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Feb 7, 2006
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Munoz Vows to Test His Wrestling Against Hamill’s

For every fighter, there’s that moment when you hit the crossroads in a real match and get formally initiated into the ranks. For Mark Munoz, the gut check came in the opening moments of his June 2008 WEC bout with Chuck Grigsby, when the 6-foot-6 slugger nailed him with a potent right uppercut.

Munoz’s head snapped back, he wobbled ever so slightly, then resumed circling.

“It was right on the chin. It was good. I thought he was far away from me, and I was circling away, and he had such a long reach. You know, when he hit me with it, I thought, ‘We’re in a fight now,’” said Munoz, 5-0, of the toughest moment of his career. “’OK. I’ve really got to move my head, close the gap and get to where I want to be.’ It put a sense of urgency in me.”

Munoz did just that, taking Grigsby down, where he delivered a series of right hands while standing, tossed Grigsby’s legs aside and smashed him into defeat for a jolting finish.

Munoz’s WEC career consisted of the Grigsby fight and a first-round stoppage of Ricardo Barros before the division was scrapped by the organization. But now he is set to debut on another big stage, against Matt Hamill this Saturday at UFC 96.

A state champion who grew up in Vallejo (a few miles east of San Francisco), Munoz now lives in Mission Viejo, conveniently located between San Diego and Los Angeles, where he shuttles around meeting the prescribed training regimen for each particular day.

“I go to wherever I need go,” said Munoz, who is a married father of four. “Jokers Wild Fighting Academy at Lake Forest, Babalu (Sobral’s) gym in Cerritos. I’ll go down to San Diego and train with Brandon Vera, and the Gracie gym in Torrance.”

He also has sessions with Jake Shields.

“Jake is awesome, a wizard on the ground,” Munoz said of the last and only EliteXC welterweight champ. “He teaches me a lot as far as interweaving wrestling with jiu-jitsu. He’s a vital asset to me and a great training partner.”

Munoz went from a virtual unknown to another promising blip on the sport’s radar with the nationally televised win over Grigsby, but his tales of gym prowess are quickly developing him a name among fighters and those close to the sport. Urijah Faber, who pestered him for months to turn pro, calls him “an animal.”

Fellow northern California high school wrestler Rick Randolph was three years ahead of Munoz in high school, took seventh in state and knows the name from way back. Randolph, who is gunning for the Gladiator Challenge heavyweight belt the same night Munoz battles Hamill, had high praise for the 2001 NCAA champ as well. He believes the much-hyped “wrestler versus wrestler” angle of the Hamill-Munoz matchup won’t turn out to be as competitive as many think.

“He’s just a dominant, dominant guy,” Randolph said. “Mark Munoz is an NCAA national champion. That’s not good (for Hamill). Mark Munoz is a ridiculous wrestler. It’s not even in the same category. That’s essentially where he’s at. Hamill’s good, but the wrestling is not gonna be an issue. The wrestling will be dominated by Munoz. When you go with a guy at that level, it’s like, ‘How did you dominate me?’”

Or there’s James Irvin’s summation of grappling with Munoz, offered up in a January 2007 conversation with this writer before Munoz turned pro and was still prepping for his debut.

“It’s bad,” Irvin said, shaking his head. “Really, really bad.”

Manager Mike Roberts said that Munoz’s standup has improved since the Grigsby fight.

“A lot of people are going to be surprised when they see him out-strike Hamill,” Roberts said. “He’s been working on everything to become the total package. And the grappling will be dominated by Mark.”

Munoz is excited to get the chance to tangle with Hamill, whose improvement since his appearance on “The Ultimate Fighter” has been considerable.

Once strictly relegated to a wrestling-based approach, Hamill has developed some striking and seems to have the kind of natural aggression and will to carry him through rough spots. He lost a disputed decision to Michael Bisping, bounced back with a quality win over Tim Boetsch, was stopped by Rich Franklin and rebounded again to pound out Reese Andy. He’s a pretty tough opponent to take on during your first appearance under the UFC banner. Welcome to the neighborhood, kid.

“It’s a great matchup for me. Wrestler versus wrestler. But it’s not gonna be a wrestling match,” Munoz said. “It’s gonna be, I feel like, whomever has adjusted to MMA better. That’s going to win the fight. All the in-between techniques. The transitions between wrestling and other disciplines. It’s going to be an interesting fight. I’d like it to be exciting. I know Matt Hamill’s gonna want to stand. In a lot of fights, he uses his wrestling sporadically. I like to use wrestling to set up other things.

“I think obviously his strength is his takedowns. But I haven’t seen much ground game from him. I’ve seen a lot of front headlock punches, and once he gets guys tired and worn down, he’s like a juggernaut. He keeps coming forward. He wears them out with those front headlock punches, dirty boxing punches. Uses wrestling to tire the guys out, but I haven’t really seen him doing ground-and-pound when he’s in guard or half-guard.”

Nonetheless, Munoz still has a big challenge in front of him. But he’s used to making his own breaks.

A high school state champion at 189 pounds, Munoz was asked to cut to 167 by the legendary John Smith after joining the Oklahoma State University wrestling squad. He complied for the first two years, torturing himself to make a weight that simply wasn’t right for him. He’d argue back and forth with Smith, citing declining performance as the season went on as evidence he wasn’t suited to wrestle that light. Finally, one summer, determined to force the issue, Munoz lifted like a maniac and came into the first practice of the season at 236 pounds. He proceeded to beat up on a blue-chip recruit Smith had pegged for the 197-pound slot. The point had been made -- and he made NCAA All-American his junior year and took the championship in his final season.

