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Feb 7, 2006
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ROBBIE LAWLER WILL LET HIS FISTS DO THE TALKING

Never being known as a trash talker is just the reputation that former EliteXC middleweight champion Robbie Lawler looks to have when getting ready for a fight. He simply lets his fists and feet do the talking for him come fight time.

Much like his match-up in ICON against Frank Trigg when his opponent had a few words for him before the fight, Lawler answered back by winning the fight emphatically with a vicious knockout.

Now the stage is set for Lawler to once again prove himself as he faces a challenge from former EliteXC welterweight champion Jake Shields, who makes the move up a weight class for the bout.

Lawler made a similar move a few years ago when he moved from welterweight to middleweight and the results have been astonishing. Regardless of his move, Lawler says there are certain things you have to make sure you have when you make the shift to a higher weight class.

"You definitely have to be strong at 170, which he was. Hopefully his strength comes with him up to 185," Lawler told MMAWeekly.com recently.

Is Shields biting off more than he can handle with this first fight at middleweight, taking on a top five level competitor in Robbie Lawler? The former UFC and ICON fighter believes his opponent is fully aware of what to expect from the heavy-handed fighter training out of the HIT Squad in Illinois.

"I think he knows what he's in there with," Lawler said about Shields. "I don't think he would have taken the fight not knowing what kind of fighter I am. I think he thinks he can nullify me, and I just need to be ready."

When prompted with the question if he believes Shields can deal with his strength and power, Lawler reminded everybody that he simply doesn't like to talk down about his opponents and he'll do his talking on June 6.

"I'm a strong fighter, we'll see when we get in there, when we lock horns," he stated in closing.

Robbie Lawler will battle Jake Shields as the main event for the second Strikeforce on Showtime event, Saturday night June 6.
 
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Strikeforce ‘Lawler vs Shields’ fight card and rumors from Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri, June 6

Event: Strikeforce: “Lawler vs. Shields”
Date: Saturday, June, 2009, at 10 p.m. ET on Showtime
Location: Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri

Main event:

182 lbs. (Catchweight): “Ruthless” Robbie Lawler (16-4) vs. Jake Shields (22-4-1)

Main card (Televised):

180 lbs. (Catchweight): Nick Diaz (19-7) vs. Scott “Hands of Steel” Smith (17-5)
205 lbs.: Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante (7-1) vs. Jared Hamman (10-1)
265 lbs.: Alistair “Demolition Man” Overeem (29-11) vs. TBA (0-0)*
170 lbs.: Phil “New York Bad Ass” Baroni (13-10) vs. Joe “Diesel” Riggs (29-10)
185 lbs.: Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos (16-12) vs. “Smokin’” Joe Villasenor (26-6)*

Under card:

170: Josh Baumgartner (5-0) vs. Jesse Finney (3-0)*
170 lbs.: Tyron “Tobasco” Woodley (2-0) vs. Sal Woods (2-4)*
185 lbs.: Lucas Lopes (8-8) vs. Scott Ventimiglia (12-5-1)*
155 lbs.: Pat Benson (3-5-1) vs. Dave Cochran (16-19)*
265 lbs.: Booker DeRousse (1-1) vs. James Wade (0-0)*

*Fight not confirmed by Strikeforce.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Renzo Gracie: Don’t sleep on Matt Serra

People take Matt Serra lightly … In our sport things don’t happen by chance. Luck has nothing to do with it … He’s one of the best fighters I have ever seen in my life. He has huge heart, never quits, he can win a fight at any moment. His jiu-jitsu is unbelievable and his punching power is very strong. He’s a guy that can always surprise someone. It will be a very action-packed fight. I can’t wait to watch.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC Quick Quote: Joe Stevenson is puking his brains out at Team Jackson

“I’m actually about to go puke now. Let the world know that I’m training at Jackson’s camp and I’m really about to go puke so I’m going to let you go because I’m sure you don’t want to hear me.”

– Joe Stevenson provides FightHype.com with a stomach-churning update on his intense training for Nate Diaz at The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 9 Finale at the Pearl Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada, on June 20. “Daddy” recently made the big decision to break from his own gym and train alongside Greg Jackson and his team in Albuquerque, N.M., to get a “change of scenery.” And with just one week under his belt it appears that he is already pushing himself to the limit, which he will need to do if he intends to best Diaz and get back in the 155-pound mix. Let’s just hope he saves enough for the Octagon … he’s going to need it against a gamer like the Stockton, Calif., native.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Feature: The Allure of MMA Cinderellas

The two stories to prick up an ear and raise an eyebow over the past weekend were the Cinderella stories of Tobey Imada and Michihiro Omigawa. The Cinderella story can often lay waste to the hopes and plans of promoters or on the other hand they can elevate their fortunes in unexpected ways. The tournament structure of both Bellator and Sengoku have provided some interesting storylines to follow going forward.

