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Feb 7, 2006
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Patry: Quebec Commission in ‘Very Bad Position’

After a near riot at a Titans Fighting show and a change in leadership at the Régie des Alcools, des Courses et des Jeux (Alcohol, Racing and Gaming Division) of Quebec, promoters were informed that the RACJ plans to adhere to rules in place since 1999.

Those rules put a couple of upcoming events in Quebec in jeopardy, most notably UFC 97 on April 18. Under the 1999 rules, no elbow or knee strikes are permitted. Stephan Patry, who has promoted more than 40 shows -- including the aforementioned Titans Fighting event -- during the last decade in Quebec, does not believe the commission has a leg on which to stand.

“To be real honest with you, I think the whole athletic commission in Quebec right now is in a very, very, very bad position,” Patry told Sherdog Radio Network’s “Beatdown” on Friday. “They’ve been sanctioning the sport under the unified rules for over 10 years and now all of a sudden there’s a new president in place, and he decides, ‘Let’s enforce what we have in the law books instead.’”

The RACJ has a subdivision -- its division for combat sports -- which operates similarly to athletic commissions in the States. The head of the subdivision had been Mario LaTraverse, who recently retired and was replaced by Richard Renaud. Patry does not think the change in the subdivision caused the current problems. He points to the change at the top and Denis Racicot, the new president of the RACJ.

“Richard Renaud did a very good job since he started, because he was very open-minded when we presented to him our new sport. I think he’s a big fan of MMA, and he really wants to push forward and do improvements,” Patry said. “He wants changes, but the problem is above him. It’s the president of the government agency that is kind of enforcing what’s in the rulebook and pretty much forgetting what Mario has been doing for 10 years.”

Patry acknowledged problems with LaTraverse’s leadership, as well. Nothing, he said, was ever put in writing in the rulebook.

“Now back to Mario -- [he has] been doing lots of good for combat sports in Quebec, whether it’s boxing or mixed martial arts,” Patry said. “But I really don’t understand why in all these years he was there why he didn’t have the rules changed in the law book. I don’t understand why he was using the unified rules but never implemented them in the rulebook. I will never understand that. I can’t understand what happened there.”

Patry worked to avoid the current impasse.

“In the last 10 years, there have been numerous times where me and Yves Lavigne and other people have put pressure on Mario LaTraverse and his organization to put in writing the unified rules to make sure there wasn’t going to be any situation like the one we’re having right now in the future,” he said. “We were always getting the runaround.”

The push to adhere to the rules on the books picked up steam following the near riot that took place at the Titans Fighting show promoted by Patry on Feb. 6. Matches were originally booked under Strikebox rules -- Patry compares it to San Shou. However, the commission dealt Patry’s promotion a blow that nearly crippled it before it ever got off the ground.

“Two weeks prior to the event, the commission called us,” Patry said. “The president of the government agency that oversees combat sports called the director of combat sports, who approved our sport … so basically the commissioner … and told them, ‘Listen, let’s cancel that show. We have [had] meetings, and now we want to enforce the rules that are in place with the commission right now.’ Basically, two weeks prior to the event, they kind of [expletive] us with these rules that aren’t even the rules of MMA and rules that were written back in 1999 in Quebec.”

After meeting with lawyers, Patry decided to protest the decision. Before the protest could move forward, the commission sought out another meeting with the longtime promoter.

“Before we had a chance to meet with these people to oversee the rules with them, we had a meeting with the commission,” Patry said. “One of the inspectors of the commission told us, ‘Listen, the lawyers are not going to be there the night of the show. Talk to your athletes. Make sure they follow the rules you want them to follow, and we will talk to the referees and we’ll make sure that the show happens. Then, afterwards, we’ll see what the president of the governing body elects to do with that.’”

With that, a gentlemen’s agreement to keep the bouts standing was put in place between all the fighters. Up until the main event, everything went off without a hitch. There, James Thompson took down Steve Bosse and moved from side mount to almost full mount before the near riot started and the crowd started pelting the ring with debris. Thompson’s actions still perplex Patry.

“Thompson actually signed an agreement that he was going to follow those rules,” Patry said. “How can you explain that everybody that was in that meeting followed that gentleman’s agreement but one guy? Is he dumb? What’s wrong with this guy? You could even ask his manager, Ken Pavia, and he’ll confirm that James Thompson was present at all these meetings. The first thing Ken Pavia told me after the fight was, ‘I don’t know what the [expletive] he did. He [expletive] up.’”

The change in commission leadership, coupled with what happened at the Titans Fighting show, strengthened the RACJ’s resolve to revert back to the rules it has had on its books since 1999. Even though the rules are in writing, Patry questions the merit of enforcing them at this point.

“Right now, what the lawyers are doing … they’re trying to see with articles of law if they could use that to say, ‘Listen guys, you’ve been doing that for 10 years. There’s no way you can go back and change the way you’ve been doing things for 10 years,’” Patry said. “Apparently, and I’m not a lawyer, from what my lawyers are telling me, the commission cannot legally do what they’re doing right now. I think this whole thing will end positively for the UFC and mixed martial arts in Quebec, but right now it’s all in the hands of the lawyers. Like I said, I’m not a lawyer, but apparently they’re not allowed to do what they’re trying to do right now.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Shaolin’s Return Imminent

Vitor Ribeiro has become something of an afterthought in the 17 months since his devastating technical knockout loss to American Top Team brute Gesias "JZ" Cavalcante in the semi-finals of the K-1 Hero’s middleweight tournament.

Afterward, the 29-year-old four-time Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion underwent surgery to repair a career-threatening eye injury suffered at Cavalcante’s heavy hands. Despite rumors swirling about a potential retirement, Ribeiro plans to return to the mixed martial arts scene sometime in 2009.

“I don’t know the day yet, but I’m already training in order to be ready when they call me,” he said. “I hope to fight at least three times this year. I feel motivated now.”

Talk of his demise -- which proved premature -- rubbed Ribeiro the wrong way.

“There were some rumors -- people saying I wouldn’t fight anymore because of my eye,” he said. “People talk too much about things they don’t know, and it snowballs.”

Before being buried under Cavalcante’s lethal ground-and-pound in just 35 seconds back in September 2007, Ribeiro (19-2) had rattled off nine consecutive victories and was almost universally accepted as one of the sport’s top lightweights. Spawned by the famed Nova Uniao camp, “Shaolin” has delivered more than half (11) of his 19 career wins by submission. He remains one of only three men to submit reigning Dream lightweight king Joachim Hansen.

As he recovered from surgery, Ribeiro left Nova Uniao to open his own academy in New York City. With that, Modern Martial Arts was born.

“I left Brazil to work with jiu-jitsu,” Ribeiro said. “My gym is focused on jiu-jitsu. My coming here was not with the intention of having more fights. I intend to stay here and teach for a long time. I don’t think about going back to Brazil. I intend to build a bridge between Nova Uniao here and Nova Uniao in Brazil.”

