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Feb 7, 2006
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Royal Ramifications for the UFC in 2009

The Ultimate Fighting Championship has ignited and perpetuated the development of Mixed Martial Arts; this is a fact. With the tremendous success of the UFC and the acquisition of countless world class fighters, the qualities and stereotypes that define a true champion are becoming blurred. By comparing the landscapes of the middleweight and light heavyweight divisions, we see sharp differences that hold implications for the future of the UFC.

One can make an argument that MMA fans crave structure and yearn to establish an unbeatable champion. Anderson Silva has become an object of fascination amongst the MMA community. As Silva’s stronghold on the middleweight division grows more and more apparent, the landscape of the division becomes clearer. Silva rules his kingdom of clearly defined contenders and gatekeepers. In fact, Silva has ruled his division so ruthlessly that top contender and two-time victim of the Brazilian, Rich Franklin, chose to pursue opportunities in the light heavyweight division. Despite “The Spider’s” habit of finishing fights in devastating fashion, he lacks the ability to draw huge pay per view numbers. While he is praised in forums and admired internationally, Silva’s reign as champion has proven to lack real drawing power.

Are fans of the world’s fastest growing sport so confident in Anderson Silva that they don’t even bother ordering his fights? While this is a possibility, the seemingly fickle light heavyweight division provides us with an interesting comparison.

As the light heavyweight division grows saturated with talent, the “certainties” that many hardcore fans hold so dearly become obsolete. The days of Tito Ortiz pummeling overmatched opponents are long gone. In reality, with all of the world class talent that has been injected into the UFC over the years, title matches are turning into crapshoots. Any contender in the light heavyweight division is capable of dethroning the champion on a given day. This lack of differentiation in talent of champion and contender results in severe instability in the light heavyweight division. Newly crowned light heavyweight champion Rashad Evans will likely face the winner of Lyoto Machida vs. Thiago Silva, each of whom is capable of trumping the champ.

While quick turnovers of titles can add an excitement factor, it may also devalue the coveted belt in the eyes of fans. Although this is speculation, with such evenly matched opponents in the light heavyweight division, the title can change hands each time it is battled for. Will fans embrace the parity of the division or will the frequent title exchanges diminish the significance of the belt?

The landscapes of both prominent weight classes will undoubtedly affect managerial decisions in the upcoming year. Will the UFC hand pick opponents to establish stability in the light heavyweight division, or will they search for a stylistic nightmare to combat Silva?

At the end of the day, the fans will help the UFC determine which scenario is most beneficial: A dominant King controlling his kingdom, or a volatile empire of uprisings and insurgencies.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Interview with BFC CEO Rebney

2008 may have been a year of historic growth for MMA, but in terms of the competitive landscape it remains a virtual UFC monopoly. EliteXC’s spectacular failure last fall, despite a historic network television deal and a number of marquee fighters, begs the question: Can a viable competitor emerge? Can the market sustain another national promotion over the long-term?

Bjorn Rebney, co-founder and co-owner of Bellator Fighting Championships, announced to some fanfare last month, believes his new promotion will be the exception to UFC’s rule. The key, he believes, is product differentiation. Unlike EliteXC, whose leaders openly criticized the UFC and aimed to challenge its supremacy, Bellator has taken precisely the opposite approach. “There is no need to change the material aspects of the game established by the UFC,” says Rebney. “Our goal is to duplicate many of the things they offer but fill in some of the blanks that consumers are missing.”

The missing elements, he claims, are a “sense of legitimate objectivity,” which he says is found in boxing but not in MMA. Bellator is not offering “a stale reality format” but a tournament that shows “an aspect of the game that is more pleasurable to watch. We let the fighters compete, track them and ultimately the best fighter wins.”

Bellator will premiere on Saturday, April 14 on ESPN Deportes and will be shown and each two-hour broadcast will be shown over 12 successive weeks. There will be four weight classes – feather, light, welter and middle weight, with eight fighters in each weight class. To win, a fighter will have to prevail in three fights over a three month period. The purse structure – which Rebney believes is another key differentiator for Bellator – is as follows:

* $10K for the first fight with a $15K bonus for the winner.
* $25K for the second/ $25K bonus
* $40K/$60K for the third.

Rebney believes these “fatter” incentives, plus the chance to fight on national television three times in three months, will also allow the fighters to attract more lucrative sponsorships. And unlike the UFC, which has strict exclusivity restrictions, Bellator fighters will free to sign with whomever they choose.