In the case of Omigawa, the Japanese Cinderella has given Sengoku folks another domestic star to push and his unexpected success will be a selling point to counter the favorite status of Hioki and the Gaijin Sandro. Omigawa had been on a 0-3-1 slide before reversing his fortunes in the Sengoku featherweight tourney. In a tourney that to some degree has had a lack of brand name appeal to the average online fan, Omigawa’s backstory coming in and subsequent success have provided the featherweight toureny with another facet that will have me tuning in for the Finals.

Bellator’s anticipated Final’s showdown between their highest profile lightweight competitors, Alvarez and Masvidal, has been derailed by the awe-inspiring standing inverted triangle choke of Imada. Bellator’s task now is to take the lemons and make lemonade, selling the Cinderella story that Imada has become. Imada’s win over Jorge Masvidal has positioned the journeyman fighter to rise above the knockabout existence he has seen in the sport during his 11 year MMA career. Imada’s dream has been a dream deferred to this point , but Tobey has resisted the temptation to dry up like a raisin in the sun. He is now faced with a finals showdown with lightweight poster boy Eddie Alvarez, a chance to “make it” for what ever that term is worth. “Making it”, to whatever degree, is often all some fighters ever ask for, rising up from obscurity to shine on bigger platform if only for a moment. These competitors often define that brass ring within their own context, be that just getting a Zuffa contract to winning the Bellator or Sengoku tourneys. One of the few moments of true emotion during the banal existence of The Ultimate Fighter was revolved around this idea of “making it”. Sammy Morgan, coming to after being KO’ed by Luke Cummo, was crestfallen at the realization that his dream of capturing the TUF was over and uttered a mournful, “I didn’t make it”. With most of the waterworks flowing on the TUF show emanating from bruised ego and pride, Morgan’s lament of a dream seemingly lost rang true where all the others fell false and flat. Imada has his own opportunity to make that dream come true if he can win his Finals match. I’m a huge Eddie Alvarez fan but I have to say that it will be hard for me to root against Imada when they show down in the Finals of the Bellator tournament.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Demian ready for Nate Marquardt at UFC 102

After five submissions in the UFC, Demian Maia was hoping to fight for the belt, but the Ultimate had other plans for the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu ace. At UFC 102, which takes place at August 29, Demian will face Nate Marquardt, who comes from a victory against Wilson Gouveia. “The expectation is always the best”, guarantees Demian to TATAME.com.

“The other guys I’ve faced I consider very tough, excellent fighters, and he’s another one, but, for sure, he’s the toughest of them. He’s a complete fighter and very aggressive”, says Maia. Wanting to show, one more time, his great ground game. “I believe in what I do and train... A lot of guys train, but don’t believe it’ll work, that they’ll have to fight strike, but I believe that I’ll get there to do my Jiu-Jitsu, not to fight standing. Of course I’m ready to strike, but, if doesn’t need to strike and do a classic Jiu-Jitsu, it’s better”.

The Brazilian, who was hoping to do a title fight against Anderson, doesn’t bother with doing one more fight before it. “Of course I wanted the belt, but, if it’s not the time, it’ll come. This guy, Nate, is high level and I’m there to test myself against the best, not only get there, win a belt and later lose it. I want to get mature and prove that I can have the belt. To me, this is a fight that, winning it, I’ll be closer of what a champion needs to be”, said the black belt, commenting Anderson Silva’s next fight against Forrest Griffin.

“I think Anderson has more chances in this fight, because he’s better on striking than Griffin. At the ground, maybe both are the same level, because Forrest is very good. Anderson has everything to win, but needs to be careful with Forrest, because this guy doesn’t stop, believes a lot in himself and trains hard”, finished Demian.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jean Silva Interview

Former Cage Rage champion, Jean Silva is considered by the English fans as one of the most exciting fighters of the MMA rings. After suffering a knee injury, pass through a surgery and stay away for more than a year of training, Jean is back with thirst for fight. In exclusive interview to TATAME.com, Jean spoke about his busy agenda, with four fights in the next three months, explained his left of the Chute Boxe, commented the other loses of the team and talked about the life in England.

Where are you living nowadays?
I’m living in London, and I train at the London Shoot Fighters gym.

When and why did you leave Chute Boxe?
I left Chute Boxe at the beginning of 2007, because it was very difficult to live in Curitiba and the trainings were high level, but it were many good athletes and I had to be disputing space in my own team, while here I'm always in front of the other guys... And it had to get some money for the family, right?

Why you don’t fight for so long?

I spent a year and three months away, recovering from a surgery on the knee caused by the last fight in Cage, against (Mazakazu) Imanari, but I'm brand new and very thirst for combat.


