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Feb 7, 2006
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Melendez Finally Ready to Fight
videolink: http://www.sherdog.com/videos/videos.asp?v_id=1483
Gilbert Melendez (Pictures) will make his next appearance in a cage. That news was confirmed Monday, when Strikeforce revealed Melendez would fight Gabe Lemley (Pictures) March 29 in San Jose, Calif.

Coming off the first loss of his career on New Year's Even in Tokyo, Melendez was originally slated to fight Josh Thomson (Pictures) on the Showtime-televised card. Thomson was one of sevearl fighters to bow out before Strikeforce settled on Lemley, an 11-6 fighter out of Iowa whose best win came over a developing Clay Guida (Pictures) in 2004.

Sherdog.com visited the Fairtex gym in San Francisco recently and caught up with the ranked lightweight, where he prepared for a then unknown opponent.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Fedor Emelianenko in interview

Fedor discusses UFC, Dana White, combat sambo, BJ Penn, Josh Barnett, Rickson Gracie and number of other topics.

The number one question everyone is wondering, why didn't you sign with the UFC?
Fedor: We didn't sign the contract there because we were offered a one-sided contract on unacceptable conditions.

You stated Mirko was your toughest fight in Pride, why? And would you give Mirko a rematch?
Fedor: I don't think Mirko was the strongest fighter. I just say he was of the toughest. There were los of top fighters in Pride: Barnett, Nogueira, Alexander, Sergei Kharitonov, Werdum, Igor Vovchanchyn. As for Mirko, he fell on evil times and it's a big question if he personally wants a rematch now.

A lot of people train Brazilian Jiu Jitsu as a base. You train Sambo as your base. What is your opinion of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu?
Fedor: I think highly of BJJ. But I see some disadvantages as well. Jiu Jitsu is a rather good Martial Art base. But one need to guide newcomers at the very beginning in order to avoid and eliminate the future mistakes. I can't say combat sambo or bjj have more or less advantage in case of transition to MMA. If people get involved in it, it's only for their good. Moreover it helps popularize the sport itself. For me, personally, combat sambo is the native sport ans this is the reason I believe sambo is more versatile, dynamic, free and less monotonous.

Both you and BJ Penn are looked at by many to be the top pound for pound fighters in the world. What do you think of BJ Penn?
Fedor: I like him as fighter. Unfortunately, I haven't seen too many of his fights. I follow his career by checking the ratings though.

Who are you interested in fighting?
Fedor: I'm interested in many of them, top ten for sure. I can't say I watch all their bouts but I'm informed of every result of the fights they take part in. I watch the fights I'm interested the most though.

What do you think of fighting Josh Barnett? What do you think of him as a fighter?
Fedor: Barnett is a good fighter. We are good friends with him. We always chat when we see each other. If we don't meet up we mail with each other. I'm aware of the fact such bout is planned but I haven't been told anything about it as of yet.

What's your secret to staying so calm in the ring? What kind of mental training do you do?
Fedor: That's no secret. I'm calm by nature. I just do my job.

What's your motivation now?
Fedor: I want to win, stay involved in what I like the most. I want to bring in a worthy Russian fighter as a future substitute for me. I want Russian banner to be placed in the first lines of the magazines regardless their bias. We have a lot of young guns who will, hopefully, show themselves in the coming 2-3 years. They are still young, a bit raw, but possess tons of energy, aspiration and motivation.

Have you considered moving to the US?
Fedor: Here is my fatherland, all my near relations and family live in Russia. It has no sense to leave the place I've lived my whole life.

What do you think of Dana White?
This person talks a lot, sometimes rashly without having thought before.

Who is in your opinion the greatest fighter ever? And who do you look up to?
Fedor: I don't consider whether the fighter is great or not. Few fighters stand on the front lines though: Randy Couture, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Tim Sylvia, Josh Barnett in a random order. I respect them all. It's very unpleasant though when your read someone's interview in which he speaks badly of me. I have never been disrespectful to any of them.

How do you think a fight between you and Rickson Gracie would go?
Fedor: This fight is a no go. Rickson wouldn't take part in it.

Who is your next opponent?
Fedor: My next bout will be organized in the USA. I can't say anything about my opponent at the moment.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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MM-Eh! News and Notes from Canada

March 11, 2008
by Andy Cotterill ([email protected])

If Kultar Gill (Pictures) could use only one adjective to describe his life right now, it would be "awesome."