Rebney also believes he can learn from EliteXC’s mistakes. “It was glaringly obvious,” he says, “that there was a lack of focus on promotion of legitimate world class talent. Pay per view revenues are the #1 growth driver in this business, and fighters like Kimbo don’t sell pay per views.” From a production and promotion standpoint, Rebney plans to take a lesson from ABC Sports legend Roone Arledge’s playbook. “What’s missing,” he says, “is legitimate storytelling. Who are they? Why are they competing?” He cites CNBC’s piece on Rich Franklin as a benchmark for his production.

Rebney acknowledges that, despite an impressive sports pedigree, he and co-founder Brad Epstein lack any direct experience in MMA. And he does not disagree with Frank Shamrock’s statement to MMAPayout.com that experience is essential to the success of any promotion. In response he has recruited a team including former King of the Cage fighters Matt Stansell and Jeff Clark. “They’ve fought inside the cage and have worked on the promotional end, promoting and managing fighters,” he says.

Thanks to their efforts, Bellator has signed “a good number” of fighters from Japan, Brazil, Russia, the U.S. and Western Europe, including 155 pounder Eddie Alvarez and light heavyweight Dave Herman. “UFC’s done a terrific job,” says Rebney, “but the fact that highly talented fighters like Eddie, who are charismatic, articulate and dedicated, are available is a misstep that we’ve been able to capitalize on.”

Despite the slowdown in bank lending that has impacted virtually every industry, Rebney claims that Bellator has met all of its capital requirements for its inaugural tournament, having raised money from “hedge funds”. He declined to provide any further specifics.

Plans beyond the tournament are sketchy at this point, though Rebney does expect to bring back champions to fight in what he describes as “special events”. Given the recent track record of UFC’s competitors, it would seem Bellator’s “one tournament at a time” approach is probably best.
 
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Belcher prepared for Denis Kang at UFC 93

After defeating Ed Herman at UFC Fight Night 15, Alan Belcher will be back to the UFC at January 17th, when the UFC 93 arrives at Dublin, Ireland, and the fighter has a Brazilian coach helping in his preparation for the combat. “We trained a lot for this fight. Alan is a person who learns very quickly, has an excellent Muay Thai and a good Jiu-Jitsu, and we adapted that for the MMA. He’s a very talented person, like his nickname already says (“The Talent”)”, said Israel Gomes, leader of Killer Bees Team at California, United States.

Against Denis Kang, who makes his debut in UFC, Belcher will have a difficult work, but his coach guarantees that the American is ready. “He’s in a very good routine of training, physical preparation, sparrings with many different persons… We’re traveling a lot, making trains foreign, and we had the help of many people, like Rich Clementi, Hélio “Soneca”, Parizzi... He’s very prepared for Denis Kang”, guarantees Israel, who won’t be able to be at Belcher’s corner for the fight, because he’ll also fight at the same night, in Cage Fight – New Years Knockout, at Alabama.

“I’m very confident with Alan’s victory, mine and of Rodrigo Vidal’s, who’ll fight in the same event of me and is also helping in Alan’s preparation. We’re very satisfied with the preparation”, revealed Israel, celebrating the good phase of the team in USA. “Since I started to train we made 20 fights and we only lost one in the decision… The result of my work here is appearing, I am very satisfied and after this fights I come back to California and inaugurate a seat of Killer Bees there”, counts the black belt, in the support for the friend and ex-partner of Chute Boxe, Maurício “Shogun”, who also fights in UFC 93. “I wish all luck for the Brazilians who are in UFC 93 and I’m cheering for Shogun’s victory”, finished.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Lyoto Machida Interview

Getting ready to face Thiago Silva at UFC 94, Lyoto Machida keeps training toughly at Belém, Brazil, for the challenge of undefeated, which promises to shake Las Vegas on January 31st. In an exclusive interview to TATAME, the fighter talked about his preparation, commented the interview that Dana White, president of the UFC, points the Brazilian as the future best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, the chance for the belt and the defeats of Wanderlei Silva and Rodrigo "Minotauro", also speaking about the Rashad Evans’ victory at UFC 92, stealing Forrest Griffin’s title.

How is the preparation for the fight against Thiago Silva?

I'm training for this fight for a long time, I’m in the 16th week of training, so now I'm already in the final straight of the training, making the replenishment of energy, technical part... I’m with my father and my brother, and my fitness coach, who are helping me a lot here in straight final. I’m making a strategy for the fight too...

You have already started to worry about the issue of weight?