You were always an idol in London because of the great performances you’ve done at the Cage Rage. How did you saw the end of the event?
I tell you that I stayed bad some days, because I not only saw the birth of this event, I fought in almost all editions, then I saw my house fall, literally, but is already being born a new major event here, the Ultimate Challenge UK.

How did you saw the left of Wanderlei, Shogun and recently of Cristiano Marcello and Rafael Cordeiro from the Chute Boxe?
The left of the great names of the Chute Boxe has been a shock to everyone, especially the one from Master Rafael, who gave his life in Chute Boxe. Actually, this is a bad phase they're going through, but they’ll overcome, even because they’re champions former.

How will it be the preparation for the marathon of four fights in three months? What’s the expectation to fight these events?
I fight when I want here in London, so I decided to get all events that came. The preparation is really high level. I decided to live in the gym, where I already wake up training, go out to eat and come back to train again. I don’t know about the results, but one thing is certain: I will make the best fights of the night. The expectation is the best possible. Certainly I will make the best fights of the night, because I'm paying hard for that to happen.

Who will be you opponents in each event that you’ll fight?
The first fight will be on May 9, in the Ultimate Challenge, against the English J. A. Ween. The second will be against Dave Elliot in the British FC tournament, on May 30. In FX3, June 13, I’ll face Sami Bering and, on July 25, I’ll face Flávio Álvaro at Shine, in Miami.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Kitaoka Wins Two Gold Medals! No-Gi Open Tournament 2009 In Kanto

SENGOKU Lightweight champion Satoru Kitaoka participated in the “Gi Amateur BJJ & No-Gi Open Tournament 2009″ in the Kanto prefecture in Japan today. He participated in the No-Gi Adult Expert -79.5kg & absolute (open-weight) division tournaments. He won gold in both of them.

He won his first fight in the absolute tournament by Guillotine Choke, the second by Achilles Lock, and in the finals he faced good grappler Kohei Nishibayashi (ADCC Asia 2007 winner, Asian Championship 2008 winner, etc.) from GRABAKA Jiu-Jitsu and won by Anaconda Choke.

Kitaoka has not competed since defeating Takanori Gomi in a SENGOKU title fight in January. According to him, this was a tournament to get into gear in preparation for his June fight in Pancrase against Yukio Sakaguchi and his August SENGOKU title defense against Kazunori Yokota or Mizuto Hirota.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Ivanov In SENGOKU! Three-Fight Deal

According to newspaper Tokyo Sports, Blagoi Ivanov will face Kazuyuki Fujita at SENGOKU IX in August. After finding an April interview with Ivanov on YouTube, it looks like the Tokyo Sports article is closer to being one of their non-false ones. Ivanov says that he is with SENGOKU and that he might fight there three times.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Kotani Vs. Hironaka! Yamada Wants To Win And Get Revenge In SENGOKU

A ZST.20 press conference was held today and additional fights were announced. Naoyuki Kotani will face DREAM participant Kuniyoshi Hironaka in a Welterweight fight. Also announced was a ZST Bantamweight title fight between Keisuke Fujiwara and Pancrase fighter Yukito. The fight will have limitless (unlimited) 5-minute rounds.

Also on hand at the press conference was “Former Super High School Student” Tetsuya Yamada who when asked if he felt like the tag team fight was a rival fight between DREAM and SENGOKU said that rather than that, he wants to win and get revenge in SENGOKU.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jason MacDonald confirms he's been cut from UFC's roster of fighters

Following a 10-fight stint in the UFC and a .500 winning percentage, veteran middleweight Jason MacDonald (21-12 MMA, 5-5 UFC) has been cut from the UFC.

His termination comes after a first-round TKO loss to Nate Quarry at UFC 97 last month.

It also comes just a couple weeks after the post-event press conference in which UFC President Dana White called MacDonald "awesome" and said "we want guys like Jason" in the UFC.

However, the UFC recently has trimmed its roster and cut dozens of fighters.

In today's edition of his sportsnet.ca column, MacDonald confirmed he received his walking papers

"I'm obviously very disappointed," MacDonald wrote. "But I'm not at all angry with the UFC. I'm well aware of the fact that I'm paid to perform. And the reality is three of the past four fights, I've lost."

MacDonald, a popular fighter with a strong fan following, stated that he's already spoken with UFC Vice President of Fighter Relations Joe Silva, who said a few more wins outside the organization could earn the Canadian fighter an invitation back into the world's top fight promotion. (Strikeforce is one organization in which MacDonald said he'd like to fight next.)

"The UFC has been great to me, and they've been great to deal with, so there are no hard feelings at all," MacDonald wrote. "I understand it's just the nature of the sport. Especially nowadays, with so many fighters, it's more important than ever to win fights."

