis, Shamrock’s appearances have included work inside the commentary booth for EliteXC shows carried on CBS.

A man who prides himself on his belief in the sport he helped pioneer, Shamrock offered more opinions on EliteXC “Heat,” which featured Seth Petruzelli’s stunning technical knockout victory over Kevin “Kimbo Slice” Ferguson last Saturday in Sunrise, Fla.

“I think it was a mistake to not let me fight [Kimbo Slice],” said Shamrock, who claims he offered to step in to face the notorious streetfighter.

Expectations were high for “Heat,” as Slice was set to take on MMA legend Ken Shamrock, Frank’s older adoptive brother. However, a laceration above Ken’s eye left the Florida State Boxing Commission with no choice but to force him to withdraw. Frank believes his presence in the cage would have proven invaluable.

“When I realized we would have to cancel the show, I said, ‘Look, I’ll fight the guy. You know, it’s a great story -- little brother steps into the spot, comes out of the booth. It’s very compelling, but we need a fight to happen that’s compelling,’” Frank said. “That went around for hours. Then I put my shirt on and went to work. No one committed to it, so I just kept talking.”

Frank, the former Strikeforce and UFC middleweight champion, lobbied the CBS staff. He even claims to have been cleared to fight Slice as a heavyweight by the commission, but the match never materialized for reasons unknown to him. The result was disastrous for EliteXC, if you ask Frank.

“Kimbo is great, great for ratings,” he said. “But Kimbo fighting a star, a superstar, somebody who’s going to elevate him or knock him down in a good way … that’s what we needed that night. We didn’t need a nobody to beat Kimbo.”

Petruzelli disposed of Slice in 14 seconds. Despite a stint on “The Ultimate Fighter” reality show, he lost both his fights in the UFC and entered his showdown with Slice after nearly a yearlong layoff.

Frank believes Petruzelli’s lack of commercial appeal made the fight “a 50 million dollar mistake” instead of the birth of a new star.

“Everybody knows that Kimbo [Slice] is not very good,” Frank said. “He hasn’t had time to mature. He’s a new guy.”

While the fight made the underdog Petruzelli the “happiest man in the world,” it revealed much more about Slice, who gained notoriety and a cult following through backyard brawls that made their rounds on YouTube.

If Slice had lost by submission or decision, his handlers could have blamed it on inexperience. Instead, Petruzelli dropped him with a jab, a fact that deflated Slice’s iron-chinned, knockout artist persona.

“The worst thing that could happen to Kimbo happened to Kimbo,” Frank said. “If there was a provision on that scale that said worst area, he was there.”

Slice’s ability to draw fans remains an undeniable positive for EliteXC. However, Frank views the hulking Floridian’s fan base -- casual fans drawn more to the man than the sport -- as fickle and dangerous.

“They’re the first guys to jump ship,” he said. “They’ll say, ‘Oh I’ll told you,’ or ‘I was never with that guy.’ If he’s a real star, this will just be a bump in the road, and he’ll start driving.”

Setting the ground work

Frank spends much of his time ensuring stability in his own career. What happened at “Heat” could play a huge role in shaping the next year for the soon-to-be 36-year-old.

“The whole show was about laying the ground for [Frank] Shamrock versus [Ken] Shamrock,” he said.

On an extended losing streak, Ken’s ability to sell the long-rumored bout with his brother has become questionable at best. Frank picked Ken to defeat Slice and build momentum for a match between them, but the elder Shamrock’s withdrawal from the fight may have derailed their big-money bout for good.

Promoting the fight on CBS seems completely out of the question, as the network was “not happy” with Ken, who has not won since 2004.

“The worst thing that could have ever happened was [for] Ken not get in the ring,” Frank said. “Two and a half years for me, I’ve been working on this once-in-a-lifetime event. If it doesn’t happen, it’ll be terrible for everybody, I think.”

Despite diminished appeal in a bout between brothers, Tito Ortiz’s cage-side appearance may open another door for Frank.

A rematch of their memorable 1999 fight has been talked about “at length.” Frank hopes it will happen by this time next year, drawing unparalleled MMA ratings.

“It looks like it’ll happen, and it looks like it’ll be with EliteXC,” he said.

Two current EliteXC champions stand out to Shamrock for different reasons.