I’m with 213 pounds, which is my normal weight and, when it gets to the time of the fight, I’ll go to the United States with about 209 pounds, and lose the rest to the fight and then recover it. I'm familiar with it, I train in this weight and lost it there.

What are you training of special to him?

I'm training a lot my specialty first, the stand up game, my Karate, I’ve been focusing in this a lot, also the takedown part and the ground game. I do the complete training, but I prioritize what I have better, my strongest weapon, stand up fight. We always make a study of the opponent, I do this for about three months, seeing how he is, where he works, so I can beat up on these things not being surprised.

Recently, Dana White gave an interview and said you have everything to be the best fighter pound for pound, in the future. What do you think of that?

I’m very honored to receive this compliment from Dana White, who isn’t just an owner or promoter of an event, he understands the fight and more or less where each one wants to get, where is mistaking, what's missing, and I’ll strive to reach his expectations and my fans. I think anyone would be honored and happy to receive this compliment, but I’ll work with humility to be better and don’t be thinking that I’m the best. I don’t think anything like that. Everyone has their stage, I'm getting better at every fight, training a lot, gaining confidence and I think this is important for my career.

If you win Thiago, do you believe that will win the chance for the belt?

I think that if I don’t win the chance, I’ll be very close. The category is getting harder every day, the fighting are strong, then I believe that, after that, if I won’t be a candidate for the belt... I’ll train more and I think it will even be good, because I’ll get more fights and get there more rounded... I think I deserve a chance to dispute the belt, but it’s a decision of the event and I’m calm about that. My time will come.

What did you think of the fight between Wanderlei Silva and Quinton Jackson?

In every fight, anything can happen. I thought Wanderlei was the favorite, even because he had already beaten him twice, but every day the MMA grows in popularity and technically. Comparing, six years ago everything was very different, today is more strategic, if you make a little mistake you can lose the fight. The Americans are getting better, everybody wants their place in the sun, so what happened was this. Quinton got a strategy that fitted better that day, but I’m not saying he is better. As the Minotauro... That day Frank Mir was better, but Minotauro is able to turn things around, is young and tomorrow can be better than them and that's my vision. The MMA is growing so much that one loses today, the other wins tomorrow, everyone is studying and you cannot make mistakes.

After the fight, Dana White spoke about the possibility of "Rampage" fight for the belt. Do you agree with that?

I really thought it would happen, Quinton is very popular, is an ex-champion, and every guy that already had the belt has an bigger luggage, such as Wanderlei, if he had passed Quinton, I recognize that he could go to the belt directly. I'm still growing, building my way, and after I become the champion, all right, I’ll be at another level they already are. Perhaps for what he has already done and because of his popularity, he really deserved, but I'm training, living day to day, doing what I like... I believe my time will come. I'm not worried whether it will be today or tomorrow, just know that I’ll have a chance to get this belt.

Where you already expecting a victory of Rashad Evans on Forrest Griffin?

I thought that Forrest would win, but, as always, every fight have two sides and Rashad is a tough guy, created right a strategy, know the right time and, every guy like that becomes dangerous, calls you to his game... It was what he did, waited, waited and was even worse in the fight, but the chance appeared and he didn’t lose it, ended the fight. I think Forrest has more resistance, even more technical on foot, but Rashad is a strategist and this counts a lot today.

What is the way to beat him?

Look, I think Rashad is a complete guy, has the wrestling as a background, but I see some flaws in his game, although I’m not worried with him now. My focus is Thiago. I look, but I don’t get much information of the opponents that I’m not focused, but I see some holes in his game (Rashad), but I prefer not to think yet, he is not the one for now.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Mirko Crocop To Return at UFC 100?

Mirko Crocop has been mentioned a great deal in the last 2 UFC’s, and in 3 interviews now with UFC officials including Dana White, they have boasted the fact that Mirko Crocop is very welcome back and they look forward to when he can return.

To add to this, Mirko Announced that he will indeed fight in the UFC for his last fight.

In a recent interview with Dana White on the Tom Leykis show, Dana had somethings to say about Mirko. Please note that this interview was done in regards to UFC 100.

“We will welcome him with open arms. He is a guy that I respect, and when he left, there was really no bad blood. He needed to clear some things up, so if he wants to come back, he is welcome.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Bouts added to Shooto 'Tradition 5'

Shooto announced last week additional fights for “Tradition 5” at Differ Ariake on January 18.

Hiroshi “Iron” Nakamura faces Hayate Usui, Sakae Kasuya faces Tomonori Taniguchi, and Akihiro Yamazaki faces Young-Se Song.