Munoz still says he wants to move like a boxer, kick like a muay Thai expert when necessary and embrace the realm when the moment is right. It’s not just about wrestling, but rather the mix of disciplines that excites him. But at the end of the day, he figures he can always take it to the ground, and he wants more finishes like the Grigsby one that fans will notice.

“I kind of want that to be my signature,” Munoz said. “Once it’s on the ground, I feel so comfortable. Because I love the ground. That’s my home. I feel that if they try to submit me, I have great knowledge as far as submission defense that I can scramble out of them.”

And after mixing in the new skills he’s been working on, Munoz figures he and Hamill will eventually settle the wrestling question en route to the finish.

“I haven’t seen much ground (work) from him. Obviously, his standup’s gotten a lot better,” he said. “His weaknesses are, I believe, in his ground game on his back. Nobody’s ever put him there. So yeah, I’m looking to put him on his back.”
 
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Cyborg-Akano Join Strikeforce Card

Submission savvy Hitomi Akano has agreed to face Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos at Strikeforce “Shamrock vs. Diaz" on April 11 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, Calif., Sherdog.com has learned.

Strikeforce Director of Communications Mike Afromowitz confirmed on Wednesday that the bout was moving forward.

Akano, who won the Smackgirl 128-pound title in 2006, will face the feared Chute Boxe striker at 145 pounds for the first of three fights with the promotion. Akano, a judo International Cup champion, may also compete in the 135-pound division.

A 2009 Abu Dhabi World Submission Grappling Championships finalist, Akano (14-5) has earned 11 of her 14 wins by submission, including her last three to Megumi Yabushita, Yuko Yamanaka and Hari Hari, who Akano snagged with an armbar at Jewels 1 last November.

Santos (6-1) has bullied her way to the top of the food chain by winning her last six fights with four stoppages. Santos also won over U.S. fans with her last two appearances for EliteXC, taking out Shayna Baszler and Yoko Takahashi with her brutal striking.

Big things are expected from the Strikeforce women’s division this year and beyond, as the promotion attempts to carry the torch ignited by the now defunct EliteXC promotion.

At the top of the list, the 29-year-old Santos is on a collision course with undefeated superstar Gina Carano (6-0), whose contract was also purchased by Strikeforce in a recent asset acquisition with EliteXC parent company Pro Elite.

Akano-Santos joins a card led by a 179-pound contest between outspoken UFC veterans Frank Shamrock and Nick Diaz and a featured lightweight rematch between Strikeforce lightweight champion Josh Thomson and Gilbert Melendez.

Strikeforce “Shamrock vs. Diaz” will be broadcast live on Showtime.
 
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Hughes-Serra Set; Other UFC 98 Bouts Announced

Matt Hughes and Matt Serra will meet May 23 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, the UFC announced Wednesday.

The welterweight grudge match will be featured on a UFC 98 card headlined by the Brock Lesnar vs. Frank Mir heavyweight title fight.

The UFC also announced that middleweight title contender Yushin Okami will fight Dan Miller. Okami, the last man to get a win over Anderson Silva (it came via disqualification), is 7-1 in the UFC. Miller is 3-0 in the Octagon and most recently scored an impressive submission of Jake Rosholt in February.

Former lightweight champion Sean Sherk will battle Frankie Edgar in another main card bout.

In light heavyweight prelim action, James Irvin will fight Drew McFedries, and Houston Alexander will fight Andre Gusmao. Patrick Barry, a dangerous kickboxing crossover who easily chopped down Dan Evensen in December, will take on Tim Hague in a heavyweight bout.

Yoshiyuki Yoshida will look to bounce back from his knockout loss to Josh Koscheck when he meets Brandon Wolff at 170 pounds. At 155, “The Ultimate Fighter” finalist Phillipe Nover will fight Kyle Bradley, and David Kaplan will tangle with George Roop.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Indefinite medical suspensions issued to WEC 39's Galvao and Hendricks

The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation's Combative Sports division has issued indefinite medical suspensions to WEC 39 competitors Marcos Galvao and Johny Hendricks.

The Texas athletic commission today confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that both competitors will need clearance from an orthopedic doctor before returning to competition.

WEC 39 took place March 1 at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi, Texas.

Galvao suffered a devastating first-round knockout loss to Damacio Page on the night's preliminary card. Galvao went unconscious and appeared to suffer a seizure as a result of the knockout. However, a post-fight medical examination and subsequent MRI cleared him of any serious injuries, a representative from his team recently told MMAjunkie.com.

Hendricks, meanwhile, scored a unanimous-decision victory over Alex Serdyukov in a preliminary-card bout. Both fighters earned a $7,500 "Fight of the Night" bonus for the effort. Despite the victory, Hendricks suffered significant damage in the bout, and he'll need doctor's clearance before he returns to the cage.

Seventeen of the night's 22 competitors were issued precautionary seven- or 10-day suspensions. Additionally, Phil Cardella, who dropped a split decision to Danny Castillo, was issued a 15-day suspension, and the commission handed down 30-day suspensions to Greg McIntyre and Justin Haskins, who both suffered TKO losses.