Ribeiro credits his mentor, Andre Pederneiras, for the success he has enjoyed, inside and outside the ring.

“I was with Andre Pederneiras for 15 years,” he said. “I owe him a lot. We’ve always shared the wish to bring up new athletes for the future. I’m working with the thing I like most in my life -- teaching jiu-jitsu.”

So far, Ribeiro seems encouraged by how his gym has taken hold in the Big Apple.

“My gym is going well, thank God,” he said. “Business is good, and I hope it continues going that way.”

Once he signs to fight, Ribeiro will have to switch gears quickly.

“When I have my next fight,” he said, “I’ll bring some friends to help me out with the classes, so I can concentrate better on my training.”

Shinya Aoki -- a man who some feel has eclipsed UFC champion B.J. Penn as the world’s premier lightweight -- caught Ribeiro’s attention during his time away from competition. The 25-year-old International superstar submitted Eddie Alvarez with a first-round heel hook at the K-1 “Dynamite” show on New Year’s Eve and has lost only once -- to Hansen -- in the last three years.

“Aoki’s a guy who gets more confident in his ground game each day,” Ribeiro said. “The guy had several fights this year and knew how to impose his game on the ground very well. To be sincere, I did not think Alvarez would accept a fight on the ground so fast. When you meet a guy like Aoki, being on top or bottom really doesn’t matter because he’s happy to go to the ground.”

With victories against Mitsuhiro Ishida, Ivan Menjivar and Tatsuya Kawajiri already in his back pocket, Ribeiro’s resume remains strong. Only time stands between the one-time Shooto and Cage Rage champion and his long-awaited return to the ring.

“It’s just a matter of waiting for that call, signing the contract and fighting,” Ribeiro said. “It will be soon, for sure.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Leites’ Turn to Try to Catch ‘Spider’

The constantly spinning wheel of UFC middleweight contenders has stopped on the latest challenger to Anderson Silva’s crown. But instead of names like Yushin Okami, Nathan Marquardt or even Demian Maia, the latest middleweight to get the nod is Nova Uniao product Thales Leites. Leites will meet Silva on April 18 at UFC 97 in Montreal, as long as UFC officials clear up the recent rules controversy in Quebec.

The title fight is a move that even Leites found a bit surprising.

“A little bit,” said Leites recently on the Sherdog Radio Network’s “Beatdown.” “But actually I was waiting a little bit because I came off five consecutive wins in the UFC. I’m doing my job. Like I said every time, I’m doing my job and I’m waiting for my time to get a title shot. If they invite me to the title shot its because they think I deserve [it]. I think I deserve it. They believe in me. They trust me. And my team too.”

Leites (14-1) also acknowledges the merits of uncrowned top contender Okami (23-4). Okami returned to the Octagon after a ten-month layoff from a broken hand and grinded out a unanimous decision against Dean Lister at UFC 92 in December. Still, the Japanese fighter, a solid 8-1 in the UFC, did not get the call.

“Yeah, he’s another tough guy,” Leites said of Okami. “He deserves it too. But he had some problems. He had an injury or something I don’t know. He’s a tough guy. He deserves it. There are a lot of guys that deserve a title shot too. But this time is my time and I want to focus on it. I want to prove this to everybody.”

Leites, 27, just wrapped up a month-long training session with Arizona Combat Sports and Brazilian jiu-jitsu instructor Gustavo Dantas before he headed back to Nova Uniao. Leites is 5-1 in the UFC thanks in no small part to his jiu-jitsu acumen, which has earned him nine submission victories in his career. Leites feels that’s one of the things he does better than the champ.

“I think so,” said Leites. “I compete in jiu-jitsu for a long time. I’ve been training jiu-jitsu for 10 years and competing every time. I think this will be the difference because I feel more comfortable on the ground, but I don’t know. Anything can happen. He already showed that he’s a tough guy and he has a lot of good skills on the ground.”

Leites also gives credit to where Silva’s black belt came from.

“Who gave his black belt was the Nogueira brothers and I know that [the] Nogueira brothers gave his black belt because he really deserves it,” said Leites. “And who am I to say something? He really deserves it. He showed it. He submitted a lot of tough guys. He submitted black belts in MMA and who am I to say something? My job will be training a lot to beat him. He’s one of the best guys in the world. That’s it.”

Silva’s Octagon credentials paint the portrait of a stone-cold killer. Six of his eight victories in the UFC have come by way of his fists and/or knees and they punctuate his 14 (T)KO career wins. But after studying Silva’s last fight against Patrick Cote, a tepid third-round TKO, Leites isn’t afraid to stand and trade.

“I can fight him standing,” said Leites. “I will not be afraid to fight him in the standup game. I will never be afraid. I’ve been training my muay Thai and boxing for five years and I think that I’m ready for any situation. I will be ready for anything. I know he wants to fight me standing to try and knock me out. But anything can happen. Cote was doing a good job with him closing the distance and keeping him down every time and moving forward in front of him. I’m thinking I have to do the same thing.”

The well-traveled Silva (23-4) is undefeated in the UFC and has, at times, looked superhuman dispatching of top-shelf opponents like Rich Franklin and Dan Henderson. But for Leites the game plan is simple -- to take the title from a man many view as unbeatable.

“The most important thing is I trust in me and believe in me,” said Leites, who isn’t spooked by “the Spider” moniker. “He has two arms and two legs like me and like everyone else. If I believe in me and trust me and do my job I can do it. That’s it.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Troy Mandaloniz: I might take Paul Kelly's arm home with me at UFC 95

Just when it seems like the only news coming out of Hilo, Hawaii has to do with Vaseline and rematches, "The Ultimate Fighter 6" veteran Troy Mandaloniz (3-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) is here to tell you he's been too busy preparing for Saturday's bout with Paul Kelly (7-1 MMA, 1-1 UFC) at UFC 95 in London to worry about the whole UFC 94 controversy.

"Having to sit there and watch [training partner B.J. Penn lose] was kind of heartbreaking," Mandaloniz recently told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "Other than that I'm really focused on my fight. If anything, it made me more hungry."

Of course, that doesn't mean there's no controversy surrounding this bout as well.

"I know [Paul Kelly] personally," Mandaloniz said. "I've met him through Kendall Grove and Michael Bisping. He's a nice guy, and I wasn't expecting to see as much [expletive] as he's talking right now."

The unlikely rivalry between Mandaloniz and Kelly has had months to develop.

"I was scheduled to fight Paul Kelly in June (2008)," Mandaloniz said. "I sustained a serious injury to my back and I had to take some time off. During the time off I gained some weight. I've been just rehabbing the neck and getting the weight back down and everything. I'm finally ready."

The injury that shelved "Rude Boy" was an unfortunate training accident that aggravated a previous injury.