MacDonald is just 1-3 in his past four fights (and 2-4 in his past six), which included a brutal first-round TKO loss to Quarry in his UFC 97 preliminary bout. MacDonald burst onto the UFC scene with wins over "The Ultimate Fighter" cast members Chris Leben and Ed Herman to earn the nickname "TUF Killer." He also defeated Rory Singer, Joe Doerksen and Jason Lambert during his two-and-a-half-year UFC stint.

Losses came to Rich Franklin, Yushin Okami, Demian Maia, Wilson Gouveia and Quarry, the majority of whom are or were considered top-10 fighters in the 185-pound division.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Krzysztof Soszynski replaces injured Houston Alexander at UFC 98

The shuffling of UFC 98's fight card continued today, as Team Quest fighter and "The Ultimate Fighter 8" cast member Krzysztof Soszynski (17-8-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) was named as a replacement for the injured Houston Alexander (8-4 MMA, 2-3 UFC).

Soszynski will meet Andre Gusmao (5-1 MMA, 0-1 UFC) on the preliminary card of the May 23 event in Las Vegas.

The UFC today announced the change, one day after confirming Alexander's withdrawal from the event after suffering a broken hand.

Soszynski will return to action on just one month's rest. "The Polish Experiment" earned a submission win over Brian Stann on the main card of UFC 97 on April 18. The win was Soszynski's fifth straight victory, and it earned him a $70,000 bonus for the evening's "Submission of the Night."

Gusmao will be looking for his first win in the octagon. The Brazilian lost a unanimous decision to Jon Jones in August 2008. The four-time IFL veteran had been undefeated before making his UFC debut.

Alexander was the latest victim of the injury bug that has plagued UFC 98. Frank Mir, Josh Koscheck, Yushin Okami and James Irvin had all previously withdrawn from the card for various ailments.

No timetable has been given for Alexander's return to action.

The oft-updated official fight card for the event now includes:

MAIN CARD

* Champ Rashad Evans vs. Lyoto Machida (for light-heavyweight title)
* Matt Hughes vs. Matt Serra
* Xavier Foupa-Pokam vs. Drew McFedries
* Dan Miller vs. Chael Sonnen
* Frank Edgar vs. Sean Sherk

PRELIMINARY CARD

* Brock Larson vs. Chris Wilson
* Pat Barry vs. Tim Hague
* Kyle Bradley vs. Phillipe Nover
* Andre Gusmao vs. Krzysztof Soszynski
* Brandon Wolff vs. Yoshiyuki Yoshida
* David Kaplan vs. George Roop
 
Feb 7, 2006
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With lines drawn, Rich Franklin on side of new training partner Anderson Silva

Rich Franklin, a former math teacher, is admittedly organized, often meticulous and definitely schedule-driven.

However, after he arrived in Los Angeles last week to train with Anderson Silva and the Black House gym for a two-week stint, he soon learned that when it comes to Brazilian fighters, scheduling isn't so much a guarantee as it is a rough estimate.

Still, Franklin has bonded with Silva, the guy who took his middleweight title in 2007. In fact, Franklin said that bond with "The Spider" is now strong enough that it could cancel any plans he had to train with Wanderlei Silva after their UFC 99 main event.

Franklin and Wanderlei Silva headline the upcoming event, which takes place June 13 in Germany, in a 195-pound catch-weight fight.

Just prior to the booking, Wanderlei had invited Franklin to train at his gym in Las Vegas. Despite their upcoming fight, Franklin initially said he still planned to take up the offer – once the fight was over. However, news of the Franklin-Anderson alliance, which was first reported by MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) and the Dayton Daily News, caused a bit of a stir last week.

Wanderlei reportedly didn't take too kindly to Anderson, a former training partner, helping his opponent prepare for an upcoming bout against him. In an interview with Sherdog, Anderson then called Wanderlei's recent decision to move from 205 to 185 pounds "pretentious."

Franklin is aware of the growing rivalry between the two fighters, but he's trying his best to stay out of it.

"My decision to come out to L.A. was made way before that feud ever really started," Franklin told MMAjunkie.com. "(Anderson's manager) Ed Soares called me and invited me to come out and train with Anderson, but this was before any of the Internet chatter was going on back and forth between Anderson and Wanderlei."

Franklin said he hasn't discussed the beef with Anderson.

"We got into the gym, we train, and it's just business," Franklin said. "We haven't talked about it."

However, having formed a friendship with Anderson and appreciative for his unselfish offer to train with him, Franklin now doesn't see himself working with Wanderlei after UFC 99.

"I'm a never-say-never guy, but with me coming out here to Anderson's camp and all that stuff, those lines have been drawn basically," Franklin said. "With Anderson helping me out, I would never do anything to cross that line. Basically, I feel like he's gone out on the limb for me, so I wouldn't – with the bad blood between them (Anderson and Wanderlei), I would never turn around and go the opposite direction, so to speak."