BJ, who is the current bantamweight world champion, is also scheduled to fight.

Current “Tradition 5” fight card:

* Yusuke Endo vs Kotetsu Boku
* So Tazawa vs Katsuya Toida
* Shintaro Ishiwatari vs Michihiro Omigawa
* KODO vs Takahiro Hosoi
* Jin Akimoto vs Ayumu "Gozo" Shioda
* Hiroshi “Iron” Nakamura vs Hayate Usui
* Sakae Kasuya vs Tomonori Taniguchi
* Akihiro Yamazaki vs Young-Se Song
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Takanori Gomi to think about why he fights

Takanori Gomi posted a message to fans in his blog on January 5.

“Thank you for your full support at Sengoku yesterday. I accept my loss because it was the result of the greatest possible training which I could have. When my leg is healed, I am going to take my time and think about the reason why I fight. Thank you very much for supporting me.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Troy Mandaloniz vs. Paul Kelly signed for UFC 95

A rumored welterweight bout between "The Ultimate Fighter 6" cast member Troy Mandaloniz (3-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) and British fighter Paul Kelly (7-1 MMA, 1-1 UFC) has officially been signed for UFC 95.

Jeff Clark of NCFC Fight Management, which represents Mandaloniz, today told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that bout agreements have been signed.

The bout is set for the preliminary card of UFC 95, a Spike TV-televised event that takes place Feb. 21 at the O2 Arena in London, England.

The Hawaiian based Mandaloniz returns to action for the first time in more than a year. He last competed at The Ultimate Fighter 6 Finale in December 2007 when he defeated Richie Hightower via first-round TKO. On the reality show, "Rude Boy" defeated Paul Georgieff in the opening round before he was submitted by Matt Arroyo in the following round of competition.

Mandaloniz, who's trained with the likes of UFC lightweight champion B.J. Penn and now "TUF3" winner Kendall Grove, then competed at the show's live finale before taking some time off from competition.

He'll now meet Kelly, a fellow well-rounded fighter who suffered his first career loss in his most recent bout. Nine months after successfully debuting with the UFC with a decision victory over Paul Taylor, Kelly took on Marcus Davis at UFC 89. He suffered a second-round submission defeat to spoil his perfect 7-0 record.

Kelly will compete on one of the UFC's U.K. cards for the third consecutive time.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Cole Miller targeted for UFC Fight Night 18 return in April

UFC lightweight prospect Cole Miller (14-3 MMA, 3-1 UFC) will go for his sixth victory in seven fights when he appears at UFC Fight Night 18 in April.

A source close to the fighter today told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that Miller has agreed to compete at the event and is awaiting word on a possible opponent.

UFC Fight Night 18, which airs on Spike TV, takes place April 1, most likely in Nashville, Tenn.

The 6-foot-1 Miller was one of the top prospects to come out of the fifth season of "The Ultimate Fighter." He dispatched of Alan Berube in the opening round of the reality series, but after taking an inadvertent illegal elbow strike in a quarterfinal fight with Joe Lauzon, Miller never fully recovered and suffered a loss and was knocked out of the competition.

The 24-year-old American Top Team member returned on the undercard of the show's live finale and needed just 70 seconds to TKO Andy Wang. Miller then scored a unanimous-decision win over Leonard Garcia for his fourth consecutive victory.

However, five months later, Miller was defeated by rising prospect Jeremy Stephens via second-round TKO. It was the first time Miller has ever been stopped in a professional fight.

Miller most recently competed at UFC 86 in July 2008, and with just 12 seconds remaining in the fight, he submitted Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt Jorge Gurgel via triangle choke. Miller, just seconds away from a decision loss, earned a $60,000 Submission of the Night bonus for the come-from-behind win.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Atencio Talks Yvel Back Up Plan

In a media teleconference for Affliction's "Day of Reckoning" on Wednesday, Affliction Entertainment VP Tom Atencio said he, as well as Josh Barnett, are ready for anything when it comes to Gilbert Yvel's trials with the California State Athletic Commission.

On Tuesday, Yvel was cleared to apply for a California license to fight, though his paperwork needs to be approved before he gets in the ring.

Atencio said he expected Yvel to clear the commission, but had fighters on standby.

"He's been approved to move forward in the licensing process, and that's pretty much where we're at," said the spectacled fight promoter. "Yeah, I have people in line if this doesn’t work out, but as far as Josh is concerned, it's approved. Once again, like anything else, you never know whata's going to happen, there's a process to go through. Hopefully, he makes it through all his medicals and if he does, then the fight's on. I know that Josh is preparing for him, but Josh will fight anybody out there, so it's not so much a concern for me."