The full list of suspensions includes:

Indefinite: Marcos Galvao and Johny Hendricks
30 days: Justin Haskins and Greg McIntyre
15 days: Phil Cardella
10 days: Jose Aldo, Mike Brown, Mike Budnik, Danny Castillo, John Franchi, Leonard Garcia, Marcus Hicks, Ricardo Lamas, Rob McCullough, Chris Mickle, Kenji Osawa, Damacio Page, Mike Pierce, Rafael Rebello, Alex Serdyukov and Bart Palaszewski
7 days: Alex Karalexis
 
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Three fights added to "WEC 40: Torres vs. Mizugaki," bout order released

With the WEC's first trip to the Windy City just over a month away, three organization has announced three additional bouts for the evening's preliminary card.

Anthony Njokuani vs. Anthony Pettis, Dominick Cruz vs. Ivan Lopez and Eddie Wineland vs. Rani Yahya were all announced on the WEC's official website, and the evening's bout order was also shared.

"WEC 40: Torres vs. Mizugaki" takes place April 5 at the UIC Pavilion in Chicago. The main card airs live on VERSUS.

Njokuani (9-2 MMA, 1-0 WEC) will be making his second appearance for the WEC. The Dallas native will be looking to bounce back from a January loss to Benson Henderson at "WEC 38: Varner vs. Cerrone." The former welterweight has four knockouts or TKO's in his nine career wins.

Pettis (6-0 MMA, 0-0 WEC) made his professional debut in December 2007. The Roufusport fighter will be making his WEC debut after a successful six-fight run in the Wisconsin-based Gladiators Fighting Series.

Cruz (12-1 MMA, 2-1 WEC) will carry a three-fight win streak into the bout, including two-straight victories in the WEC. The featherweight has earned unanimous-decision wins over Ian McCall and Charlie Valencia in his past two WEC appearances. Cruz's lone loss came via submission to Urijah Faber at WEC 26 in March 2007.

Lopez (8-0 MMA, 0-0 WEC) will bring an undefeated record into his WEC debut. A seven-time veteran of the Mexican promotion MMA Xtreme, Lopez has four submission and two TKO victories in his eight career wins.

Wineland (14-5-1 MMA, 1-1 WEC) will be making his first appearance for the WEC in just over two years. The former WEC bantamweight champion has won two fights outside of the WEC since his loss to Chase Beebe at WEC 26 in March 2007.

Yahya (12-4 MMA, 1-2 WEC) put an end to a two-fight losing streak with a submission win over Yoshiro Maeda at "WEC 36: Faber vs. Brown" in November 2008. The Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt is just 3-3 in his past six bouts after starting his career 9-1.

With the additions to the card, the officially announced broadcast order now includes:

MAIN CARD (televised)
Champ Miguel Torres vs. Takeya Mizugaki (for bantamweight title)
Joseph Benavidez vs. Jeff Curran
Ben Henderson vs. Shane Roller
Rafael Assuncao vs. Jameel Massouh
PRELIMINARY CARD (un-televised)
Anthony Njokuani vs. Anthony Pettis
Dominick Cruz vs. Ivan Lopez
Diego Nunes vs. Cub Swanson
Wagnney Fabiano vs. Fredson Paixao
Eddie Wineland vs. Rani Yahya
Akitoshi Tamura vs. Manny Tapia
Rafael Dias vs. Cole Province
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Report: Struve vs. Stojnic, Taylor vs. Sobotta at UFC 99

Recently announced UFC 99 competitors Paul Taylor (9-4-1 MMA, 2-3 UFC) and Stefan Struve (16-3 MMA, 0-1 UFC) now have opponents lined up according to a report from the U.K.-based Fighters Only.

Taylor will face UFC newcomer Peter Sobotta (8-1 MMA, 0-0 UFC), while Struve will meet Denis Stojnic (5-2 MMA, 0-1 UFC).

"UFC 99: The Comeback," featuring a main event between Rich Franklin and Wanderlei Silva, takes place June 13 at Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany.

Taylor is returning to action for the first time since UFC 89 in October 2008. The British welterweight suffered a unanimous decision loss to Chris Lytle, but suffered a rib injury that has kept him out of action since the bout.

German welterweight Sobotta will be looking to build on a four-fight win streak.

Heavyweights Struve and Stojnic will each be looking to bounce back from losses in their UFC debuts. The Unlimited Combat System fighter has four TKO's and four submissions in his eight career wins.

Struve suffered a TKO loss to Junior dos Santos on the preliminary card of February's "UFC 95: Sanchez vs. Stevenson." The Dutch striker protested the 54-second TKO loss, but Struve was visibly rocked by the Brazilian's heavy hands.

Stojnic dropped a main-card bout to Cain Velasquez at February's "UFC Fight Night 17: Lauzon vs. Stephens." Stojnic was the first fighter to push Velasquez past the opening frame, but "The Menace" never threatened his undefeated opponent before being stopped at 2:34 of the second round.