"I got into a car accident in 2004," Mandaloniz said. "I got rear-ended by a drunk driver. I had a lot of problems with that back then. Then I got a kick in the neck from Coach (Shawn) Tompkins in April. It put me out.

"I was immobile for two weeks. There were two large, bulging discs in my neck, and there was a lot of rehabbing and resting that I needed to take just to make that better so I could compete again.

"There is a surgery I could do, but the bulge is not detrimental to my spinal cord. So the doctor advised me that I not do the surgery because it may screw up my chances of competing."

The bout will be Mandaloniz's first since his December 2007 TKO win over Richie Hightower at "The Ultimate Fighter 6" finale. It is the weight that Mandaloniz admits to putting on, as well as his jiu-jitsu prowess, that have been central focuses in the war of words between the two fighters.

"It seems like [Kelly] is taking me really lightly," Mandaloniz said. "He's saying that he's stronger than me and that I'm no genius on the ground -- and that I gained all this weight and I'm sitting on the beach in Hawaii. He wants to talk all this [expletive] about my ground game, but at least my only submission loss is to a great jiu-jitsu practitioner. How did he lose his last fight again?"

Kelly dropped an October 2008 bout to Marcus Davis via submission, the lone loss of his career.

Mandaloniz said he was actually appreciative of his English opponent for providing him the extra bit of motivation he needed to finish training camp on a strong note before traveling to London.

"He got me real fired up in my last week of training," Mandaloniz said. "It's made me even more hungry to go over there.

"I'm taking this one with a smile. I'm a [expletive] maniac, man. I'm the guy that you punch in the face and I smile. You don't understand why the hell you just hit me with your best shot and I'm still coming forward."

As Mandaloniz considers the UFC's reasoning for arranging the bout with Kelly, the tension is evident in his words.

"I think [the UFC] put us two together and matched us up because they want to see us go in there and punch each other in the face," Mandaloniz said. "I'm a little frustrated. I'm really thinking about putting him on his back and finishing him. But we'll see what happens. I'm looking forward to this fight. It's a war. I'm hoping for that quick finish, but I'm ready to go to the end."

And as Mandaloniz looks to return to action in dramatic fashion, the Hawaiian native has a message for his opponent.

"It's going to be a great one," Mandaloniz said. "I'm hoping that we stand in front of each other and just bang it out and get that fight of the night. But it looks like he thinks I'm so easy on the ground he's going to take me down.

"He better be careful, I might take his arm home with me."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Full WEC 39 lineup, including five-bout televised main card, announced

World Extreme Cagefighting has released its full fight card, including a five-bout televised main card, for the organization's upcoming "WEC 39: Brown vs. Garcia" event.

The March 1 event takes place at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, Texas, and the main card airs on Versus.

The night features WEC featherweight champion Mike Brown's first title defense since the American Top Team fighter defeated former champ Urijah Faber. Brown (20-4) meets Texas-based fighter Leonard Garcia (12-3) in the night's main event.

A late addition to the main card is rising featherweight contender Jose Aldo (13-1), who recently moved to 3-0 in the WEC with a first-round TKO of Rolando Perez in January. Aldo takes on 38-fight veteran and WEC newcomer Chris Mickle (26-11-1), a busy Midwest-based fighter who's only 25 years old.

Other bouts scheduled for the televised main card include former top WEC lightweight contender Richard Crunkilton (16-2) vs. former IFL stand-out Bart Palaszewski (30-11). Additionally, former WEC lightweight champ Rob McCullough (16-5) meets Marcus Kicks (8-1), and Oklahoma State's two-time NCAA Division I national wrestling champion and four-time All-American Johny Hendricks (4-0) takes on Alex Serdyukov (8-4).

WEC 39 was originally slated to feature a co-main event between WEC welterweight title-holder Carlos Condit and challenger Brock Larson. However, the bout was scrapped when Condit suffered a sprained wrist, and the WEC opted to scratch the entire 170-pound division soon after. Both Condit and Larson have since been moved to the UFC, where they'll make their octagon debuts in the coming months.

The full WEC 39 card includes:

MAIN CARD (Televised)

Champ Mike Brown vs. Leonard Garcia (for featherweight belt)
Jose Aldo vs. Chris Mickle
Richard Crunkilton vs. Bart Palaszewski
Marcus Hicks vs. Rob McCullough
Johny Hendricks vs. Alex Serdyukov
PRELIMINARY CARD (Un-televised)

Marcos Galvao vs. Damacio Page
Mike Budnik vs. John Franchi
Justin Haskins vs. Mike Pierce
Alex Karalexis vs. Greg McIntyre
Phil Cardella vs. Danny Castillo
Kenji Osawa vs. Rafael Rebello
 
Feb 7, 2006
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How two bizarre fights with Paulo Filho led Chael Sonnen to UFC 95

"I've got something wrong with my arm," Chael Sonnen (21-9-1 MMA, 1-2 UFC) told Kevin Keeney, his close friend and confidant since the latter was 11 years old.

The two run the West Linn (Ore.) All-Phase Wrestling Club that's tailored for kids aspiring to be wrestlers. On this night, Sonnen was not going to work the mat with his students.

Although he was able to attack and defend himself, each time Sonnen's left arm was in the rest position, the pain was impossible to ignore.

At that point he recalled a recent massage when he told the therapist about his painful wing. She asked if he was sick, and Sonnen said yes, to his stomach. The therapist replied that it was the first sign of a broken bone.

This was 10 days before the biggest fight of Sonnen's life, a rematch with World Extreme Cagefighting middleweight champion Paulo Filho at WEC 36 back in November. One of Sonnen's biggest cares in this world is to be a champion – not for the fame, the glory or the money, but for the accomplishment – which is why he refused to get an X-ray until after the fight.

He was showing up to the physical and not telling another soul about his arm.

Nothing was going to deprive Chael Sonnen. Not a broken appendage, not excruciating pain, nothing that was within his control. What denied him were Filho and the demons that were consuming him.

A substance abuse problem landed Filho, once considered perhaps the world's top middleweight, higher than even Anderson Silva, into a rehab clinic and postponed an original March rematch of Sonnen's controversial submission loss in December 2007. This time, Filho showed up at the weigh-in an unbelievable seven pounds overweight.

Sonnen's title shot was gone. Because Filho failed to make weight, the bout was rendered a non-title affair. The execution was boring and traumatic. En route to Sonnen winning a lackluster unanimous decision, Filho was apparently talking to himself in the cage and suffered a breakdown that drew recollections of boxer Oliver McCall crying in the middle of the ring during his rematch with Lennox Lewis.

Upset with the result, UFC matchmaker Joe Silva was through with Filho and was set to cut the cord with Sonnen, who entered the WEC after a 1-2 stretch with the UFC in 2007. Then he found out the fighter took the fight with a serious arm injury, and just like that, Sonnen was back in Silva's good graces.