Atencio declined to name any fighters waiting in the wings, but expressed confidence that Barnett would face any of them.

"When we approach that bridge, we'll cross it," said Atencio.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Injured Alvarez Sidelined, Jan. 23 Replacement Bout Forthcoming

Dream ace Eddie Alvarez will not be able to keep his appointment with ZST standout Naoyuki Kotani in a lightweight contest scheduled to main event Extreme Challenge “War at the Shore” on Jan. 23 at the Tropicana Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City.

Alvarez (15-2) sustained a leg injury during his brief encounter with submission expert Shinya Aoki at K-1 “Premium Dynamite 2008” on New Year’s Eve and has been forced to withdraw. The wily Japanese groundsman ensnared Alvarez’s leg in the bout’s opening moments, forcing the tapout to a heelhook at 1:33. The loss was Alvarez’s second to date.

Though an MRI has revealed no tears or other substantial damage to Alvarez’s knee, the popular Philadelphia-bred fighter said ligaments are “looser than they should be” and he will take the time to recuperate properly, he told Sherdog Radio’s “Beatdown” on Wednesday.

Alvarez (15-2) said if the bout had come a month later he would have been ready to compete.

Extreme Challenge promoter Monte Cox, who also manages Alvarez, said the bout between Alvarez and Kotani will likely be rescheduled for a later date at the same venue. Cox is currently making final arrangements for a new main event.

The 24-year-old dynamo had a banner year in the sport, tallying four victories in a row before he reached Aoki. Two of those wins came to top-caliber competition in Dream lightweight champion Joachim Hansen, who Alvarez decisioned in May, and Tatsuya Kawajiri, who was stopped on strikes in a heated contest for Dream in July.

Alvarez is still under contract for one more fight with Dream, and will enter Bellator Fighting Championships’ eight-man lightweight tournament in April. The newcomer promotion will broadcast 12 weekly events on a one-day tape delay on ESPN Deportes.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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BISPING BREAKS DOWN FRANKLIN VS. HENDERSON

As Rich Franklin and Dan Henderson get ready for their main event match-up at UFC 93 in Dublin, Ireland, Michael Bisping, who will serve as coach against the winner on the next season of "The Ultimate Fighter" reality show weighed in with his thoughts on the bout and who he believes will win.

Since dropping to the middleweight division in early 2008, Bisping has been a hot prospect to make his way to the top of the weight class and work for a title shot. His best opportunity may come at the end of the ninth season of The Ultimate Fighter, as he will face either Henderson or Franklin.

The popular British fighter says that's exactly the fight he wants.

"I wanted one of those two guys cause their two of the best in the world, and probably No. 2 and 3 in the middleweight division," Bisping told MMAWeekly Radio recently. "So they're the guys I want to fight. There's idiots on the Internet that say I dodge good fighters and this and that, and that kind of annoys me a little bit and that's why I want to fight these guys."

With the Franklin vs. Henderson bout on the horizon and the filming of the show starting soon after the Jan. 17 event, Bisping says that he will be in Dublin for the show and will keep a very watchful eye on the main event.

"I've been watching that fight very closely," he stated. "I think it's a fantastic fight. I think it's definitely got the potential, apart from the fact that it's in January, I'd say Fight of the Year."

So how does Bisping, who competed and won the third season of The Ultimate Fighter, feel this fight between Franklin and Henderson will go?

"Rich Franklin is probably the smarter fighter out of the two. I think he's got better footwork, probably more technically composed fighter. Dan's got great knockout power obviously. They're both fantastic fighters," Bisping commented.

"If I had to pick a winner, I'd probably go out on a limb and say Rich Franklin by decision, to be honest."

Will it be Rich Franklin returning to The Ultimate Fighter house for his second term as coach? Jan. 17 will tell the tale.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Exclusive: Joe Riggs Says He Is Fighting For Strikeforce In February

MMANews.com was able to catch up for a quick minute today with Strikeforce welterweight Joe Riggs and he gave us the low down on when his next fight will be. According to the UFC vet, he will be fighting for Strikeforce in February on a card that has been yet to be announced but according to a few close sources, is set to be finalized any day now.

Riggs, who recently dropped back down to the welterweight division following a stint at middleweight, won his last fight against Luke Stewart in November via a second round TKO. It was his return fight to the 170lb weight class.