With the reported additions to the event, the UFC 99 card now includes:

Rich Franklin vs. Wanderlei Silva
Spencer Fisher vs. Caol Uno
Marcus Davis vs. Dan Hardy
Ben Saunders vs. Mike Swick
Heath Herring vs. Cain Velasquez
Alan Belcher vs. Alessio Sakara
Mustapha al Turk vs. Todd Duffee
Peter Sobotta vs. Paul Taylor
Denis Stojnic vs. Stefan Struve
 
Feb 7, 2006
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WVR announces match-ups for March 20 Sengoku featherweight grand prix

After completing the field of competitors earlier this week, World Victory Road has set the match-ups for the opening round of its 16-man featherweight grand prix.

The first round of the tournament begins March 20 at Sengoku Seventh Battle, an HDNet-televised event takes place at the National Yoyogi Stadium in Tokyo, Japan.

In addition to the eight tournament bouts, the event features Ryo Kawamura vs. Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal and James Thompson vs. Jim York.

Following the March 20 first round, the quarterfinal round of the featherweight tournament is set for Sengoku Eighth Battle, which takes place May 2 in Tokyo. The semifinals and finale will take place later this summer.

The full card for Sengoku Seventh Battle now includes:

James Thompson vs. Jim York*
Ryo Kawamura vs. Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal*
Nam Phan vs. Hideki Kadowaki
Ronnie Ushiwaka vs. Tetsuya Yamada
Seiya Kawahara vs. Nick Denis
Hatsu Hioki vs. Chris Manuel
Marlon Sandro vs. Matt Jaggers
Michihiro Omigawa vs. L.C. Davis
Chan Sung Jung vs. Shintaro Ishiwatar
Kim Jong Man vs. Masanori Kanehara
 
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Yushin Okami vs. Dan Miller announced for UFC 98 main card

Hoping to claim his long-awaited shot at the middleweight title, Yushin Okami (23-4 MMA, 7-1 UFC) will return in May at UFC 98 for a fight with Dan Miller (11-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC).

The UFC recently announced that main-card bout and nearly every other fight for the upcoming card, which takes place May 23 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

The pay-per-view show is headlined by a previously announced main event and title-unification bout between UFC heavyweight champion Brock Lesnar and interim title-holder Frank Mir, and the UFC also confirmed a previously reported co-main event between Matt Hughes and Matt Serra.

With middleweight champ Anderson Silva set to face Thales Leites at UFC 97, much of the attention has turned to contenders Demian Maia and Nate Marquardt. However, with a 7-1 record in the UFC (and his lone UFC loss coming to then-top contender Rich Franklin in 2007), Okami could be the most deserving of the next title shot.

Okami returned from a near-10-month layoff in December and defeated Dean Lister via unanimous decision at UFC 92. The fight, though, took place on the night's un-aired preliminary card.

He'll return to the main card in May to fight Miller, a former IFL fighter who's torn through the UFC with three consecutive victories. After signing with the UFC in 2008, Miller made his debut with a first-round submission victory over Rob Kimmons at UFC Fight Night 15. He's since posted a decision win over Matt Horwich at UFC 90 and a submission win over Jake Rosholt last month at UFC Fight Night 17.

Miller is now 9-0 (with one no-contest) in his past 10 fights.

Assuming a currently unannounced bout between Josh Koscheck and Chris Wilson is slated for the main card, the full UFC 98 line-up now includes:

MAIN CARD

Champ Brock Lesnar vs. interim champ Frank Mir (heavyweight title unification)
Matt Hughes vs. Matt Serra
Dan Miller vs. Yushin Okami
Frank Edgar vs. Sean Sherk
Josh Koscheck vs. Chris Wilson*
PRELIMINARY CARD

James Irvin vs. Drew McFedries
Kyle Bradley vs. Phillipe Nover
Pat Barry vs. Tim Hague
Houston Alexander vs. Andre Gusmao
Brandon Wolff vs. Yoshiyuki Yoshida
David Kaplan vs. George Roop
 
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M-1 offers official response to Kirill Sidelnikov's suspension

One day after the California State Athletic Commission officially announced the suspension of Kirill Sidelnikov (5-3) for a failed drug test, M-1 Global officials have offered an official response.

The statement from M-1 Global pinned the presence of the synthetic anabolic steroid Stanozolol in Sidelnikov's system on a nose spray used in treatment of a broken nose suffered in training.

Sidelnikov was suspended for one year and fined $2,500 by the CSAC for the failed test following his Jan. 24 Affliction bout with Paul Buentello.

The 20-year-old Sidelnikov is a longtime M-1 fighter. The organization insists that it does not support the fighter's actions, but that it will stand behind Sidelnikov despite his suspension.

According to the statement, Sidelnikov and M-1 Global respect the CSAC's decision and will not appeal the ruling.

The official statement from the organization is printed below.


OFFICIAL STATEMENT FROM M-1 GLOBAL RESPONDING TO NEWS OF KIRILL SIDELNIKOV'S POSITIVE STEROID TEST

M-1 Global officials first learned that Kirill Sidelnikov failed his post-fight screening for performance enhancing drugs when it was informed late last week by the California State Athletic Commission.

Immediately after the company was notified, an internal investigation was launched. As a part of the investigation, M-1 Global officials spoke with Kirill and asked him to explain his position.

In preparation for his Affliction debut against Paul Buentello in January, Kirill spent some time training outside of the Imperial Team family in St. Petersburg. Kirill indicated that during that time away he began to experience complications from a broken nose that he had recently sustained.