The 29-year-old Canadian, also known as "Black Mamba," will make the 10-hour flight Tuesday from Vancouver to Japan, where he'll fight Tatsuya Kawajiri (Pictures) in the opening round of the Dream lightweight grand prix this Saturday at the Saitama Super Arena.

The bout will be Gill's first since he defeated Hideo Tokoro (Pictures) in the opening round of the K-1 Hero's middleweight tournament eight months ago. While preparing for his second round pairing against Caol Uno (Pictures), Gill woke one morning with no strength in his left arm.

He thought his career might be over.

"I came out of the tournament last year and I blew a disc in my neck," he told Sherdog.com. "I thought I was done training and fighting and stuff like that."

A bone-fusion surgery soon followed that also put a plate in his neck. Now Gill said he's feeling awesome.

"It's been six months since my operation," he said, "and I've been using an East Indian remedy that's really been helping me out."

In Kawajiri (20-4-2), Gill faces a versatile opponent who has won half of his fights with strikes.

"He likes to stand, which is awesome," Gill gushed. "I never have anybody stand up with me, so hopefully I can knock him out with kicks to the head. He likes to wrestle, he's known for that, and he has wicked grappling, so we'll see what happens."

Gill said he considered the fight the opportunity of a lifetime when he was approached with the offer several weeks ago.

"Everybody is tough at this level," he said. "I just don't care. What's he going to do to me, knock me out? Already been done in the gym. Submit me? Already done that. Hurt me? I don't think he'll do anything to me that hasn't already been done."

Although he is confident in his chances, Gill realizes that not everyone feels the same.

"A lot of people think I'm a super-underdog and don't belong there, but I've always had great striking," Gill said. "And now with Bibiano's help, my game has gotten a lot better."

Bibiano Fernandes (Pictures) is his jiu-jitsu coach and teammate on the Revolution Fight Team. Gill lauds the Brazilian for bringing his ground skills up to a new level.

"He gave me my purple belt just a little while ago," Gill said proudly. "My jiu-jitsu has been improving and has gone up from being nonexistent, and that increases my striking capabilities because I'm not as worried about going to the ground."

Gill is also very appreciative of the treatment he has continued to receive from K-1.

"My K-1 contract, I can fight wherever I want as long as it's not interfering with my fight in K-1, so it's very nice of them to let me do that," he said. "I really appreciate them putting me up with high-caliber fighters. I think this is one of the hardest lightweight tournaments ever with so many top-ranked world champions. I'm actually humbled by being in with the best 16 fighters in the world.

"I'm a fan of the sport," he continued, "and am just so excited to be out in front of 40-50,000 people and representing India, representing Canada and representing Revolution Fight Team. It's going to be awesome."

Pele is ‘Nuts'

Such is the belief of Gill, who gave a quick update on Revolution Fight Team member Jose Landi-Jons (Pictures). The Brazilian suffered an abhorrent lower leg injury two weeks ago at TKO 32 that saw both his tibia and fibula break clean through his skin.

"Pele is nuts, man!" Gill said with an incredulous laugh. "He broke his leg on Thursday, had surgery, came back in the gym on Monday and he was walking no crutches or nothing. So four days later he was running around, talking Brazilian and yelling at everybody -- he's crazy man."

Then Gill said something truly scary about the man who is widely regarded as having some of the hardest leg kicks in MMA: "Before he used to beat the crap out of us, and now he's got metal in his leg like a baseball bat to beat us up with, so I'm not looking forward to that."
 
May 5, 2002
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I don't think Chuck would have beat Shogun
I disagree I think Fedor is a bad match up for chuck.
SHOGUN GIVE ME YOUR OPINION ON BOTH THESE FIGHTS. WHY CHUCK AND FEDOR WOULD BE A BAD MATCH UP AND WHY YOU DONT THINK CHUCK WOULD HAVE BEAT SHOGUN RUA. WHO DO YOU THINK WILL WIN BETWEEN FORREST GRIFFIN AND RAMPAGE?
 
Jul 24, 2005
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DREAM Rules Announced

March 11, 2008 •


Rounds Lengths:
10 minute first round, 5 minute second round. A 90 second interval between rounds.