Fighting for the first time in the UFC since May 27, 2006, Sonnen faces Demian Maia on the Spike TV-televised UFC 95 main card, which takes place Saturday in London, England. There is a lot more the public should know about Sonnen; there are many layers to his game and personality. And while Sonnen won't have the luxury of time on his side, he also refuses to suffer a loss to a rising, albeit late-blooming, contender.

"MMA isn't my passion; being the best in the world is," Sonnen told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "MMA is what I've elected to pursue in order to fulfill that goal. (UFC President) Dana White has created an industry that makes it fun and exciting for me and others to chase our dreams. I have a small window of opportunity with sports, so I have to do this now."

His name doesn't roll off the tongue with precision. But to the hardcore fan, Sonnen is known and known well. He's traveled from one end of the continental U.S. to the other. His MMA resume is bulleted with bouts in Tokyo, Osaka, Vancouver and Costa Rica. His cumulative record is 21-9-1, which at first glance has him teetering on the fence between legit contender and journeyman, and potential chicken-feed for the 31-year-old Maia, who is undefeated in nine MMA fights and a winner of his first four UFC bouts via submission.

Sonnen is also 31 and has won seven out of his past eight fights – the lone loss coming in the first Filho fight when referee Josh Rosenthal prematurely stopped it even though Sonnen, caught in an armbar, never actually gave up – verbally (aside from an audible yelp) or otherwise. Rather than use a striking game to neutralize Maia's relentless ground attack, Sonnen will stick his with greatest talent, a wrestling ability nurtured since age 9 that earned him All-American Freestyle honors at West Linn (Ore.) High School and twice junior national runner-up honors.

"Maia is very dangerous, but who's not?" Sonnen said. "The UFC isn't the place you go to learn how to fight. All the guys under contract with Zuffa are dangerous."

Not all men are created equal, especially when Sonnen, who simply has a different way of thinking than everybody else. For one thing, he has few interests beyond mixed martial arts. He holds no hobbies, and the only reason why he follows football is to root against his alma mater, the University of Oregon. He's constantly pinpricking others, not because he's a prick by nature, but only to ruffle one's nerves. That natural ability would have served him well if Sonnen, a near-graduate of the World Championship Wrestling Power Plant, had not been denied his desire to become a pro wrestler when WCW was bought out by its rival, World Wrestling Entertainment (nee WWF).

In wrestling, the best characters are extensions of their true selves. Sonnen's blunt edge would have made him the perfect foil to any fan favorite. His reasons for disliking the Ducks football team are rooted. He takes great pleasure over how one of Oregon's most famous alumni, Joey Harrington, went from the third-overall pick in the 2002 NFL Draft to one of the biggest busts in history.

"He doesn't like Joey, probably because Joey is from Portland as well and it would take some sort of limelight away from Chael," Keeney told MMAjunkie.com. "But he would be brutally honest about it too.

"It's that kind of mentality where he can get in front of a mic, and he's not afraid to say things like that. I think somebody in the WEC said it best when he was walking into the cage: 'Chael Sonnen is the nicest asshole I've ever met.' There's a lot of truth to that. He says stuff that's completely horrible sometimes, but the way he says it, you know he's trying to get a rise. He's just trying to be funny. That's just how it is."

With pro wrestling by the wayside, Sonnen made an unsuccessful bid at the 2000 Olympic wrestling team, but seeds were planted. He had tried his hand at MMA before, competing against Trevor Prangley in a 1999 amateur bout, and he had trained with Dan Henderson and Randy Couture to prepare for the Olympic trials. Sonnen followed the duo to train at Team Quest and a new career was born.

Sonnen made his professional MMA debut in 2002 with a decision win over notable Jason "Mayhem" Miller at "HFP 1: Rumble On The Reservation" and won his first five bouts before losses to Prangley and a then-unknown Forrest Griffin, with a draw against PRIDE veteran Akihiro Gono in between. Such a path of resistance has been blocked from Sonnen's memory. Ask him for an evaluation on how his career has evolved from the first time he stepped into a cage through now, and he'll hesitate.

"I have a hard time assessing myself," Sonnen says. "I work really hard, and I'm not afraid to compete. I'm the only guy in the UFC who has never lost at middleweight."

(His undefeated opponent, Maia, would obviously disagree. But he's a rare exception.)

"All of my blemishes have been at different weights (with the exception of the first Filho fight)," Sonnen said. "That is a good sign. I'm at my best right now. If I were to fight myself from a year ago, the me of today would win."

Even if Sonnen defeats Maia, even if he brings Maia to his knees or knocks him out in spectacular fashion, MMA is only a small stepping stone. Sonnen owns a degree in sociology and business from the University of Oregon, and he also holds a job in real estate. There's a bigger plan in place, one that no obstacle – not Maia, not a cold that slowed him a bit in training prior to his departure for London on Monday, not a 33-month absence from the Ultimate Fighting Championship – will deny.

"I have no choice," Sonnen says. "I must beat him."

Sonnen wants it all, and he plans on taking it. Anything that gets in his way, he'll conceal. Any motivation he has to prod you, he won't hold back. Like it or not, that's just the way it is.
 
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Following Strike Box debacle, James Thompson returns at March's Sengoku

Fresh off a disastrous Strike Box fight with Steve Bosse that nearly caused an arena-wide riot earlier this month, PRIDE and EliteXC veteran James Thompson (14-9) will return to action next month at World Victory Road's Sengoku Seventh Battle.

A source close to the fighter told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that WVR officials are close to finalizing an opponent for Thompson. However, Thompson's agent, Ken Pavia from MMAAgents.com, declined to comment.

Sengoku Seventh Battle takes place March 20 at the National Yoyogi Stadium in Tokyo, Japan, and airs on HDNet.

The event also features a light-heavyweight bout of Ryo Kawamura vs. Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal, as well as the opening round of Sengoku's featherweight grand prix.

At Strike Box's debut event on Feb. 6 in Canada, the organization hadn't received permission from the Quebec athletic commission to hold the event under its proposed modified rules, which didn't allow ground fighting. Therefore, the event could only be sanctioned under MMA rules; however, all of the night's competitors, including Thompson and Bosse, reportedly made an agreement to adhere by Strike Box's preferred rules.

Not until the night's main event did any problems arise. When Thompson took the fight to the mat and battered Bosse with a steady stream of ground and pound, fans began throwing debris, including chairs and cans, into the cage to protest the apparent breach of agreement. Referee Yves Lavigne was forced to halt the fight, which was ruled a no-contest.