Not wanting to miss any training time leading up to "Day of Reckoning," Kirill followed the advice of a coach not affiliated with M-1 who gave him a nose spray commonly used in Russia to help treat some of his symptoms. It is M-1's belief that the nose spray is what contained the Stanozol.

For those that are skeptical of this explanation, we believe Kirill's account is true based in large part to his physique. If he had been using large amounts of Stanozol on a regular basis, we believe that the frame of his upper body would have contained leaner muscle that had more definition.

While we do not believe the use of a nose spray provided Kirill with an unfair competitive advantage, we are obviously very disappointed in his lapse of judgment. Even though it was only a common nose spray that he used to treat an injury, an athlete must take full responsibility for what he puts into his system at all times. While we are not citing youth as an excuse, we feel we need to offer the public an explanation and we attribute the mistake in part to the fact that Kirill is just 20-years of age.

In spite of our disappointment, Kirill remains a part of the M-1 family and as such, he can continue to count on our support through this turbulent period. While we do not endorse his actions, we stand by him.

M-1 takes full responsibility for Kirill's actions and we respect the decision of the California State Athletic Commission. The organization would also like to make it clear that we do not condone the use of performance enhancing drugs of any kind and we'd like to hereby apologize to the MMA community for Kirill's indiscretion.

M-1 believes that Kirill is one of the top up-and-coming fighters of the sport and after he has served his punishment and is eligible to return, we hope that the public will give him a second chance to prove himself.

- M-1 Global
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Strikeforce Deal with Showtime and CBS Worth Millions

Strikeforce is quickly putting the pieces together for its next year of MMA programming on Showtime and CBS. It's been a frantic month for CEO Scott Coker and his small staff as they zero in on dates, venues, and fighters for a possible 16 shows over the next 12 months.

So far, one show is nearly booked, "Shamrock vs. Diaz," which hits the promotion's home base at HP Pavilion on April 11. All but two of the event's main card bouts have been revealed, with a source indicating that former EliteXC middleweight champ Robbie Lawler will fight on the card against an unnamed opponent, and terror Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos, who also remains without an opponent.

With up to 48 shows to book, that's a lot of work. But according to another source with knowledge of the negotiations between Strikeforce, ProElite, Showtime, and CBS, the deal will prove very lucrative to the San Jose, Calif. promotion.

The source, who chose to remain anonymous, said Strikeforce stands to make $25 million dollars in license fees over the course of its three-year deal with the broadcast network and its premium channel sibling.

A portion of that revenue, first disclosed by an SEC filing by ProElite on Feb. 11 and, according to the source, put in the neighborhood of five percent, will be paid to ProElite Inc. as consideration for the sale of its assets to Strikeforce. The total revenue coming into ProElite coffers could total up to $1.25 million.

Since the sale, the Los Angeles-based company has been mostly silent about its future in MMA promotion. CEO Chuck Champion told SI.com that the company had an existing TV deal with Fox Sports, and planned to nurture its relationship with the remaining active promotion under its umbrella, King of the Cage. But how that relationship would develop, and what shape the restructured company would take, remained unclear.

On March 12, Strikeforce and Showtime will trumpet the upcoming San Jose show with a media day featuring its executives and athletes.
 
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Marcus Davis would like Dan Hardy to stand and trade or shut his mouth

“He’s one of those guys that’s looking to build his name and stir up things. He’s all Hollywood and stuff so whatever. The guy keeps running his mouth and he reminds me a lot of when I fought Jess Liaudin, but he’s pushing it further. If the UFC makes that fight, I will be looking forward to it … he’s riding high on the fact that he just knocked out Rory Markham, but he’s got normal power in his punches, like an average MMA fighter, but he doesn’t have my kind of power in his punches and he’ll find that out if we fight … I think that he’s smoking crack because he can’t stand and trade with me. He won’t stand and trade with me because he would be on his back and if he’s on his back, then I would be on top smashing his face into dust like I said before … I’ve heard him take shots at my speed or whatever, that I’m not that quick. Well, whatever; we’ll find out. I’m fast enough to catch him. He’s had 2 fights in the UFC and won’t shut his mouth.”
 
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Demian Maia: “I deserve the titleshot”

Five fights in the UFC, five submission victories. This time (UFC 95), the victim was Chael Sonnen, who came from victory over Paulo Filho, at WEC. With less than three minutes of fight, the Brazilian got the takedown and has already locked Sonnen in a triangle choke, and was just a matter of time for the tap. "I always enter without expectation for the fight, but I’ll find a way to submit", said Demian, to TATAME.com.

Getting more thousands of dollar because of the submission of the night, the Brazilian wants, now, his chance for the title. "I have to fight for the title. I’ve won five fights by submission and there were people that won less and... I’ve won three fights in the first round, I deserve the titleshot", defends the black belt, who sees himself in an advantage in the competition for the UFC extra bonuses. "My fights were by submission and the majority ends by knockout in the UFC, then I have great chances to make the submission of the night".

Waiting for a chance for the title, the Brazilian was smart to avoid a direct question: if you had to bet the $40 thousand that you’ve gain for the submission of the night, would it be on Anderson Silva or Thales Leites? "I would put $20.000 on Anderson and $20.000 on Thales (laughs)... I don’t know who will win, this fight is very difficult”, he avoided. As for his future in the event, the fighter doesn’t know when he’ll return. "We’re starting to see that now, but I have nothing closed yet", ended.
 