As with the card it’s self an opponent has yet to be confirmed but Riggs was confident that he would be in the cage in February and has already began preparing for the bout.

With a 29-10-0, Riggs is looking to regain some flare in the welterweight division where he once took a fight on short notice to challenge for then UFC champion Matt Hughes’ title. Since that fight Riggs has gone 6-4 with wins over Nick Diaz, Eugene Jackson and Jason Von Flue, while he has lost to Diego Sanchez and Kazuo Misaki (it was following this fight that Riggs decided to move to 170lb.)

Expect more to be announced on this upcoming in the coming week.
 
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Turning Japanese: MAYHEM GETS LOST IN TRANSLATION

As a man with the fitting name “Hayhem,” I sometimes have to live up to my moniker, and part of that entails making irrational decisions from time to time. For example, when my training partner. “King” Mo Lawal, competed in Sengoku event on November 1st, in Tokyo, I of course attended as his corner man. That isn’t very irrational, it’s actually the opposite. The irrational parts came after Mo finished his fight in the third round by TKO. As the rest of the team was getting on the bus to the airport. I said, “Ya know what? I`m gonna stay.” My friends, laughed and said, “Ok, good ruck." So I stayed.

For a month.

Now, although I am currently retired, I love fighting. I love it, so I couldn/t stay away from the gym. And since I have taken on as “big brother- or ainiki, as the Japanese say- the last man to beat Anderson Silva, Ryo “The Oiranha” Chonan. I have an instant pass to all the gyms I could want to visit Tokyo. First stop is the famous Kikix Kickboxing gym, in Oomachi. Riding the train from Gotanda, Chonan tells me in his broken but very understandable English about his sensei (teacher, Riki Onodera, including his wins in tournaments against Thai guys with unpronouncalbe names like Anuwat Kaewsamrit. The sound of the train misex crazily with the neon lights rushing by – Signes for Pachinko Parlors and Kirin beer- and signs in the train telling you not to talk on your phone. In fact, exept for me and Chonan talking, the packed train is completely silent. A city of people, stuffed one on top of another, not talking at all. It’s evening rush hour, so along with two fighters and all their smelly kickboxing gear are loads of businessmen and super cool rock-star-looking dudes intermingles with high fashion girls with Louis Vuitton bags and thigh- highstocking boots. “Asshole,” Chonan says, one of his favorite words that I taught him during his recent six-month training trip to America. I`m lost in those stocking boots, and he’s already gotten off the train to change to another line. We get on the next train and he tells me, “Number one left hook, Riki.:

After a walk down a street in a suburban neighborhood, the streets filled with 100-Yen shops, old guys walking their dogs, and vending machines that have both hot and cold coffee, we get to an unassuming storefront with a small sign that says, “ Rikix = No Kick, No Life,” and all the lights are off. “Maybe closed, Chonan.” “Asshole,” he grumbles and walks down the stairs into a basement, where I can hear the familiar sounds of jump rope, bag work, and timer bells. What is unfamiliar is the smell. Mixed in with the normal musk of a murky downstairs gym is that of incense. Inside, the small gym is packed with tough guys working hard, and a pair of young kids sparring particularly hard in the middle of the floor. I see, right by a barely oepn sliding glass door, the incense burning, fillling the hot and humid gym with a bit of smoke.

After changing into kickboxing attire, we jumped rope with giant heavy cords. I learn that this is what they use in Thailand. After 16 straight minutes of jumping and beating my toes pink with this lead rope, I wrap up my hands and began shadowboxing. It’s at about this time that a fresh faced, dare I say handsome, Japanese man appeared and corrected my form. Broken English and gesturing made it clear he was trying to say: My form was off. And when he goes to demonstrate a left hook on the bag for another student, it was clear- this is Riki. SPACK! SPACK! His left hook cracks the bag as a lanky but strong looking, tanned Japanese kid who just finished sparring looks on, waiting for his turn to try the technique.