Judging:
Fights are judged in their entirety and no draws are possible, the judges must pick a winner.

Knees, stomps and soccer kicks:
Stomps and soccer kicks to the head of a grounded opponent are not allowed, but they are allowed to the rest of the body. Though if both fighters are on the ground, they are allowed to the head.

Knees to the head of a grounded opponent are allowed.
If there is a 15 kg or more weight difference nothing of the aforementioned is allowed.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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TOMMY SPEER: "I JUST DON'T THINK HE CAN GO THE DISTANCE WITH ME!"

By Percy Crawford | March 11, 2008

UFC welterweight Tommy Speer talks about his experience on The Ultimate Fighter and the differences in his skills between then and now as he gets set to face Anthony Johnson at UFC Fight Night 13 on April 2nd. Check out what he had to say about training with H.I.T. Squad, his thoughts on his upcoming fight and much more

http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content2181.html?PHPSESSID=610b35a61e0f4ace6464f35b3215bf84
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Boston to Host "The Ultimate Fighter 8" Tryouts on April 10

by Dann Stupp [mmajunkie] on Mar 11, 2008 at 12:12 pm in - News -
The seventh season of "The Ultimate Fighter" is still a month away from its debut on Spike TV, but UFC and Spike TV officials are already preparing for an eighth season that debuts later this year.

The first tryouts for "The Ultimate Fighter 8" will take place Thursday, April 10 in Boston at a site to be determined.

However, a source close to the show today told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that producers haven't yet decided on a weight class or any other major details for the show.

"The Ultimate Fighter," the UFC's groundbreaking reality series that helped MMA break into the national mainstream, debuted in 2005 and has launched the careers of dozens of current UFC fighters. Past cast members (including Nate Quarry, Kenny Florian and Travis Lutter) have been granted UFC title shots, and season-four winner Matt Serra became the first-ever "TUF" cast member to win a championship when he defeated Georges St. Pierre at UFC 69 a year ago.

Many Boston-area fighters -- including Florian, Joe Lauzon and Marcus Davis -- have used "The Ultimate Fighter" as a springboard for future success, so it's no surprise that UFC president Dana White (also a Boston native) would head there to recruit talent. (Other dates and locations will likely be announced in the future.)

The UFC has never held an event in Massachusetts, primarily because the state's athletic commission doesn't yet regulate the sport. UFC Vice President of Regulatory Affairs Marc Ratner is working to change that by year's end. Along with New York, the UFC considers Boston potentially one of the sport's most lucrative markets.

For now, "TUF" tryouts will have to suffice.

Back in October, the UFC and Spike TV inked a contract extension that calls for two new seasons of "TUF" in 2008 and 2009, and one new season in 2010 and 2011. "The Ultimate Fighter 7" debuts April 2 after UFC Fight Night 13.

"The Ultimate Fighter 8," meanwhile, will likely debut in August
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Chuck Liddell Willing to Fight for Heavyweight Title

MMAjunkie.com Staff [mmajunkie-staff] on Mar 11, 2008 at 10:58 am in - News -
First things first: Chuck Liddell wants to remain at 205 lbs. so he can reclaim his light heavyweight title. However, the former champ says he's willing to move up to the heavyweight division to fight interim champ Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira if the UFC makes the request.

Liddell talked about the possible move while a recent guest on Fight Network Radio.

"That's a possibility if they want to do it," Liddell told host Mauro Ranallo when asked about the fight with Nogueira. "If they want to set it up. I'm willing to do it."

Nogueira, the former PRIDE heavyweight champion, made his UFC debut in 2007. After a victory over Heath Herring, he took on Tim Sylvia at UFC 81 and won the organization's interim heavyweight title with a third-round submission.

UFC hall-of-famer Randy Couture is the organization's current heavyweight champ, but he resigned from the organization in October after a dispute with key UFC executives. The UFC maintains that Couture, in fact, retired from the sport, and UFC president Dana White said he won't strip him of the title until Couture fulfills the terms of his contract (fighting twice more in the UFC). Couture and his lawyers maintain that he's free to fight for other organizations when his contract expires in October. The matter will likely be determined by the courts.