Jake Shields, who expressed interest in fighting Frank at 185 pounds after capturing the EliteXC welterweight strap in July, is not part of his plans.

“He’s a nice guy; I genuinely like him,” Frank said. “He doesn’t have that aura of stardom about him.”

Robbie Lawler, EliteXC’s middleweight kingpin, may lack desired star power, but he has other qualities that might make the risk worth Frank’s while.

“He’s finishing fights, and they’re dramatic,” Frank said. “Jake does the same thing, but it’s not high drama. That’s why people like me. I’ll go in and I’ll break my friggin’ arm, and I’ll keep fighting.”

While he did not return to action against Slice -- and that fight seems of little, if any, interest to him now -- Frank plans on asserting himself soon.

Moving forward

Frank’s involvement in EliteXC is a curious one. The 14-year MMA veteran’s confidence never falters when it comes to his value. He’s an established commodity, pushing a youthful, unproven company in a wild industry.

He considers “Heat” a good event and commends the organization for its efforts. The CBS show was a step in the right direction, as it affirmed MMA can garner high ratings on primetime network television. Still, Frank sees enormous chinks in the EliteXC’s armor.

“All these things come with money and time, and they don’t have money and time,” he said. “I know they have serious financial troubles and they have lots of indigestion over there. I don’t know if the future of the company will hold. I know that they have very savvy money people in charge, so I don’t see it going away.”

Frank recognizes at least one bright spot within EliteXC -- Gina Carano.

Whether or not she can carry the EliteXC torch now that Slice has been knocked off his pedestal remains to be seen. Frank speaks highly of her talents and compelling persona and feels she has the potential to impact the sport’s future in a big way.

“Gina’s name will forever be known in MMA,” he said. “The things she’s done have been monumental.”

Cross promotion bolstered “Heat,” too. Affliction was exposed to a wider audience, as it allowed former UFC heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski and International Fight League titleholder Roy Nelson to scrap under the EliteXC banner on network television. Future collaboration may make a dent in the UFC’s stranglehold on the sport, but what happens next remains uncertain.

“I think it was more of an opportunistic thing of just bringing someone in at the time” Frank said. “I don’t know where they’ll go from here. But you know there’s one 800-pound gorilla in the industry, and there’s a bunch of other guys. I think all those other guys should really be working together for a common good.”

Scrambling to make an impact in MMA is no small task, as the UFC has run counter-programming against both Affliction and EliteXC. Two of the UFC’s top draws, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Forrest Griffin, reached an even wider audience when their pay-per-view fight at UFC 86 was aired on Spike TV during EliteXC’s broadcast on CBS.

Although Frank never saw the fight, he knows having it run parallel to “Heat” did not help EliteXC’s cause.

“[The UFC is] white collar,” he said. “It’s all or nothing, you’re either with us or against us kind of business, and that’s not how I see the sport.”
 
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With win at ShoXC, "Pee Wee" Herman seeks bout with Brett Rogers

HAMMOND, Ind. -- Dave "Pee Wee" Herman (11-0) is not your typical undefeated heavyweight prospect.

But as Herman told the media at Thursday's official "ShoXC: Elite Challenger Series" weigh-ins, don't expect him to change anytime soon.

"Yes, I am still training alone and, no, I’m not really worried about joining a camp or team," Herman said.

Herman will meet former "The Ultimate Fighter 2" cast member Kerry Schall (21-10) in the main event of tonight's card at the Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Ind.

Herman has notoriously shied away from traditional training methods in favor of garage work-outs by himself. Herman has also generally relied on his buddies to hold pads for him while honing his striking skills.

While eight of his 11 victories have come by knockout or TKO, Herman did admit to taking a little different route in reparation for tonight's bout.

"I went and trained for a week in Las Vegas a few weeks ago," Herman said. "I worked on striking and how to block a punch ... without using my face. I sparred with Frank Mir. That was fun."

Herman will be making his third appearance for ProElite. The Indiana native earned TKO victories over Ron Waterman and Mario Rinaldi in his past two appearances on EliteXC undercards.

Despite the previous success, Herman says he is still deciding how to approach tonight's affair.

"I don't really think about a gameplan before a fight," Herman admitted. "Whatever happens is going to depend on what he does. I'd like to put him away in the first round in case I get tired."