Franklin and Anderson first met at UFC 64, where "Ace's" 18-month title reign came to an end. Franklin worked his way back to a title fight, but he again suffered a TKO loss to Silva at UFC 77. With the two losses, a third matchup is unlikely, and Anderson essentially rendered Franklin irrelevant in a division he once dominated.

Franklin, though, was impressed by Anderson's candor and respect, and friendship developed soon after that second fight. Although they speak different native languages, Franklin said there hasn't been a major language barrier during the past week. In fact, his longtime trainer partner, Jorge Gurgel, unknowingly provided Franklin a translator for one workout session.

"Sometimes I understand things real well, and sometimes I don't understand things at all," Franklin said. "I speak enough Portuguese ... and Silva's English has certainly gotten better. Actually, Jorge Gurgel's brother lives out here, and so he came to a training session. ... When I had trouble understanding [Anderson] and there was that language barrier there, it was helpful having him there."

Franklin said the decision to spend two weeks of his eight-week camp in Los Angeles hasn't really affected his usual pre-fight preparations. Usually splitting his camp between Cincinnati and Seattle, Franklin simply moved his Seattle team, including head trainer Matt Hume and boxing coach Rob Radford, to Los Angeles for two weeks.

"Really, thing are still pretty much the same," Franklin said. "I just get the benefit of working with Anderson some. ... And most of the time, it's essentially a classroom environment with Anderson teaching all the students, but he makes some one-on-one time so we can work on things."

Franklin is impressed with the sessions and the Black House fighters' creativity and passion for learning. But it took him a while to get used to the constantly fluctuating schedules. For a guy who has workout sessions calculated to the minute and every calorie accounted for in his diet, Franklin initially found it difficult to, well, relax.

"I do wish I was a little more like that," Franklin joked. "I wish I could kind of relax and stuff. I guess that's the whole logical mathematician side of me. I'm just an in-control sort of guy. ... These guys get the work in, but you're never quite sure (when they'll do it)."
 
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SUPERMAN RETURNS AT JUNE 19 SHO MMA

Dennis "Superman" Hallman will soon be fighting in his backyard.

The longtime MMA veteran on Monday confirmed his return to action in the second installment of SHO MMA: Strikeforce Challenger Series on June 19, though his opponent has not been confirmed.

The event will take place at the ShoWare Center in Kent, Washington, an arena representative confirmed to MMAWeekly.com. The venue seats approximately 7,000 fans in a fight configuration and is about an hour from Hallman's hometown of Olympia.

A lightweight showdown between Duane "Bang" Ludwig and Lyle Beerbohm is expected to headline the event, but cannot be confirmed at this time.

Hallman last appeared at "March Badness," the Roy Jones, Jr. promoted MMA/boxing hybrid, defeating Danny Ruiz by rear naked choke in the first round. Prior to that, he defeated Jeremiah Metcalf in a tournament alternate match at Strikeforce: Four Men Enter, One Man Survives in November of 2007. He is 40-12-2 in a twelve-year career as a professional mixed martial artist.

The first installment of SHO MMA kicks off next Friday, May 15, at the Save Mart Center in Fresno, Calif. A lightweight match between Billy Evangelista and Mike Aina will headline.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Escudero Bridging UFC-Mexico Gap

Drive and ambition comprise the will to win, and they are prerequisites for success in a fight. Efrain Escudero, the lightweight winner on season eight of “The Ultimate Fighter,” demonstrated those traits when he registered himself in kindergarten.

Born in the northwest Mexican state of Sonora, Escudero’s parents rose for work at 4 a.m. Perhaps curiosity or loneliness drove the young child to leave his home, walk into town and begin his education. A puzzled administrator listened to the boy explain that his mother was gone, and he wanted to go school. Luckily, the school official recognized Escudero and knew his mother.

“Nothing is given to you,” Escudero said. “Being born in Mexico, it was like me against all odds, you know?”

His family immigrated to the United States when he was 7 years old and settled in the Southwest. His parents, Oscar and Adelaida, were field workers, and despite learning the value of education early, Escudero traded in school for work in his early teens; his mother was disabled on the job, leaving the family without her income. Escudero’s tenure in the fields was short-lived, however, as a teacher refused to allow his educational journey to end there.

A Wrestler Discovered

Wrestling was behind his ambition in school.

Escudero won an Arizona state title in high school and earned All-American status at Pima Community College. He eventually landed a scholarship at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix. Unable to afford fight training, he walked out of a gym dejected before he noticed UFC veteran Drew Fickett.

“I told him I wanted to fight, but I didn’t have any money,” Escudero said.

Fickett then provided the opening he needed.

“You’re devoted,” Fickett said. “You can help me train for my fight [with Kurt Pellegrino at UFC 61].”

Suddenly a wrestling partner for “The Master,” Escudero slowly incorporated boxing and jiu-jitsu into his training. Fickett’s gamble on the college wrestler was repaid with loyalty when Escudero followed Fickett and left Arizona Combat Sports. Local promotion Rage in the Cage caught wind of Escudero’s talents and gave him an opportunity, too.