The victory would have been Thompson's first since since April 2007, when he scored a first-round TKO of Don Frye. Thompson is 1-4 in his past five fights (and 2-7 in his past nine), which included a third-round TKO loss to Kevin "Kimbo Slice" Ferguson at "EliteXC: PRIMETIME" in May 2008.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC 94 officially draws 14,885 for $4.29 million gate, according to NSAC

A Jan. 31 UFC 94 event that featured the long-anticipated rematch between UFC welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre and lightweight title-holder B.J. Penn officially drew 14,885 attendees for a live gate of $4,290,020.

Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Director Keith Kizer today emailed the figures to MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

The totals were in line with the preliminary attendance figure (14,885) and the live gate total ($4.3 million) UFC officials disclosed in a post-UFC 94 press conference.

Of the 14,885 attendees, only 1,263 (8.49 percent) received complimentary tickets.

UFC 94 now goes down as the sixth-largest gate in UFC history and the highest-attended UFC event among the 13 shows that have been held at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas to date.

UFC's all-time top gates:

UFC 66 (Liddell vs. Ortiz II): $5,397,300 gate (12,191 attendance)
UFC 83 (St. Pierre vs. Serra II): $5,100,000 gate (21,390 attendance)
UFC 79 (St. Pierre vs. Hughes): $4,994,050 gate (9,704 attendance)
UFC 91 (Couture vs. Lesnar): $4,815,675 gate (13,224 attendance)
UFC 71 (Liddell vs. Jackson): $4,304,740 gate (13,224 attendance)
UFC 94 (St. Pierre vs. Penn II): $4,290,020 gate (14,885 attendance)
(For more on the figures, check out our previous UFC 94 gate and attendance report.)

Aside from St. Pierre's dominating fourth-round TKO over Penn, the event, which sold out in just a few weeks' time, may best be remembered for the number of fights that went to the judges' scorecards. On a 10-fight card, the first eight bouts all went to decision. Five ended via split decision.
 
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UFC signs lightweight Josh Neer to a new four-fight deal

Following his second-round submission victory over "The Ultimate Fighter 6" winner Mac Danzig earlier this month at UFC Fight Night 17, lightweight Josh Neer (25-7-1 MMA, 4-4 UFC) has signed a new four-fight contract with the UFC.

Mickey Dubberly, CEO of KO Dynasty, today told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) of his client's signing.

The new deal deal comes after a stretch in which Neer has gone 4-1 in his past five fights and 8-2 since November 2006.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The signing also comes less than two months after Neer was arrested following an early-morning New Year's Day police chase in which he was charged with second-offense operating a vehicle while intoxicated and eluding police.

Neer put the episode behind him, and after the UFC decided to keep him on the card, the 25-year-old fighter topped Danzig in a truly entertaining UFC Fight Night 17 bout at the USF Sun Dome in Tampa. Neer earned a $30,000 Fight of the Night bonus for the effort.

"We would like to thank the UFC for being very supportive of Josh throughout his career and awarding his hard work with a new contract," Dubberly stated in an email. "The UFC is where Josh wants to fight. ... (He) is more focused than ever and is looking forward to his next fight in the UFC."

Neer is a six-year MMA professional who made his UFC debut in 2005. He's currently in his third stint with the organization.

There's no word on his next fight or opponent.
 
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MARQUARDT ONLY SEES AT WHAT'S IN FRONT OF HIM

To be the top contender in the UFC's middleweight division, fighters have to travel a tough road to get close to champion Anderson Silva. Working his way back to a rematch with Silva may be even tougher, but that's exactly what Nate Marquardt is striving for when he steps into the cage Saturday night to fight rising 185-pound star Wilson Gouveia at UFC 95 in London.

Having moved past his loss to Silva in July 2007, Marquardt has never been shy about his desire to get back to the title shot. One way that seems almost flawless is to be a coach on "The Ultimate Fighter." While the upcoming season already has leaders in Dan Henderson and Michael Bisping, it was Marquardt who was hoping for his shot on the show.

"I wanted to do it and I think the UFC was considering me, but things happen, they have their reasoning’s," Marquardt said about The Ultimate Fighter season nine. "I’m happy with what I have now. I'm sure that's still a possibility for the future."

Never one to focus on the past, he now looks towards a bright future, one that became even brighter after a first round drubbing of former middleweight contender Martin Kampmann in September 2007. Now he's ready to continue the path that leads him back to the title, but his eyes never stray from the mission at hand.

"All I'm really doing is focusing on what's in front of me now," Marquardt said about his fight against Gouveia. "I've got a tough fight ahead of me now and as long as I stay focused everything will fall in place."

Since dropping to the middleweight division, Gouveia has won his last two in a row, most recently dispatching of Jason MacDonald in December 2007. Marquardt was happy with the choice in opponent and he knows what a tough customer Gouveia can be.

"I was excited. He came off a couple of big wins and he's kind of a big name right now in the middleweights, so I'm excited," Marquardt said about his opponent.

Training with some of the best in the world at Team Jackson, the former seven-time King of Pancrase knows that Gouveia is also getting top-notch instruction at his camp at American Top Team. While admitting that his opponent trains with great fighters, Marquardt is more concerned with what he's going to do in the fight.

"I know my training and all I really care about is my training," Marquardt stated. "Every fight I want to fight the best opponent I can, so I hope Wilson shows up in shape cause I know I'm going to be in shape."

Marquardt had a familiar cast of fighters working in his camp that traveled from his home in Colorado to New Mexico and all the way to Montreal. Georges St. Pierre, Rashad Evans, Keith Jardine, Joey Villasenor, Shane Carwin, and others let Marquardt know that he's got a family beside him when it comes time to fight.

"We're like brothers," he said about his teammates.

With the training camp winding down, Marquardt closed out his camp at home in Denver before packing up and heading overseas to England. Even though he'll be the only one fighting Gouveia in the cage, he will have almost his entire team there on Saturday night to support him as he takes another step towards a return shot at the UFC middleweight title.
 
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MARKHAM READY FOR GOOD OLD-FASHIONED FIGHT

Twenty-six-year-old Pat Miletich product Rory Markham lives by an old boxing saying: In the ring, the truth will find you.

“That’s my truth,” he tells MMAWeekly Radio. “You hit me, I’ll hit you twice. You hit me twice – I’ll hit you four times. That’s just who I am.”

And so far, Markham has not been afraid of the truth. His give one-take two style has served him well – of 16 career wins, 11 have been by KO or TKO. It's a marriage of convenience: he’s good at throwing shots, and fans like it. But he can’t be that way forever; he has a five-year plan that doesn’t involve throwing himself on the sword every time he’s in training room or the cage.

“Eventually I’ll reinvent myself, and look farther out and make sure that I become more of a Georges St. Pierre if I’m going to take it to the next level,” he says.

In other words, aggression checked by tactical mastery. When he got the call from the UFC in mid-2008, manager Monte Cox told him he would need to add patience to his arsenal of weapons.

“If you can be patient, you’re going to be in a better spot than if you were too anxious,” Markham says of Cox’s advice.