A win tonight would certainly put Herman among the best fighters in ProElite's thin heavyweight division.

And while a long-awaited bout between fellow undefeated prospect Brett Rogers and former streetfighter Kevin "Kimbo Slice" Ferguson may have lost some sizzle with Slice's recent loss to Seth Petruzelli, Herman said we would be glad to step in.

"I'm willing to fight Brett Rogers or anyone," Herman said.

Tonight's final card includes:

MAIN CARD
Dave "Pee Wee" Herman vs. Kerry Schall
Jason Guida vs. Mamed Khalidov
Anthony Lapsley vs. Mike Stumpf
Robert McDaniel vs. Alexander Shlemenko
Lyle Beerbohm vs. Rafaello Olivera
PRELIMINARY CARD
Anthony Marti vs. Jared McMahon
Jeff Cox vs. Torrance Taylor
Matt Jaggers vs. Orville Smith
Tiawon Howard vs. Hector Urbina
Deray Davis vs. John Kuhner
Josh Barnes vs. Jeremy Norton
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Strikeforce adds Joe Riggs vs. Luke Stewart at 170 pounds

After a disappointing loss to Kazuo Misaki in September's "Strikeforce at the Mansion II" event Joe Riggs (28-11) will make his long-rumored return to welterweight in November.

The organization announced in a press release overnight that Riggs will meet seven-time Strikeforce veteran Luke Stewart (6-1) in its Nov. 21 return to San Jose, Calif.

A seven-year veteran of MMA, Riggs enjoyed success at a young age fighting for the Arizona-based Rage in the Cage organization. The Arizona resident would also earn trips to the UFC, WEC and Rumble on the Rock.

Struggles with injury and chemical-dependency have led to mixed results in recent years.

Riggs first shared his plan to return to 170 pounds with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) in August.

"I'm going back to 170 because, for one, my body weight is just adjusted," Riggs said in August. "When I used to cut to 170 -- back when I fought Diego (Sanchez) and those guys -- it was a really, really tough cut. My body has adapted. Now it's easier."

The bout will be Riggs last in his current Strikeforce contract, and the 25-year-old has not been shy about his desire to return to larger organizations -- including the UFC.

"Strikeforce is a cool company," Riggs told MMAjunkie.com in August. "I like (Strikeforce promoter) Scott Coker and those guys. They pay me good money. But I miss fighting on those (bigger) shows.

"I asked for my release from the UFC (in 2007), and they gave it to me. After that, sometimes the grass isn't always greener on the other side. I do miss fighting in the UFC."

Riggs is also currently scheduled to headline Rage in the Cage's 10-year anniversary show on Nov. 8 in Phoenix. That bout, against JR Schumacher, will be held at 185 pounds.

Stewart has fought exclusively for Strikeforce since his 2006 debut. The 28-year-old holds notable wins over Jason Von Flue and Jeremiah Metcalf. His lone loss was a unanimous decision to Tiki Ghosn at March's "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Le."

Stewart was also in action at "Strikeforce at the Playboy Mansion II," earning a first-round submission win over Jesse Juarez.

The fight card for Strikeforce's Nov. 21 card now includes:

Champ Josh Thomson vs. TBA (for Strikeforce world lightweight title)
Champ Bobby Southworth vs. Renato "Babalu" Sobral (for Strikeforce world light heavyweight title)
Joe Riggs vs. Luke Stewart
 
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Up next for Josh Thomson? Chris Horodecki and Caul Uno possible

After an outmatched Ashe Bowman gave Josh Thomson (16-2) little more than a 74-second tune-up fight back in September, the Strikeforce world lightweight champion could get a major step up in competition come November.

After that non-title fight, Thomson will defend his belt for the first time at the organization's Nov. 21 "Destruction" event in San Jose, Calif.

Although no official opponent has been announced, Strikeforce executive Mike Afromowitz today confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that former IFL stand-out Chris Horodecki (12-1) and DREAM/UFC veteran Caol Uno (25-11-4) are under consideration for the fight.

Right now, though, the organization is simply in preliminary talks for the fighters' services.

"I can tell you that we are talking with both K-1 about having Josh fight Caol Uno and with Affliction about having Josh fight Chris Horodecki," Afromowitz said. "Again, nothing is set in stone."