“I wanted to fight because I needed money [for school], so Drew just threw in anybody. He said, ‘He'll fight anybody,’” Escudero said.

Fickett seemed to sacrifice his protégé when Joe Cronin, a local draw with 15 fights under his belt, accepted the challenge to oppose Escudero in his second fight. Escudero’s worries were eased, as he took a unanimous decision. A winning streak ensued.

Fighting then turned surreal, as Escudero tried out for “The Ultimate Fighter” reality series. A phone interview further endeared him to producers, and he was selected. It was bittersweet, though. His father died shortly before his appearance on the show and was not around to see his son live out his dream.

“One of the things he told me before he passed away … I was gonna leave for this show, so he made me promise [to win],” Escudero said.

His father also told him to remain true to himself. Escudero’s character was tested when Shane Nelson and Junie Allen Browning taunted him in an attempt to bait him into a physical altercation at “The Ultimate Fighter” house.

Perhaps memories of his father -- a former boxer -- staying up until midnight to play with his sons despite having to wake up for another 12-hour work day at 4 a.m. stayed Escudero’s hand. Maybe it was the admiration for the passion of his father, who, even in poverty, found a way to keep the family happy. Either way, retaliation against Nelson and Browning would have squandered his chance at a UFC contract.

Ironically, Escudero defeated Nelson and Browning en route to the final at “The Ultimate Fighter 8” Finale. There, he outpointed the favored Phillipe Nover to win the competition.

“I had one thing in mind,” Escudero said, “and that was getting on the mic and dedicating the show to my dad.”

In San Luis Rio, Colo., Escudero (11-0) was honored with a key to the city. A sign at its entrance now signifies it as his hometown.

“I would say, for him, it’s the most dynamic change of any of my athletes,” said manager Jason Genet. “I went from having to pay his light bill to him, you know, making over six figures a year just through sponsorships.”

Despite all the accolades, education remains a priority. Pursuing his degree in criminal justice kept him busy when a rib injury forced him out of a bout with Jeremy Stephens in April. Escudero points out that, these days, people need a college education just to get a job interview. He wants a backup plan. The 23-year-old enjoys training and wants to fight, but he does not believe fighting should be viewed as a long-term job.

“That’s what a lot of fighters have today,” he said. “They want to keep fighting because that’s all they do; that’s all they know how to do.”

Finding an Identity

Aside from his father, Escudero only looked up to one fighter growing up -- Julio Cesar Chavez. “El Gran Campeon Mexicano” remains arguably the most celebrated Mexican boxer of all-time, and ESPN ranked him 24th on an all-time greatest boxers list in 2007.

“I wanna be remembered like him,” Escudero said. “These people respect him, because he represents not only himself but his country.”

He switches gears quickly and quotes Mexican revolutionary Emeliano Zapata: “It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.”

“I have that Mexican spirit,” Escudero said. “If you’re gonna fight me, you’re gonna come out and fight me. You better come in and knock me out, because I’m gonna keep coming at you until I’m completely out.”

That spirit made Chavez a beloved figure. Mixed martial arts in Mexico remains a fringe sport. Escudero has fought there and admits the fan base has a lot to learn. However, the sport has crept into border towns -- a staple for boxing promotion in the country. Escudero wants to see the Octagon in Mexico someday.

“I hope that one day we can do that,” Escudero said. “Like a Julio Cesar Chavez fight, you know, everybody was [glued] to the TV.”

He plans to do his part and hopes to open a gym in Mexico with fellow UFC fighter, friend and training partner Edgar Garcia. They come from the same town in Mexico and want to share their experiences and opportunities with their homeland.

“[There are] people out in Mexico that don’t ever quit,” Escudero said. “You just try to guide them the right way, and they’ll go ahead and do it.”

Escudero believes his tenure in the UFC can help him achieve his goals. He calls attention to Roger Huerta, another Mexican fighter in the UFC, who, despite his immense popularity, has to battle the fact that he was not born in Mexico -- a detriment in the eyes of hardcore Mexican combat sports fans. Escudero does not have that uphill battle to fight. He welcomes a fight with Huerta, though.

“I’m not scared of him,” Escudero said.

A fight with Huerta was on the table, according to Genet, in a battle for the “El Matador” nickname, which Escudero carried prior to the UFC adopting him as “Hecho en Mexico.” Though they have nothing personal against Huerta, Escudero and company would not be upset if Huerta’s last UFC fight on his current contract pits the two lightweights against each other.

Escudero gives the UFC a marketable piece with which to play.

“It’s a big thing, obviously, [with] combat sports having a good history in Mexico,” Genet said. “We would hope that the UFC gives us the Roger Huerta treatment, but we’re also willing to work hard for it and earn it.”