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Johnny Eduardo signs with Bellator FC

With six straight wins, four by knockout, Johnny Eduardo (20-8) signed a contract with Bellator Fighting Championship, which debuts on April 3rd at United States, live on ESPN. Johnny will make the alternate fight on the tournament, that will have another Brazilian, Wilson Reis, EliteXC champion, and Luis Palomino, black belt under Rodrigo “Minotauro” Nogueira. Who can also be on the card is the 2008 world Jiu-Jitsu champion, Sérgio Moraes.
 
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Gesias Cavalcante Interview

Two times Hero's GP champion, Gesias Cavalcante can’t wait to return to the rings. After the rumors of a possible participation at Dream’s welterweight GP, TATAME.com went after Gesias to an interview, where the fighter spoke about the tournament, commented about the team partner, Marcelo Garcia, who will participate on the GP, the evolution of the black belt at the MMA trainings and Shinya Aoki, his last opponent, in the welterweight tournament. Check below the chat with JZ.

Do you know when you’ll be back to Dream?

So far they haven’t said anything. They have told me that I’d fight in March, but I’m waiting and I think that I’ll fight in April’s event, the same event that Marcelinho (Garcia) will fight too.

We heard some rumors that you could fight at Dream’s welterweight GP. Is it true?

People came to talk to me about this rumor, but it has nothing. I want to fight, but in my category. If I fight in another category, it will be in the future, I still have much to do in my weight.

Shinya Aoki, your last opponent, got up to 170lbs to fight the GP. How do you think he will be?

He already fought with this weight at Shooto’s and dropped at Pride, but he is already used to this weight. His physical characteristic isn’t issue of weight and muscle quality, but the flexibility and the high. He is very flexible, and I think this won’t interfere too much. Of course he will feel more power of the guys from that weight, but it doesn’t make much difference for him. I think he can do well in that category, as he was at the Shooto at this same weight.

What is your bet to the GP?

The names are not confirmed yet, André Galvão said he would be at the tournament, but they didn’t release anything yet, and Marcelinho is almost confirmed, is only waiting for the event to confirm. I think that Marcelinho will be the big surprise of this year. His caliber and physical quality hasn’t comparison. He’s training much more focused today and is used to the game of MMA. He may be one of the big surprises, not to mention Aoki, who has a great quality and is used, is experienced, has a different game, (Hayato) Sakurai, which is from the old times. But I bet in Marcelinho, I have to bet on the ATT guys, not to mention that is Brazil (laughs).

Marcelinho made a MMA fight in 2007 and, since then, didn’t fight. How is his preparation for 2009?

His ground game was always very good. At the first fight he was going okay, but it happened what happened and he learned a lot with that. He trained well focused to MMA and his game is better adapted, getting used to the glove... His game is more consistent, working his Jiu-Jitsu so that he can beat and gain positions. He’s risking much more in standing, people that goes to the academy gets amazed, he came here very raw and is already striking on foot.
 
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Rafael Assunção Interview

Black belt of Jiu-Jitsu, Rafael Assunção is ready for his WEC debut. Scheduled for the 40th edition of the American show, the Brazilian spoke with TATAME.com about the fight, which happens on April 5th, in Chicago. In the interview that you see below, the fighter, brother of Junior Assunção, former UFC fighter, spoke about the expectations for the fight, what he knows about Jameel Massouh, his opponent, his history in MMA, where he won 12 victories in 13 fights, and the expectation for his future in the event.

What are your expectations for your debut in WEC?

My expectations are good, for sure. I know I’ll have good high-level competitions, but this was one of the reasons why I’ve chosen to go to the WEC among other proposals, and definitely put my name on the world map of fights, being recognized also in Brazil as one of the best in my category.


What do you know about your opponent?

My opponent is Jameel Massouh, and he has 20 victories and four losses. He is a very experienced athlete and has already fought a lot internationally.

What is the strategy for the fight?

The strategy isn’t very different from my last fight, that my opponent was higher than me and had more reach. My strategy is to fight standing, use my kicks and punches, close the distance, put him down and work my ground and pound, taking care with his long legs, and work my Jiu-Jitsu, in case that the fight goes to the ground.

You have 12 victories and one loss in your career... What do you expect for your future in WEC?

I hope I can have a nice future at the WEC and, with the protection and light of our God, much training and intelligence of fight, support, perseverance, discipline and everything that comes around a champion.

Do you think of getting up to another category to have a chance in the UFC?

Get up to a higher weight for the UFC is definitely not in my plans yet, but now that the athletes are getting super professional and disciplined in weight loss, such as Diego Sanchez, for example, one athlete who lost much weight to hit 155 pounds and was a little big in the fight against Joe Stevenson... I usually weight between 155 and 160 pounds, and drop to 145 pounds.

Who do you point as the hardest opponent in your category today?

My category has new talent coming every week (laughs), as Manny Gamburyan, who just dropped the weight, Urijah Faber, Mike Brown, a friend of mine, José Aldo, who is doing a good job, and many others. They are all great athletes, it’s very difficult to say who is the hardest.

How did you and your brother start in MMA?