In the meantime, the organization is moving forward with Nogueira -- for all intents and purposes -- as the UFC's current heavyweight champion. Fabricio Werdum was expected to get the next title shot, but as MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) passed along last month, the UFC instead scheduled him to fight Brandon Vera at UFC 85 in June.

The UFC has yet to schedule Nogueira for his first title defense.

Liddell, meanwhile, will fight Rashad Evans in UFC 85's main event. With a victory, he hopes he'll get a third shot at Quinton Jackson, who took his belt this past May at UFC 71, if he gets by Forrest Griffin in July (at UFC 86).

"I would definitely like it to happen before the end of the year," Liddell said.

However, he's not ruling out a fight with Nogueira.

"Honestly I would like to get my title back at light heavyweight and then talk about moving up," he said. "But if that came up, (that) too is a possibility."

As it stands, there may be no better time than now to move up since the UFC's heavyweight division is in a bit of disarray. A year ago, the division never looked so stacked. However, Couture recently resigned, Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic suffered back-to-back losses and left the UFC, former champ Tim Sylvia lost to Nogueira in February, one-time contender Gabriel Gonzaga has lost two fights in a row, fringe contender Cheick Kongo was recently stopped by Heath Herring, and former title-holder Andrei Arlovski may be on his way out of the organization now that he's a free agent.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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SHOGUN GIVE ME YOUR OPINION ON BOTH THESE FIGHTS. WHY CHUCK AND FEDOR WOULD BE A BAD MATCH UP AND WHY YOU DONT THINK CHUCK WOULD HAVE BEAT SHOGUN RUA. WHO DO YOU THINK WILL WIN BETWEEN FORREST GRIFFIN AND RAMPAGE?
I don't see chuck Koing Fedor I actually see a stand up war similar to the fight he had with cro cop. I believe Fedor will definitely get him to the ground and keep him there. If Chuck takes him down chucks geting subed. I think Chuck moving to heavyweight will make him slower then at light heavyweight. I think a healthy Shogun would outstrike Chuck much like Jardine did. Forrest vs Rampage I gotta go with Rampage but I will not be suprised if Forrest wins.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Thales Leites vs. Nate Marquardt Set for UFC 85

Visa issues forced Thales Leites (12-1 MMA, 3-1 UFC) to cancel a scheduled October 2006 bout with Nate Marquardt (26-7-2 MMA, 5-1 UFC), and then a broken hand forced him out of a second attempt at the fight last month at UFC 81. However, the two UFC middleweights will give the fight a third try at UFC 85 in London.

The fight has been accepted and Marquardt has signed a bout agreement, a representative from his camp today told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

The fight was first reported by GracieMag.com.

UFC 85 takes place June 7 at the O2 Arena in London, England. Chuck Liddell meets Marquardt's training partner, Rashad Evans, in the night's main event.

With the UFC's middleweight division short on contenders, the winner of the Leites-Marquardt bout could inch very close to a potential title shot.

After Leites pulled out of the UFC 81 fight, Marquardt instead took on late replacement and veteran fighter Jeremy Horn. Marquardt dominated the fight and earned a second-round victory after securing a guillotine choke. It was the 28-year-old's seventh victory in his past eight fights, with the only loss coming in a title shot with Anderson Silva at UFC 73.

Leites, a 26-year-old Brazilian, made his UFC debut at The Ultimate Fighter 4 Finale and dropped a unanimous decision to middleweight standout Martin Kampmann; it was the first loss of his career. Leites has bounced with a three-fight winning streak, which includes victories over Pete Sell, Floyd Sword and Ryan Jensen.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Here we go: Mike Goldberg UFC announcer interview
http://www.mmacanada.net/home/view/195
UFC ringside announcer, Mike Goldberg, has a dream job … just ask him and he will tell you so.

That’s exactly what we did the other day, in fact.

“Goldie” has been all over the map when it comes to broadcasting. He was a sideline reporter during the Chicago Bulls dynasty, he was the voice of the Detroit Red Wings and the Minnesota Wild, and broke into the sports broadcasting world calling CFL games back in the day.

He’s been around the block in the sporting world and when asked how he got his start with the UFC he’ll tell you that “Jerry Garcia said it best; ‘It’s been a long strange trip.’”