“Go bag “ barked my ainiki, who pointed to my gloves, and I fell into line, doing my normal bombinations until the baby-faced left-hook guy pulled me aside, wearing some mitts that looked like they were older than he was. “Jaba, straight-o hook-ah” he called out. I`m doing the time-tested American form that, hell, I think my dad taught me when I was in grade school. :No no, hook-ah like a, a… “Then a look to Chonan with a rattling of Japanese, apparntly asking for some English help, and a slapping motion. “Smack,” Chonan says. “Like a smack.” Riki adds, “Rike a smacke!” I try. THUNK, THUNK, THUNK on the pads, Riki correcting me at every eighth or ninth incorrect attempt, ocassionalu nodding his head in approval, but mostly shaking it in dismay, until he finally sends me to the bag. He then works with Chonan, who snaps the hook with a Toyota Prius-like efficency. More pads, more watching, more workout. THUNK, THUNK, THUNK. On the bag, two and three-minute rounds of a left hook. Just a left hook. Then more shadowbixing. The incense has stopped, and now the horribly humid gym is mostly cleared out, and I`m left hooking into a mirror. Thiry minutes later, I`m still left hooking into a mirror. “You sprinkler,” Chonan laughts, pointing at the mirror, now covered in sprinkles of my sweat. “Go shower, go eat!”

After dropping off some baggage and a train ride to a station with another unpronouncalbe name, we come to a restaurant, me chasing Chonan, as usual, in a sea of Japanese people walking back and forth in every direction. “We go smo restaurant.” “What the hell is a smo restaurant? What is smo?” I ask, worried that I`m going to struck eating noodles again, “You know, smo! Smo! Smo!” “No dude, I don’t. “Asshole.” At the front of the place ther’s an old guy cooking chicken on the street, skewers of beef, stuff I could really eat. And when we go in, standing right in front of me, with menus in his hand like he was working at TGIFFridays, is a real life Sumo wrestler. Hair, robe, and I`m sure underneath is the underwear. “SU-mo! Oh, Sumo Restaurant!” “Yeah, I say, many times, SMO! Ass…” Interrupting him, “I know, man. I got it.” We head up a flight of stairs to a room with sliding wooden doors and low tables and cushions on a tatami covered floor-legit. I mean this is like a movie. Sitting at our tabke, down the way from me, is one of my childhood heroes, Tsuyoshi Kosaka. I think I peed in my pants a little bit.

Being the only gaijin (foreigner) around was something I was getting used to, but not understanding much of anything that was being said was getting frustrating. The wait staff hustle in and out of our private room, which was grown increasingly small due to all the fighters crowded around the low table, and the Japanese banter is flying back and forth faster than ever. Finally, after a big hit of laughter, Chonan explains: “He cherry boy! Ha, ha!” “Huh?” After a quick consultation with his electronic dictionary and another hearty laugh, “VIRGIN!” The shy young fighter obviouslyh knows tha English word, and cowers down laughing at the end of the table. Later, more drinks, more food, more fun, and a strange sushi-looking plate comes out that, after taking a bite, I learn is horse meat. Sorry cowboys, horse is delicious. The main dish is a soup called chanko, which is filled with meat and vegetables, perfect for sumos or a room full of Japanese MMA fighters (Save one American). More drinks, more loud Japanese yelling, and UFC vet Michi spills Chanko on his foot, causing him to tear his sock off and everyone to crack up. The cherry boy is taking more and more abuse, and is eventually forced to strip down, in a culturally unexplainable phenomenon. Everyone is now laughing hysterically, throwing things at the at the poor bastard until they got bored with it, and he puts his undies back on. Glad I wasn’t an up-and-comer in Japan. After a while, in our paper-and-wood box of laughs, Hideko Yoshida arrives, emitting the coolness of someone on face lotion ads all over Tokyo. Seriously, he’s on face lotion ads all over Tokyo. We shake hands, and I feel like I`m rubbing shoulders with the Yakuza. Except instead of an underground network of criminals, it’s an above ground network of fighters, headed by a Judo champ, and national hero. As I sat in awe for a moment, somehow the cherry boy was naked again, getting assorted things thrown at him, and a waitress opens the door wide, sees the nakedness, and slams the door shut. In any language that is hilarious.

The room agrees. After the laughter dies down, Yoshida invites us down to Yoshida Dojo the next day.

Yoshida is busy with his new baby, but we get to train with the crew, which is increasingly excited about me being there; so I have some of the craziest sparring sessions one could have, with some of the most excited young fighters in Japan. One who is especially enthusiastic unexpectedly knees me in the face during grappling, giving me a nice bruise to walk around Tokyo with. Moments later, I crush this less experienced guy with my specialty, “the sleeper,” which Americans call the “rear naked choke.” After practice, the room disperses, and I work on the left hook in the mirror. Left hook, left hook, left hook. Over, and over, and over. The young kids watch this, and begin doing their own post-workout workouts, some that look too hard for anyone, including a whole set of body weight exercises that includes picking a partner up from the guard, climbing around a partner like a monkey while he stands there like a tree, and squatting with a partner on your shoulders. We are all satisfied and dead tired, but I pull the young guys aside and point our the intricacies of my “sleeper hold,” so that they can now use it. They thank me the best they can without knowing the English words, but I got it. That night, we go again to Kikix. And this time Riki, holding the pads, was a tiny bit better. SPACK! Went my hook, and Riki’s face lit up. “So, so, so!” Which is the Japanese equivalent to “Yeah, that’s it!” But the next few hooks, THUNK, THUNK, and back to the bag, where I worked on it again, getting the occasional SPACK, but mostly THUNKS.