We started to train in the United States after an influence of my cousin, who was a fighter in Recife, Pernambuco. When we were younger, we went to Brazil on vacation and we always saw his fight, which was becoming popular at the time, so that influenced me a lot. We came back to America and began to train with the grand master Romero "Jacaré" Cavalcante. We trained there until the purple belt, then we decided to go our way, that was the MMA, and we went to other gyms in Atlanta. We got the brown and black belts with Diego Saraiva, former UFC fighter. We were a little individual on the trainings, because we had many partners, but not a certain set time. Now that the sport is evolving well, sure we’ll have a professional team soon.
 
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Leonardo Santos To SENGOKU

Leonardo Santos was announced as the first official participant for SENGOKU VIII which will take place on May 2nd. He is a new signing in Nova Uniao Lightweight BJJ expert Leonardo Santos who is currently on a 5 fight winning streak. Santos is the brother of Wagney Fabiano and faced Takanori Gomi in his first professional fight back in 2002.
 
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Sanchez-Guida Agreed for TUF 9 Finale

Diego Sanchez and Clay Guida are heading straight for one another.

The potent lightweight pair has agreed to meet in the headlining bout of “The Ultimate Fighter 9” finale on June 20 at the Pearl inside the Palms Resort in Las Vegas, according to sources close to the fighters. The bout will anchor a night of final deciding bouts for the Spike TV reality series, which begins airing in April.

Sanchez (22-2), a winner of the first season of “The Ultimate Fighter,” acquitted himself well in his 155-pound debut against Joe Stevenson at UFC 95 on Feb. 21 in London. The 27-year-old New Mexico native hung tough and outscored the accomplished Stevenson to take the unanimous decision from the TUF 2 winner.

At 170 pounds, Sanchez stockpiled key victories over Joe Riggs, Karo Parisyan, and Nick Diaz. His only two losses have come to Josh Koscheck and Jon Fitch, which prompted his move to lightweight.

Few can match Guida’s intensity and pace in the UFC’s lightweight division. The Chicago-based wrestler has rattled off three straight victories –- to Samy Schiavo, Mac Danzig, and Nathan Diaz –- since his dramatic loss to Roger Huerta at “The Ultimate Fighter 6” finale in December 2007. Guida (25-9) eked out a close spilt decision to Diaz at UFC 94 on Jan. 31 in Las Vegas.
 
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Joe Stevenson vs. Mac Danzig no longer being considered by UFC

UFC lightweights Joe Stevenson (29-10 MMA, 6-4 UFC) and Mac Danzig (18-6-1 MMA, 2-2 UFC), linked together for a possible showdown in a recent report from longtime MMA commentator Mauro Ranallo, are no longer slated to meet.

Stevenson today told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that there has been a change of plans, though he could not elaborate on a new opponent.

"It was talked about, but it's not happening," Stevenson said.

Ranallo broke the news of the potential matchup during a pay-per-view broadcast of the Candian-based XMMA 7. Though no specific event was announced, Ranallo described the potential bout as a "loser leaves town" match.

Ranallo later told MMAjunkie.com that he was informed from a "very reliable source" the the loser of the bout would be added to the growing list of fighters cut by the organization.

Stevenson did not comment on his contract status with the organization. The 26-year-old did say that he wasn't opposed to the matchup, but that the UFC had simply elected to go in a different direction.

Stevenson last fought in a losing effort in the main event of February's "UFC 95: Sanchez vs. Stevenson." The decision dropped Stevenson to 1-3 in his previous four bouts, though the losses have come to Sanchez, No. 1 lightweight contender Kenny Florian and 155-pound champion B.J. Penn.

"The Ultimate Fighter 2" winner had won four-straight bouts in the UFC before his current slide.

Danzig has also lost two-straight bouts. After defeating Tommy Speer to become "The Ultimate Fighter 6" winner, Danzig would then submit Mark Bocek in April 2008. The 29-year-old has since droped a September 2008 decision to Clay Guida and was submitted by Josh Neer at "UFC Fight Night 17: Lauzon vs. Stephens" in February.
 
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Three preliminary bouts signed for April 11 "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz"

With the main card for Strikeforce's April 11 "Shamrock vs. Diaz" event complete, the California based organization has moved on to filling out the preliminary portion of the evening.

Strikeforce Director of Communications Mike Afromowitz confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) the addition of Zak Bucia vs. James Terry, Eric Lawson vs. Richard Montoya and Buck Meredith vs. Luke Rockhold.

Afromowitz said Strikeforce will soon confirm two final bouts for the evening's preliminary card.

Bucia (1-1) will be making his second appearance for Strikeforce. After losing his professional debut at a Gladiator Challenge event, Bucia earned a submission win over Adam Steel in the opening bout of "Strikeforce: Destruction" in November 2008.

A member of Cung Le's Universal Strength Headquarters, Terry (5-1) will be making his Strikeforce debut. The San Jose, Calif., resident reeled off five straight wins to open his career before being submitted by Jeremiah Metcalf in May 2008 in at a Cage Combat Fighting Championships event.

Lawson (8-2) is a four-time Strikeforce veteran currently riding a four-fight win streak. Lawson debuted professionally in 2004 and has earned five wins by submission in his eight career wins.

Montoya (6-5) will be looking to snap a four-fight losing streak in his Strikeforce debut. The 31-year-old opened his career with a 6-1 stretch in the WEC, IFC and King of the Cage. Montoya has since dropped four straight contests to Xavier Foupa-Pokam, Nate Loughran, Bryan Travers and Emmanuel Newton.