Strikeforce has worked with Affliction before. In fact, when the clothing company turned MMA promotion hosted its first show back in July, Strikeforce loaned the organization Paul Buentello for an FSN-televised fight. Strikeforce also planned to lend Trevor Prangley to Affliction for a fight with Matt Lindland in October, but the event was recently postponed.

Horodecki became a free agent after the collapse of the IFL earlier this year and signed with Affliction in August.

The Canadian fighter, who turned pro just days after his 18th birthday, fought for the TKO organization before heading to the IFL. There, the now-21-year-old lightweight went 8-1 to become one of the organization's biggest stars. However, in a first-ever IFL lightweight title fight, he suffered a first-round TKO to Ryan Schultz. It remains the only loss of his career.

Uno, meanwhile, made his American debut and spent a two-year stint with the UFC from 2001-2003. Uno went 3-3-1 in the organization against the UFC's top 155-pounders, but after he fought B.J. Penn to a disastrous draw in the finale of a four-man lightweight tournament that was intended to crown a champion, the UFC soon abolished the division all together.

Uno returned home to Japan and began competing for K-1 HERO'S, which recently became the DREAM organization. Most recently, he suffered a unanimous-decision loss to Caol Uno in the semifinals of the DREAM lightweight grand prix. Despite the loss, Uno has won eight of his past 11 fights.

As for Thomson, who won the belt with a lopsided unanimous-decision victory over Gilbert Melendez in June, he'll go for his ninth consecutive victory.
 
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KJ Noons: I offered to give my belt back to EliteXC

Mired in the center of controversy for several months, former EliteXC lightweight champion recently told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) he could have saved the organization substantial time and trouble.

After all, Noons offered to give his title back.

"I gave (EliteXC) five days notice, before I was stripped, that I wanted to give the belt back and be released from my contract," Noons said. "Then they stripped me without even (telling me) -- I found out on the internet. That was I guess (EliteXC) trying to prove a point, I guess you could say."

After refusing to accept a September bout with lightweight contender Nick Diaz -- citing financial concerns and a desire to fight a more-deserving competitor -- Noons was stripped of his title by way of an EliteXC press release. Noons said he has remained quiet about the saga while trying to continue negotiations for his EliteXC return.

"We were talking," Noons said. "I was hoping the Nov. 8 bout was going to happen. We were going to redo contracts or whatever, and hopefully I could fight Nick. But they're already moving forward with that. Once I found out Saturday night that [EliteXC] was moving forward with [a Diaz vs. Alvarez fight], I'm moving forward over here."

Noons said EliteXC's decision to strip him of the title, rather than considering his offer to return the belt, effectively made him a free agent.

"To tell you the truth, I don't think [EliteXC] knew the consequences of stripping me," Noons said. "They just kind of reacted off of me saying I would give them back the belt if we could work things out. I think maybe out of ego, or for whatever reason they wanted to make a point, they stripped me. That's a breach of contract.

"You can say however much you want that I owe you fights. I can go fight somewhere else. I'm not going to fight those fights if I owe them or not. It doesn't matter. It's supposed to be title fights, and I'm not the champ."

It would seem that Noons could soon find himself in the center of a courtroom rather than a cage. EliteXC would certainly want to prohibit Noons from simply walking away from any obligated duties he may still owe. Noons said he and manager Mark Dion have done their homework, and are sure of his free-agent status.

"I'm very confident," Noons said of the termination of his contract. "I'm sure you know by now, once something is done to me -- like being stripped of my belt -- I don't just come out and immediately react off of emotion. I want to make sure all my ducks are lined up correctly, and I say the educated, right thing.

"Let's say legally, or for whatever reason, I do owe them two fights. You can wait for a lifetime before I fight those two fights. I'll go fight 50 other fights before I fight those two."

Despite the obvious clash between Noons and EliteXC, the former champion said he's not opposed to returning to the organization -- under a new contract.

"They've got to sign me under a new contract," Noons said. "I'm a free agent."

Noons' immediate plans call for a six-round boxing match on Nov. 13. After that, Noons just wants to continue compete with the world's best.

"I'm just going to move forward and go on with my life," Noons said. "Hopefully they'll want to bring me back, but if not I'm real interested in a (Takanori) Gomi fight. Or hopefully some other organization will think I'm a pretty good fighter and want to put me on.

"I just want to be happy."