Genet describes his client as “a young kid who is evolving.” In the contender-ridden UFC lightweight division, he believes room exists for his 155-pound fighter.

“We don't expect him to win them all,” he said, “but we expect him to be a fan favorite every time we go out.”

‘Living in America’

No stranger to hard work, Escudero sees it as the only way to go forward. It got him a green card in the U.S. after he had lived here illegally. He loves his place in the land of opportunity but still communicates with the country he left behind -- and the fans he has gained since -- through his personal Web site at www.EfrainEscudero.com.

Reluctant to talk politics, he ultimately shares his views on the importance of work visas, which “would eliminate a lot more people jumping the fence … more Mexicans dying.” A legal route, he asserts, allows Mexicans working in America to live in Mexico rather than just sending money back home.

“All Mexicans that come across to America want a better future,” Escudero said.

Rumored for a bout against American Top Team’s Cole Miller at UFC 103, Escudero plans to spend his Cinco de Mayo relaxing. Perhaps better than any other, the day illustrates the divide between Americans, Mexican-Americans and Mexicans. Americans enjoy it. Mexican-Americans celebrate it fervently. And Mexicans either reluctantly participate or sit out altogether, choosing instead to prioritize Mexican Independence Day on Sept. 16 -- a day not nearly as popular in America as Cinco de Mayo.

Wherever he lands, Escudero will probably enjoy the spoils of a marketable undefeated MMA fighter in the UFC: drinking free beers from his newest sponsor, Bud Light, and listening to music on speakers provided by another, MTX Audio.

“I will probably join [people celebrating],” he said, “because I’m living in America.”
 
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Eric Schafer injured, replaced by Mike Ciesnolevicz at June's TUF9 Finale

Eric Schafer (11-3-2 MMA, 3-2 UFC) has suffered an injury and has been forced to pull out of The Ultimate Fighter 9 Finale, which takes place next month in Las Vegas.

A source close to Schafer told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) the light heavyweight suffered a rib injury while preparing for the June 20 fight.

Stepping in as a replacement and scheduled to fight Tomasz Drwal (15-2 MMA, 1-1 UFC) is Mike Ciesnolevicz (17-3 MMA, 1-0 UFC), according to the The Times of Northwest Indiana.

The Ultimate Fighter 9 Finale, which concludes this season of "The Ultimate Fighter: U.S. vs. U.K.," takes place at The Pearl at the Palms Casino Resort and airs on Spike TV.

The Ciesnolevicz vs. Drwal fight will likely end up on the night's unaired preliminary card.

The injury comes out an inconvenient time for Schafer, who was riding the momentum of a four-fight win streak, which included UFC wins over Antonio Mendes and Houston Alexander in his two most recent bouts.

Ciesnolevicz, though, is an apt replacement and enters the event with a four-fight win streak of his own. His latest win came via a 63-second submission via heel hook over Neil Grove at February's UFC 95 event. Ciesnolevicz, a former IFL fighter, made his UFC debut at the overseas event.

Drwal, meanwhile, is looking to build on the momentum of his first career UFC win, a first-round knockout of Italian slugger Ivan Serati at UFC 93 in January. The Polish-born fighter previously appeared for the organization in a September 2007 loss to Thiago Silva at UFC 75.
 
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More UFC Trims: Loiseau, Chonan, Bielkheden

Not a spectacular night for Canada: Following the scratch of Jason MacDonald after a loss to Nate Quarry at UFC 97 in Montreal, Fighter’s Only reports that David Loiseau has also been ousted.

Ryo Chonan, forever a trivia footnote with his flying heel hook -- I say, a flying heel hook -- over Anderson Silva in 2004, joins Loiseau and Swede David Bielkheden on the unemployment line.

All three have been removed from the UFC’s roster list on their official Web site; oddly, UFC 1 entrants Pat Smith, Gerard Gordeau, Teila Tuli and Kevin Rosier remain. Gotta keep those options open.
 
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Affliction's reported Fedor Emelianenko vs. Josh Barnett fight not set

A reported August bout between heavyweight kingpin Fedor Emelianenko and highly ranked Josh Barnett has not been scheduled. Not yet, anyway.

On Monday a report from the official Russian-language M-1 Global website stated that the two heavyweight fighters would meet at a currently unannounced Affliction event in August.

However, the event – and that fight – aren't yet definites.

Soon after Affliction's second event in January, when Emelianenko defeated Andrei Arlovski and defended his WAMMA heavyweight belt, Affliction Vice President Tom Atencio mentioned Emelianenko vs. Barnett as a possibility for Affliction's third show.

However, company officials have confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) no details are set for for third event (and Atencio confirmed with MMA FanHouse that nothing is signed), and Barnett's camp told ESPN.com that the fighter hasn't been approached about the fight or the event date.