Although Goldberg is Octagon-side calling all of the UFC events and hosting Spike TV’s “UFC Unleashed,” he still feels like he hasn’t worked a day. First and foremost he is a fan of MMA. He is extremely dedicated to his job and feels blessed and fortunate to be doing what he is doing.

Charles Ruocco of MMACanada.net recently caught up with Goldberg. And when asked what the hardest part of his job was he replied:

“Challenging would be a better term, the most challenging part of my job is staying on top of all the news, doing my homework and keeping up with the growing sport of MMA. I feel the fans deserve this.”

In this in depth interview find out why Goldie thanks Canadian fans for saving the UFC in its early days, what he does to stay educated and on the cutting edge of the sport, and what he has to say about his and Joe Rogan’s relationship on air and off.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Kevin Randleman VS Jeff Monson Confirmed

Global Fighting Championship announced that the fight will take place in North Carolina on June 21.
Randleman suffered a serious infection recently and hasn't fight since 2006 when was submitted by Maurício "Shogun" Rua.

Monson recently won the Jiu Jitsu World Champion at heavyweight. He last MMA match up was a victory over Hakim Goram following a loss to Pedro Rizzo at Art of War.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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**Article** Ortiz and Others Could Leave the UFC...
http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/news?slu...yhoo&type=lgns
The May 24 match between Tito Ortiz and Lyoto Machida at UFC 84 from Las Vegas is among the most important matches of 2008.

Ortiz is a key component of a battle that ends with the last man left standing.

That battle isn’t in a ring or a cage, but a business war for supremacy of the mixed martial arts industry.

Ortiz is the biggest of a host of name fighters whose UFC contracts will be expiring at a time in which a slew of new rival promotions are in desperate need of big-name fighters.

For groups such as Elite XC, which debuts soon on CBS, and Mark Cuban’s HDNet Fights, the key to challenging the UFC’s supremacy in the marketplace is having the right television exposure, the right stars, the right business sense and a degree of long-term planning and patience.

It is generally believed that barring a miracle reconciliation, Ortiz and UFC will part company when his contract expires. UFC will be gambling by airing Ortiz’s match live on pay-per-view. Ortiz is a big enough name to help sell orders. The former UFC light heavyweight champion’s contract calls for bonuses far beyond his $210,000 reported per-match figure, so the feeling is it’s too much to pay without getting market value through heavily promoting his fight.

Machida should be favored to win the fight, but it’s hardly a lock. It’s a win the undefeated Machida needs if he’s going to work into position for a shot at the light heavyweight title, and connect with an audience that has seen him win many times against lesser-known fighters, but has yet to react to him as a star.

But if Ortiz wins, he’ll be a free agent at a time he’s at the top of the list of the most famous mixed martial artists in the country, in a business with many potential suitors who are all in need of a recognizable star.

By himself, no one fighter is going to make a difference in a promotional war. But Ortiz, former heavyweight champion Andrei Arlovski, Josh Koscheck, Mike Swick and two-time former heavyweight champion Tim Sylvia all have contracts that have either run out or are close to expiration. Losing most at the same time will give the public the impression the UFC must not be the be-all and end-all of the industry, particularly if several are seen shortly on a major television station with a competing promotion.

Ortiz, if he can pull off the right kind of a win, and then walk, is as strong a name to build around from a marquee standpoint as is out there, having headlined the two biggest pay-per-view events in history. He’s been plagued by back problems for nearly five years, and Machida will be a real test of what he still has in the tank.

There may be plenty of fighters as good as Ortiz, but only two current fighters, Chuck Liddell and Randy Couture, have his star power and name value. When building a company, that means a whole lot more than having ranked fighters that the general public has never heard of on your roster.

None of the other four are locks to be re-signed either. Koscheck has publicly stated he wants to stay. UFC has offered him a substantial raise from the $10,000 base pay with a $10,000 winning bonus he was getting from the long-term deal he was given in 2005 when he was an unknown fighter signing to do the Ultimate Fighter reality show. But a better offer could come from elsewhere.

Swick faces an altogether different situation. While he beat Josh Burkman by decision in his last fight in January, he fought tepidly and the fight was terrible. He is the third of three fighters from the same American Kickboxing Academy team in UFC’s welterweight division, with Koscheck and current No. 1 contender Jon Fitch. None of the three will fight each other, which makes keeping all three a potential problem. Of the three, Swick would be the lowest on the priority list.