Of course, he needed to put on a show once he got to the sport’s biggest platform. He had idolized his hard-swinging former teammate Robbie Lawler as the example of how to make an impression. At the UFC’s “Silva vs. Irvin” show, he did just that, knocking out fellow newcomer Brodie Farber with a vicious head kick. Even that wasn’t good enough for the Chicago native.

“There’s got to be a way to win these things in a little bit more dominating fashion,” Markham remembers saying.

Right now, he wants to bring his improvements to every performance, because he has time to make changes. Gone are his hectic days with the International Fight League, where he trained for 4-5 weeks, fought, and rested for a week. “They didn’t really understand that we weren’t basketball players or baseball players, that we could be there for every fight,” says Markham of the failed promotion. Like GSP, he wants to hone his individual skills and mix them together come fight time.

“But under no circumstance am I ever going to get away from who I am,” Markham continues.

UFC 95 in England will not be the place where he shifts gears. His opponent, Dan Hardy, also 26, is a budding technician on his feet and is more than willing to throw hands. "There’s no way I can see this thing being boring," Markham comments. It’s certain that American will play the heel to the Nottingham resident, but in the end, he believes English fans really just want to see a “good old-fashioned fight.”

“And that’s what I’m going to give them,” he concludes.
 
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FISHER WELCOMES UNO BACK AT UFC 99 IN GERMANY

After short courtship, Caol Uno appears headed back to the Octagon.

The former UFC lightweight and Japanese mainstay is expected to make his return to the American promotion in July at UFC 99 against tough veteran Spencer Fisher.

The fight is the first bout to be confirmed for the UFC’s first trip to Germany, set for June 13 in Cologne.

Though bout agreements have not been sent for either fighter, sources close to Fisher and Uno’s camps have confirmed that they have agreed to face each other. The fight is expected to be finalized by the end of this week.

A source close to Uno said his December loss to Shinya Aoki in the finals of Dream’s Lightweight Grand Prix completed his obligations to the Japanese promotion. Subsequently, matchmakers for World Victory Road attempted to sign him to fight in Sengoku, but were rebuffed. At UFC 94, he was seen palling around with UFC President Dana White, who later confirmed his interest in Uno.

Since leaving the UFC, Uno kept in the winning percentile, racking up 10 wins to 5 losses with K-1 Hero's and Dream. Save for a decision loss to Andre Amade at the K-1 Hero’s Tournament Final in 2007, the 33-year-old fighter’s losses came only from Top 10 ranked opponents. In the UFC, his luck was mixed, with three wins and losses and a sole draw. One of Shooto’s early stars, Uno has an overall record of 25-11-4 in 12-plus years of competition.

Fisher, 32, rebounded from a UFC 78 decision loss to Frank Edgar with two straight victories against up-and-comers Jeremy Stephens and Shannon Gugerty at The Ultimate Fighter 7 finale and UFC 90, respectively. A perennial contender in the lightweight division, he has amassed seven victories with three defeats in his three years with the UFC.
 
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Dave Jansen to replace Brian Cobb this Saturday at M-1 Challenge Opener

M-1 Global officials have announced that undefeated Team Quest product Dave Jansen has been signed to Team USA West for this Saturday’s M-1 Challenge opener at the Emerald Queen Casino near Tacoma, Washington.

Jansen replaces Brian Cobb, who had been slated to represent Team USA West in its best-of-five series against Team Brazil Naja.

The move to sign Jansen was necessitated after Cobb signed a multi-fight agreement with the UFC in order to accept a last-minute fight at UFC 95 this Saturday against Terry Etim.

“Those people who know me know I am a glass is half full kind of fight promoter,” USA Team West co-owner Roy Engelbrecht is quoted as saying in a press release. “So as the managing partner of the USA West Team in the 2009 ‘M-1 Challenge President by Affliction,’ I hear about Brian Cobb signing with the UFC to fight this coming Saturday in London, it was like bad news/good news for me. The bad news is that we had lost Brian but the good news is that we were able to sign Dave Jansen as the replacement.”

Jansen, 8-0, trains under Matt Lindland and Robert Follis at Team Quest in Portland, Oregon and is set to take on former Rio Heroes and Vale Tudo veteran Flavio Alvara of Brazil Naja in a lightweight encounter.

“I am really excited,” Jansen is quoted. “This was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. To be able to fight a tough and experienced guy like Flavio Alvara is the test I’ve been waiting for. I’m ready to step up.”

The 29-year old Jansen accepted the fight vs. Alvara even though just competed on Feb. 6 during the inaugural show for the World Cagefighting Alliance. Facing former BodogFIGHT veteran Matt Lee in front of a capacity crowd at the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, N.J., Jansen maintained his perfect record after submitting Lee with an Anaconda choke just three minutes into the fight.

Despite only having 15 days between fights, Jansen feels he’s more than ready.

“Physically I think I am in the best shape of my life,” he said. “My preparation for my last fight went smoothly and the I didn’t take any damage in the fight itself. Leading up to the fight, I had done incredible amounts of cardio… And with only a few weeks having passed, I don’t think I’ve lost any of that stamina.”

In addition to Team USA West vs. Team Brazil Naja, the ‘09 season opener will feature a total of three head-to-head matchups with 15 fights. Returning champions Russia Imperial Team (formerly known as Russian Red Devil) will be taking on South Korea and the returning Team Finland will also be squaring off with the debuting Team Benelux.

Complete lineups for Saturday’s opener are as follows:

Finland vs. Benelux (best of five) -

Lightweight (154 lbs./-70 kg): Juha-Pekka Vainikainen (Finland) vs. Danny van Bergen (Benelux)
Welterweight (167.2 lbs./-76 kg): Janne Tulrinta (Finland) vs. Tommy Depret (Benelux)
Middleweight (184.8 lbs./-84 kg): Lucio Linhares (Finland) vs. Kamil Uygun (Benelux)
Light Heavyweight (204.6 lbs./-93 kg): Marcus Vanttinen (Finland) vs. Jason Jones (Benelux)
Heavyweight (204.7 lbs.-plus/+93 kg): Toni Valtonen (Finland) vs. Sander Duyvis (Benelux)
South Korea vs. The Imperial Team (best of five) -

Lightweight (154 lbs./-70 kg): Dohyung Kim (South Korea) vs. Mikhail Malyutin (Imperial)
Welterweight (167.2 lbs./-76 kg): Myungho Bae (South Korea) vs. Erik Oganov (Imperial)
Middleweight (184.8 lbs./-84 kg): Hyungyu Lim (South Korea) vs. Dmirty Somoylov (Imperial)
Light Heavyweight (204.6 lbs./-93 kg): Jae Young Kim (South Korea) vs. Mikhail Zayats (Imperial)
Heavyweight (204.7 lbs.-plus/+93 kg): Sang Soo Lee (South Korea) vs. Alexey Oleinik (Imperial)
Team USA West vs. Team Brazil Naja (best of five) -