Affliction officials have been largely silent on the details of Affliction III in recent months. Although the show was once rumored as going head-to-head with the UFC's ultra-stacked UFC 100 show on July 11, Atencio recently told MMAjunkie.com that such a counter-move makes no sense and is "not even a possibility."

Affliction held its first two shows, "Banned" and "Day of Reckoning," at the Honda Center in Anaheim, Calif. The third show could again take place in California, though Affliction could team up with M-1 and DREAM to host the show in Japan instead.

Emelianenko (30-1), widely regarded as one of the world's top pound-for-pound fighters and perhaps the greatest heavyweight in MMA history, is undefeated in his past 27 fights. Although he had been criticized for the lack of quality competition throughout 2006 and 2007, he's since defeated two former UFC champions (Tim Sylvia and Arlovski) with first-round stoppages.

He could make it three in a row if he defeats Barnett (24-5), who had a short title reign with the UFC in 2002. Barnett has won four straight fights, which included a tough-fought third-round TKO of a resilient Gilbert Yvel at January's "Day of Reckoning" show.
 
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DREAM and PRIDE vet Luiz "Buscape" Firmino joins American Top Team

The Florida-based American Top Team has added another notable to its all-star roster of fighters.

Former PRIDE fighter and recent DREAM lightweight Luiz "Buscape" Firmino recently joined the team.

The former Brazilian Top Team fighter made the move to ATT earlier this year with hopes of fighting in the U.S. in 2009.

Among others, Firmino (12-4) is currently training with WEC featherweight champion Mike Brown, who fights Urijah Faber next month in WEC 41's main event. Brown briefly discussed Firmino in his latest WEC.tv blog, calling him "another quality training partner."

During a five-fight, 18-month stint in the PRIDE Bushido series, Firmino, who began his career with a 10-1 record, emerged a legitimate lightweight prospect. Having last competed for DREAM in May 2008, Firmino has suffered back-to-back losses in his past two fights. However, over the past nine years, he's suffered only three losses. Two came to notable Tatsuya Kawajiri via decision.

Firmino joins a fight team that features notables such as Gesias "JZ" Cavalcante, Thiago Alves, Jorge Masvidal, Cole Miller, Thiago Tavares and others.
 
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Strikeforce's Frank Shamrock: "I can't have another Nick Diaz night"

For all the accolades, all the accomplishments, all the highlights from Frank Shamrock's near-15-year career, the MMA legend currently finds himself with a mere 1-3 record in his past four fights.

And as the former UFC and Strikeforce champion knows, merely being average simply isn't an option.

"I wasn't able to deliver in my last fight," Shamrock recently told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com). "It was a good show, but it was an OK fight. I didn't deliver a performance. I look at it like, 'If the actor can't hold the role, then you need a new actor.'"

Shamrock walked away from the UFC in 1999 after a legendary win over Tito Ortiz at UFC 22. The MMA pioneer fought just twice more over the next six-and-a-half years.

Despite currently feeling a strong desire to continue competing, the 36-year-old knows he has to base his decision on how future competitions would effect his brand as a whole.

"I think I have to (make a decision) just from a smart business standpoint," Shamrock said. "I can't have another Nick Diaz night, unfortunately. The reason why people are Frank Shamrock fans is that I show up, and I deliver every time."

Shamrock entered his April 11 Strikeforce bout with Diaz with a nagging rib injury, but the middleweight said he wouldn't pin the results of the fight on that setback.

"I'm normally hurt," Shamrock said. "I can't take anything away form Diaz. I went in there and fought, and the result wasn't what I wanted or expected.

"The rib messed me up pretty good. I couldn't grapple or do much of anything for a couple of weeks. But I went in there believing 100 percent that I could beat Nick Diaz. Regardless of if I had one leg or not, I stepped in there, I picked up the sword, and I believed the sword would strike him down. It didn't. I just didn't feel it that night."

While Shamrock won't blame the loss on his injured rib, the California resident doesn't know where exactly to focus the responsibility.

"I've never gone in and gotten my ass kicked," Shamrock said. "I've never gone in and not had an outstanding performance, which is what people pay for. It's a brand-new experience for me, and I've always been able to go in there – broken, whatever – and been able to push it aside and perform.

"So I don't know. Am I getting old? Do I care less? Is it time to move on? I have no idea because this is my first experience."

Shamrock once walked away on a hot streak, leaving the UFC with a five-fight win streak in the organization – and having compiled a nine-fight unbeaten streak that would eventually reach 12 contests.

With just two wins in six bouts since a 2006 return to more frequent action, is it time once again for the MMA pioneer to focus on his multiple ventures outside of the cage?

"My only regret is that I didn't start younger and have more years to give," Shamrock said. "I really think I'm going to go for nine more years, but I also really thought I was going to kick Nick Diaz's ass.

"Things have changed a little bit."