Negotiations haven’t gotten close with Arlovski, who is seen as a star by the UFC audience, and is a fighter one would think every U.S. promotion would be interested in as an athletic heavyweight with great takedown defense and good hands. But fans have waited more than two years for the return of the Arlovski who destroyed people in 2004 and 2005. That fighter hasn’t been seen since he was brutally knocked out by Sylvia at UFC 59.

Sylvia, on the other hand, has never been popular with the UFC audience, but has been a fixture on top of the heavyweight division for five years.

UFC is attempting to replenish the heavyweight division by building around three projects, all decorated college wrestlers, Brock Lesnar, Cain Velasquez, an Arizona State All-American who debuts on April 19, and Shane Carwin, a Division II national champion who starts on May 24.

Last year brought three major players, the IFL, Elite XC and Bodog Fight, all of whom burned through tens of millions of dollars. IFL had a weekly Monday night television show in prime time nationwide on Mynetworktv, but didn’t have or make the right stars, nor did they seem to have long-term planning. IFL no longer has that TV outlet and they have completely revamped their presentation.

Elite XC had a deal with Showtime, bought smaller promotions all over the world, and with a CBS prime time television deal have a shot at making a great impact this year. Bodog had a television show on Ion that nobody watched, spent millions in advertising, failed on pay-per-view, lost their TV and are no longer even running shows.

This year’s key new players include Mark Cuban’s HDNet Fights, looking to become a major player by using MMA as a key sport in building a new television station and seemingly having the best chance of promoting the elusive Fedor Emelianenko vs. Randy Couture fight. Affliction, the makers of the T-shirts that are a fixture in the world of MMA, is starting a company tentatively scheduled to debut in June, and is making a big play for a number of free agents, reportedly making big offers to the likes of Matt Lindland (who has signed with them), Josh Barnett and Ben Rothwell among others, for non-exclusive contracts and numbers far beyond what they would be earning in UFC.

Cuban has stated many times he’s not interested in getting into a bidding war over the top talent. UFC has not talked publicly, but privately, their philosophy based on recent negotiations is to also not get caught up in bidding wars for talent.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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CroCop talks about DREAM, his plans and elbow surgery

"It's been really hectic over the last few days, people from the media kept dialing my number. It's not how I would like my day to look like, but it goes with the job. Of course, I understand that my fans want information about me and I promise that I'll provide as much information as I can here on my official MMA ID account.

Tomorrow I finally take off, I leave from Zagreb airport around 1 PM local time. Arriving just two days before the fight is a perfect timing for me and I won't be suffering from a jet lag.
I'm not going to talk much about my fight. I had very limited information about my opponent so I'll just be my old self and get in there to knock my opponent out. I always enjoyed fighting in Japan and I really hope that DREAM will put up a good show.

People keep asking me about my next opponent and I think it's not appropriate to discuss this before next week. Although I'll say that there's a possibility of facing some good fighters from K1 under MMA rules. But first things first, we'll see about that after Saturday.

For quite some time I've been having troubles with my left elbow. It's nothing too serious but I'm scheduled for a surgery later this month with Dr. Bojanic from the University Hospital Center „Salata“. A few weeks ago I received a major blow to my elbow during a sparring session, that caused a tiny hematoma inside. From what I hear from dr. Bojanic, this is a routine procedure and I'll restart my trainings a couple of days after surgery.

Thank you all for supporting me and don't miss the show on Saturday."
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Cage Rage Champion Imanari Finds Success with Lost Art

LONDON – Leglocks have largely become a lost art in the world of combat sports, deemed too impractical or difficult to apply by today’s fighters. While kneebars, heel hooks and toe holds are great additions to a high-level jiu-jitsu arsenal, they can be tricky to pull off in competition – unless your name is Masakazu Imanari.

Nicknamed “Ashikan Judan” (which loosely translates to “Master of Leglocks”), the Cage Rage World and Deep featherweight champion has become known as much for his incredible leg submissions as he has for his peculiar nature. Half of his 14 career wins have come by leglock submission. Feared by many, his leg locks have resulted in some memorable finishes, including his beautiful reverse heel hook against Jean Silva at Cage Rage 25 last Saturday at Wembley Arena.