Lightweight (154 lbs./-70 kg): Dave Jansen (USA West) vs. Flavio Roberto Alvaro (Brazil)
Welterweight (167.2 lbs./-76 kg): Dylan Clay (USA West) vs. Eduardo Pamplona (Brazil)
Middleweight (184.8 lbs./-84 kg): Reggie Orr (USA West) vs. Juliano Cioffi Belgine (Brazil)
Light Heavyweight (204.6 lbs./-93 kg): Raphael Davis (USA West) vs. Jair Goncalves Junior (Brazil)
Heavyweight (204.7 lbs.-plus/+93 kg): Carl Seumanutafa (USA West) vs. Jose Edson dos Santos Franca (Brazil)
 
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Diaz vs Shamrock: The Sizzle Sells

Strikeforce recently announced they would make their debut on Showtime with an April 11th card headlined by Frank Shamrock vs Nick Diaz. While neither fighter are within spitting distance of anyone’s Top 10, the fight looks to be one of the more enticing bouts in the next couple of months. The fight falls on the far end of the entertainment vs sport spectrum, but that may not necessarily be a bad thing.

A straight sell on the sporting aspects of MMA can vary greatly. Match two of the top 5 pound 4 pound guys on the planet like BJ Penn and Georges St Pierre, and you can do huge numbers like UFC 94 has purported to do. On the other hand throw together two guys also in most folks Top 10 p4p at the time they fought, Dan Henderson and Anderson Silva, and the numbers fall somewhat flat. Conversely, some of the bigger box offices on PPV have had little in the way of sporting impact (Shamrock vs Otiz 2, Hughes vs Gracie).

The month of April will give a contrast of sorts for the two booking options available, sport vs entertainment. Anderson Silva vs. Thales Leites will take place and will do serviceable numbers based on the UFC brand. It will feature the unquestioned best 185 lber in the world, but from a perspective of a fight that gets the juices flowing, the fight that I will be looking most forward to that month will be Frank vs Nick. One would have a hard job making a case that Frank Shamorck is a top ten fighter at 185 anymore, but his fights with Phil Baroni and Cung Le over the past two years have been a couple of the more entertaining fights that have taken place. The build to these fights were almost as much fun as the fights themselves, the Baroni fight especially. A fight like Diaz vs Shamrock is almost as much about the sizzle as it is about the steak. The “MMA purist” may scoff at the fight but this is a guilty pleasure that will be well worth indulging.

Shamrock was eloquent in making his point recently in talking to MMAWeekly about a showdown with Tito Ortiz, but the gist of it holds true:

“We’re in the business of sports entertainment and we’re all entertainers. We just happen to fight,” Shamrock stated. “If you’re not entertaining both in the fight and leading up to the fight, you’re not a good entertainer, and there’s a lot of fighters we have that are not good entertainers.
 
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Demian Maia Interview

Ready to fight Chael Sonnen at UFC 95, Demian Maia knows that the American isn’t an easy fight. “The man who defeated Paulo Filho” always includes every report about him, and the Brazilian knows that he’ll have to be in shape to put him down and do what he knows best: Jiu-Jitsu. In an exclusive interview to TATAME.com, the undefeated middleweight spoke about his expectations for the fight, the training with Wanderlei Silva, his bets to Anderson vs. Thales, a possible fight with Anderson Silva, if he remains the champion, TUF 8 and ADCC 2009. Check below the exclusive interview with Demian.

What do you expect of this fight against Chael Sonnen?
Of course he is a tricky opponent, he’s very strategic, will try to annul my game all the time, will try to make his points and try to stay away from the ground, not to expose and try to win the fight on points, this is what is complicated about him. He is a guy with a high level of Greco, Grappling, always efficient for a MMA fight. But I believe in my Jiu-Jitsu, I believe I can submit him the same way I did in other fights.

What do you expect of the fight between Thales and Anderson?
It is a very difficult fight, and I want to watch it. Thales is a man of very high level of Jiu-Jitsu and Anderson is the best in the world, nowadays, in the MMA. I believe a lot in Jiu-Jitsu, then I think that Thales is able to deal with Anderson, but I won’t adventure a guess, because he has a great Jiu-Jitsu, but Anderson is an opponent that has no words to describe. To me, he's the best MMA fighter pound for pound in the world.

If you win this fight and get a titleshot, what would be the way for you to win Anderson Silva?
If he is the champion when I fight, that I hope it happens soon, it would be the obvious way that everybody knows, that would be take the fight to my area, which is the Jiu-Jitsu. And his, to beat me, is to keep me in his area that is the part of Muay Thai, the fight on foot. This isn’t a secret, but just on the time you see what way the fight will take, sometimes surprises happen, I can have a lucky punch on foot, like Napão (Gabriel Gonzaga) on Cro Cop, give a standing knockout, and he can take me down and submit me on the ground. Fighting is fighting, you never know what will happen.

And how was your experience at The Ultimate Fighter? You were invited to join Frank Mir's team against Minotauro’s team. How was that experience?
My manager, Jim Albert, invited me, said it was a great show. He spoke about me to Frank, who invited me by Jim's influence. It was a great experience, I trained the boys, helped them with what I could in Jiu-Jitsu, you have to get used to the cameras, it’s a realty show, it’s a different timing. Despite of being against the Minotauro’s team, who is also my friend, everybody was together. Behind the scenes, we stayed talking, even Minotauro and Frank too, laughing, Amauri (Bitetti), the Brazilians, me, Robert (Drysdale)... it was very nice.

How was the experience of starting to train with Wanderlei Silva?
I watched his first MMA fight here in São Paulo, when I was a kid. It’s a wonderful experience to have the opportunity to train with a guy who I believe will be champion again, but that was, for many years, unbeaten and the world's best. He and Minotauro, who until today I think are the best representatives that Brazil already had. Anderson is very well today, but with certainty of constancy and victories, Minotauro and Wanderlei are the two most representative Brazilian fighters in the history of the MMA, today. It’s an honor to train with him and have the doors open, all he helps me and teaches me, the great person he is, just makes me happy.

You also train with Alejarra, Wanderlei’s physical coach, and you’re even bringing him to São Paulo. What is the differential of his trainings?
He’s an excellent professional, technically speaking. He knows a lot of physical preparation, of physiology, of everything. He knows how to do the training. It has also excellent coaches in the technical part, but is this psychological part and that motivates you, he is one of the few. This is what makes him unique, he is excellent in that part. He adds that with the heart, the love on what he does, to put up, which is very rare to happen.