Meredith (3-2) will be fighting for the first time since since an April 2006 decision loss to UFC middleweight Alan Belcher. The 26-year-old owns wins over MMA veterans Alex Schoenauer and Harris Sarmiento, and he suffered his only other career loss to UFC, Pancrase and Shooto veteran Yuki Sasaki.

Rockhold (3-1) will be making his third appearance for the organization. Rockhold's first two appearances resulted in first-round submission victories over Nik Theotikos and Josh Neal.

With the additions to the event, the card now features:

MAIN CARD

* Nick Diaz vs. Frank Shamrock
* Champ Josh Thomson vs. Gilbert Melendez (for Strikeforce lightweight title)
* Joe Riggs vs. Jake Shields
* Benji Radach vs. Scott Smith
* Hitomi Akano vs. Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos

PRELIMINARY CARD

* Zak Bucia vs. James Terry
* Eric Lawson vs. Richard Montoya
* Buck Meredith vs. Luke Rockhold

"Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz" is scheduled for the HP Pavilion in San Jose. The main card airs live on Showtime.
 
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Fight Path: Outspoken Dominique Robinson kicking ass and naming names

Dominique Robinson starts right in with the examples.

"Take Casey Olson from Fresno," Robinson tells MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) while guiding his car through the Bay Area while hot on a rant. "He has more sponsors. He does more radio interviews. He's in the mother [expletive] magazines. You know why? Because he knows Chuck Liddell.

"I'm out here trying to get my own fights. I can't get a call back, but it's not stopping me from busting my ass."

That, in a nutshell, is what you'll get during a half-hour conversation with "Fallen Angel," an up-and-coming lightweight who has fought most recently in the Palace Fighting Championship, on an otherwise calm Tuesday night.

There is great intensity and intelligence. And opinions. Plenty of opinions. He'll even warn you.

"I'm not one who won't name other fighters," Robinson said. "I'll tell you what I think."

That passion mixed with motivation instilled from a grandmother leading a large and incongruous family have led Robinson to a 4-2 record and near blisters from dialing the phone looking for more fights.

Even though Olson is known as "The Underdog," Robinson sees himself filling that role doing a mostly one-man job training, marketing and selling himself as a fighter who can outthink opponents as much as he can outfight them.

And, he's not shy about sharing his feelings.

"A lot of people don't know this, but 80 percent of what I do, I do myself," Robinson said. "I mostly train myself, I've never been with the big teams. I'm around a lot of the big-time people, but I'm putting in my own time and my own work. I'll outwork anybody."

Creole at heart

Robinson's family is simultaneously large, interesting and difficult. As a kid, he moved around from San Francisco to Oakland to Texas to Louisiana to North Carolina. There were several constants: a maternal grandmother who ran the house, a mother who was committed to education and a father who had a strong history in athletics, both as a boxer and a football player.

Robinson's father, though, also showed skills as a photographer, which would help mold Robinson's desire to be an artist later in life. His parents' mentality also helped him commit to education from an early age.

His educational interests as he left high school in San Francisco and onto (several) colleges were as varied as his early addresses: criminology, zoology, hematology and then, finally, simply knowledge in general. His transcript includes classes at University of California-Davis and San Francisco State, and he was even accepted to Yale before leaving education for the working world.

Which leads, of course, to another list. Robinson worked in a pharmacy filling prescriptions, selling his own artwork, odd jobs in a chocolate store and even a job at Victoria's Secret. There was a stint on the narcotics force of a smaller California city police department, as well.

Robinson's past underlines his fighting personality. That is, he's a hard worker, enduring whatever training he must and contacting whomever he must to break further into the world of mixed martial arts.

"I had plenty that I was doing with my life," Robinson said. "But I gave up everything to do fighting."

Soap box

In 2005, Robinson was at a party and got into a fight. Not at all uncommon, of course, but this time there was a catch, and it started his MMA career.

Someone at the party alerted Frank Shamrock, who was running a gym in San Jose, Calif. Soon after, Robinson got a call inviting him to come visit the gym. One of the other visitors there that day was Bob Cook, a now-top trainer who also owns a career 5-0 MMA record with a 1-0 showing in the UFC.

"We went at it for 30 or 40 minutes," Robinson said. "He choked me, and I was pissed off. People around there said, 'Do you know who that is? That's Frank Shamrock's top student.' I didn't care, and we've had fun going after each other ever since.

"I still haven't gotten him though."

Robinson has earned his victories, starting with a Gladiator Challenge show in November 2005. From there, Robinson has done much of his own training while watching others he considers inferior fighters rise because of their attachment to big names, he says.

"I pick things up from just watching martial arts movies and watching guys train – and not wanting to get beat up," Robinson said. "I go out there and outthink these lazy mother [expletive]."

If he makes weight, Robinson's next chance could come at Roy Jones Jr.'s hybrid MMA/boxing event March 21 in Pensacola, Fla., Robinson said. If not, he is at least guaranteed a shot at the PFC lightweight title against former WEC challenger Carlo Prater at PFC 13 on May 8.

Whatever his next fight, it's likely Robinson set it up himself. That has been his career – relying on his own smarts, motivation and business savvy to elbow his way into the MMA world. One opinion at a time.

"If you prove you're better than me, I'll respect you," Robinson said. "But until then, I'm going to believe I work harder and train harder than anyone."