The weeks go by, and more and more left hooks. Sometimes I`m having dreams about them in my tiny rented weekly apartment, the kind the Japanese call a “mansion.” I mean, this place is a broom closet, but everyone keeps calling it a mansion, making me worry about how small THEIR places are. Since the Tokyo landscape is filled with buildings, many places have no direct sunlight is choked out of my entire buildings, so it’s hard to tell what time it is without leaving for the train station. I feel like Batman, living in a tower in Gotham city, except when I look out the window I don’t see the Joker, I see an alley where people ride their bikes and a Pachinko parlor (basically a Japanese slot machine casino) where drunk and now broke businessman occasionally stumble out the door, cigarettes dangling from their mouths. The weeks pass by like this… training every day, and being confused about what to eat every night. When I`M alone, I go to “Mos Burger” to try to have something American-tasting without going to “Macadonorado’s” (how they say it). I really get used to the lifestyle of Tokyo: riding the train at all hours of the day; the schoolgirls giggling: the super cool rock star-looking dudes; the occasional woman in a kimono; and the loud, brightly clothed hip hop kids with sunglasses at 11 P.M. as “23 ocrock,” I get used to it all, and can even communicate in Japanese somewhat, which blow’s everyone’s mind, including my own. It’s time for me to head back to America, so I start packing up my mansion in preparation for the exodus, from being a stranger in a strange land to being a strage person in a familiar land.

In the last day of training, we walk down the familiar dark stairs of Rikix and change into our gear. It is late on a Saturday night. Noticeably absent is Riki. I want to say bye to the handsome bastard, and thank him for all his help with my training. “Chonan, where is Riki?” I shout across the small gym. “No coming, Riki, his teacher…there.” pointing to a guy outside on the spiral staircase smoking a cigarette, maybe 50, with a bushy moustache, a military flattop, and the hard face of someone who has chopped off someone’s finger for dishonoring the clan. Looking Yakuza, but no Yakuza,” Chonan clarifies. I laugh. After my warm-up and shadowboxing. The Yak-boss calls me over, holding a pair of hand pads that look even more ancient than Riki’s. Through some broken English that he must have learned from foreign boxers that have come through Japan, he starts to take me though Japan, he starts to take me trhough some pad work, Pop, pop, SPACK, my one-two-three hits the pads, singing a sweet song. Pop, pop SPACK again. He calls for a four-punch combo, and I let it go, pop, pop, SPACK, thunk. The round ends. Chonan comes by to check on me, and after they confer in Japanese, Chonan translates, “He say hook number one good, upp-cut, uh shit.”

I guess that’s one thing that wasn’t lost in translation. I also guess that I`m glad that I decided to stay behind and live in Japan for a month. It gave me a whole new perspective on life, training, learning from the “big brothers” of the world, and paying it forward to the litle brother of the word. It almost makes me not want to go back to America, and instead just stay here in my broom-closet mansion and train for a few more months. But I’ve got other adventures to get into, and I canhear Chonan coming up the stairs, “Let’s go. Asshole!”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jardine Pushed To UFC 97

UFC light heavyweight Keith Jardine will not make an appearance at UFC 96 in Columbus, Ohio after all. Jardine was widely rumored to be in the running for a rematch with former light heavyweight champion Chuck Liddell, but MMAInsider in late December confirmed that was not the case.

On Wednesday, a source close to Jardine said the Greg Jackson-trained fighter was recently moved back to UFC 97 on Apr. 18 in Montreal, Canada. No opponent has been named for his appearance.

So far, no match-ups have been confirmed for the UFC's second incursion into Canadian territory, but a rumored bout between Anderson Silva and Thales Leites remains a possibility. Canadians David Loiseau and Jonathan Goulet are also expected to be on the card. Goulet is rumored to face Tamdan McRory.

Jardine last took home a split decision victory over Brandon Vera at UFC 89. He is 6-3 in the organization after his stint on the second season of "The Ultimate Fighter."