You're next get a titleshot in the UFC, but we can’t forget that you won the last ADCC and you’re automatically invited to defend your title. What do you expect of this competition in this category, are you motivated to this? Will you fight it?
I’m very motivated, I want to fight for sure. It will depend on if I don’t have a fight in the UFC next to it, I which is a little later. If it is before, fine. However, if it will be a little later, is complicated for me because I will be in preparation for the UFC fight and I can’t break it to fight the ADCC. For me, is the second goal. Winning the UFC’s title is the first and then be two time champions of the ADCC.
 
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Alexander Emelianenko Fight’s March.29

According to the Russian ProFC site, Aleksander Emelianenko will face Ibragim Magomedov on March 29 in Russia.

Quoted and Translated from Russian ProFC:

The main event of the evening will feature the top star fighter from tournaments such as «Pride» and «Mix-Fight M-1» - Alexander Emelianenko. AE’s opponent could be another famous Russian fighter - Ibragim Magomedov.

For those who do not remember Ibragim Magomedov, he was the fighter who fought Mirko Crocop and lost via Liver kick.
 
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Frank Shamrock Open to UFC and Silva!

In a recent interview with DreamFighters.com, Frank Shamrock was open about his desire to fight Silva, Tito, and possibly join the UFC.

DreamFighters.com: If you win against Nick, who is next on your list? Is there anyone in particular you would like to fight?

Frank Shamrock: After i beat Nick I would like to fight Tito and then Cung Le again. I would still like to fight Ken too if he can get to the ring.

DreamFighters.com: Any desire to go over to Affliction and fight some of their guys who called you out (Vitor Belfort and Tito Ortiz)

Frank Shamrock: I would love to fight both Vitor and Tito. I dont think i will be in the afffiction shows, as i am down with Strikeforce and Showtime.

DreamFighters.com: We have to ask. Any chance we ever see you fighting in the UFC, possibly against Anderson Silva?

Frank Shamrock: I am open to all things. I would love to fight silva and have been a fan for many years.
 
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Kazuhiro Nakamura In ADCC Japan

It was announced today that SENGOKU, PRIDE & UFC veteran Kazuhiro Nakamura will participate in the ADCC Asia preliminaries in Japan on February 22nd. He will participate in the -99 kg class. Also participating are DREAM veteran KTaro Nakamura and SENGOKU veteran Yukiya Naito.

-66kg: Katsuya Toida, Masato Shiozawa, Kohei Yasumi, Tetsu “Hadairo” Suzuki
-77kg: Shinji Sasaki, KTaro Nakamura, Jeong Du Gwang(?)
-99kg: Kazuhiro Nakamura, Yukiya Naito, Akihisa Iriki(?)
 
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KOSCHECK HEADS INTO THE UNKNOWN AT UFC 95

Ultimate Fighting Championship welterweight contender Josh Koscheck takes on UFC newcomer Paulo Thiago at UFC 95 on Feb. 21. The 31-year-old fighter enters the unknown when he steps into the Octagon inside the O2 Arena in London knowing nothing about his Brazilian opponent.

"I don't even know what the guy looks like to be honest with you. I don't even know what he's good at," Koscheck told MMAWeekly.com. "I don't even know what color he is. I have no clue on anything about him. I just know that his name is Paulo Thiago.

"The opportunity came up for me to fight in London. I was like, 'Alright, what the hell, let's go to London.' I don't care who it is, just get me somebody," added the former collegiate NCAA Division I wrestling standout. "The UFC said Paulo Thiago, and I said, 'Alright. I'll take it.' I don't even know him, but I'll take it."

Knowing little about his opponents is nothing new for the American Kickboxing Academy trained Koscheck. He was in a similar situation heading into his last fight with Yoshiyuki Yoshida, where he delivered a devastating, highlight reel knockout over the Japanese prospect.

"I don't really study my opponents. I just worry about what I've got to do," he said. "I just get in the gym and train. I don't care who I'm fighting. I don't care where it's at. I'm just going to show up at my best, be in great shape, train my butt off, put on a show, and hopefully I can come out with a victory."

The Top 5 ranked welterweight has a lot to lose in his UFC 95 match up, while his opponent, Thiago, has everything to gain.

"It's a win-win for him," commented Koscheck. "He's a new guy coming in. Nobody really knows him, and if he beats me he'll be right up there in the top of the division. I've definitely got to be ready. I'm not underestimating anybody. I prepare very serious. I trained hard. I just trained to fight.

"I'll be prepared. I won't have any excuses win or lose," he continued. "I'm just going to show up, and I'm going to fight my butt off and hopefully come out with a victory."
 
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PARISYAN REMAINS UNDER TEMPORARY SUSPENSION

Keith Kizer, executive director for the Nevada State Athletic Commission, said the suspension of UFC welterweight Karo Parisyan will hold until a formal complaint against him is heard at the regulatory body’s next meeting in mid-March.

Kizer, on Feb. 10, issued a temporary suspension of the 26-year-old athlete when his post-UFC 94 drug test revealed the presence of painkillers Hydrocodone, Hydromorphoone, and Oxycodone.

During a commission meeting on Tuesday afternoon in Las Vegas, NSAC officials concluded its agenda could not accommodate a “full” hearing of the complaint against Parisyan, and that both officials and Parisyan needed more notice before the commission levies a formal decision on the matter.

Parisyan was in attendance, and told officials he would welcome the opportunity to tell his side of the story in person at the March meeting. Any possible punishment against him would be recommended then, according to Kizer.

“It was my problem that I didn’t carefully read the instructions on the paper (provided) by the commission,” Parisyan told the commission.

He has publicly disclosed his use of prescription medication stemming from a turbulent year in and out of the Octagon.

Following the positive test, Parisyan told MMAWeekly.com he took pain medication for injuries sustained in his last three years as a mixed martial artist. Prior to his split decision victory over Hyun, an injury to his sciatic nerve forced him to withdraw from a UFC 88 fight with Yoshiyuki Yoshida less than 24 hours before it was scheduled to take place. In November of 2005, Parisyan severely tore his hamstring in preparation for a fight with Matt Hughes and was forced from the UFC 56 title bout.

Parisyan said he neglected to disclose his drug use in the pre-fight medical paper work for UFC 94, informing NSAC official Tony Lato at the post-fight drug test that he had taken a pain pill the night of the weigh-ins.

“I did not even think about any of that stuff,” said Parisyan. “I was just thinking about my fight, and my anxiety and how I’m going to walk in the cage. I had so many problems in my head. I didn’t even think I should write – I was just doing it fast, fast, fast, just to get out there and weigh in and fight. I completely forgot about all this stuff.

“When he asked me after the fight, my mind was calm, my body was calm, and I was thinking about the urine test. They say I didn’t say it before, and I know that’s my mistake.”

Parisyan told MMAWeekly.com he planned to admit his use of the pain medication at the March hearing. He hoped his mistake would not cost him a planned bout with Josh Koscheck at UFC 98.

“This is the way I make my living,” he said. “I need to fight.”