Fans in the British capital watched in awe, as the Kanagawa, Japan, native stopped his Brazilian challenger in what can only be described as a grappling clinic. Though he had his hand raised just 2:30 into the match, Imanari says he’s not entirely satisfied with his performance.

“My body didn’t move the way I wanted it to,” Imanari says through his interpreter, Tomomi Sawabe. “Regardless, I’m happy that I was able to finish this fight the way I wanted to – with a leg submission.”

Imanari, a 32-year-old father of one, improves his art with each fight, which may have a lot to do with the fact that he trains alongside grappling wizard Shinya Aoki – a man many regard as the premier submission fighter in the world. In the prime of his career, Imanari may not have peaked yet. One needs only to view the Japanese featherweight’s recent bouts to conclude he likely has many fruitful years ahead of him.

“I don’t know where I am in the mountain climb that is my career, but as long as I’m going up the mountain in a comfortable car, it’s all fine by me,” says Imanari, a victor in five consecutive fights. “There were times when I thought about quitting [due to injuries and other hardships], but I’m a professional fighter; that’s what I do. If I didn’t have this job, I would be homeless.”

So what’s next for the “Master of Leglocks?” Though he hopes to return to the United Kingdom and continue defending his Cage Rage title, recent developments in his homeland have opened a whole new world of possibilities. With the Dream promotion rising from the ashes of Pride and K-1 Hero’s, Japanese fans may soon catch a glimpse of Imanari competing in the featherweight division of the recently hatched organization.

“Aoki has very good contacts in Dream, so I hope to fight there,” Imanari says. “Hopefully, we will return to England soon, as well. For me, there’s not much difference in where I fight; it’s just distance.”

Might there be an eventual fight with Aoki in Imanari’s future? He smiles as Sawabe translates the question.

“I always lose to Aoki, but my goal is to beat him,” Imanari says. “Hopefully, before I die.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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FULL DREAM LIGHTWEIGHT GRAND PRIX 1ST ROUND CARD

Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic will take on Tatsuya Mizuno – not Yoshihiro Nakao, as previously reported – at Dream 1 on Saturday at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. Dream officials announced the bout on Tuesday.

Filipovic (22-6-2), a free agent bust inside the Octagon, parted ways with the UFC last month following back-to-back losses to Gabriel Gonzaga and Cheick Kongo. The 34-year-old Croatian last competed in Japan in September 2006 when he knocked out Wanderlei Silva and struck Josh Barnett into submission on the same night to win the 2006 Pride Open Weight Grand Prix. Filipovic also owns victories against Heath Herring, Aleksander Emelianenko, one-time UFC heavyweight champion Kevin Randleman and Japanese icon Kazushi Sakuraba.

Mizuno (3-2), who has fought exclusively for Pancrase, has not appeared since November, when he delivered a technical knockout against Masayuki Kono. The 26-year-old has dropped two of his past three bouts.

Dream 1
Saturday, March 15
Saitama Super Arena
Saitama, Japan

NON TOURNAMENT:
Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic vs. Tatsuya Mizuno
Hayato “Mach” Sakurai vs. Hidetaka Monma

Dream Lightweight Grand Prix
Gesias “JZ” Calvancante vs. Shinya Aoki
Tatsuya Kawajiri vs. Kultar Gill
Joachim Hansen vs. Kotetsu Boku
Luiz Firmino vs. Kazuyuki Miyata
Eddie Alvarez vs. Andre Amade
Mitsuhiro Ishida vs. Bukyung Jung
Katsuhiko Nagata vs. Artur Umakhanov
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
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Dream 1
Saturday, March 15
Saitama Super Arena
Saitama, Japan

MY PICKS

NON TOURNAMENT:
Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic vs. Tatsuya Mizuno
Hayato “Mach” Sakurai vs. Hidetaka Monma

Dream Lightweight Grand Prix
Gesias “JZ” Calvancante vs. Shinya Aoki
Tatsuya Kawajiri vs. Kultar Gill
Joachim Hansen vs. Kotetsu Boku
Luiz Firmino vs. Kazuyuki Miyata
Eddie Alvarez vs. Andre Amade
Mitsuhiro Ishida vs. Bukyung Jung
Katsuhiko Nagata vs. Artur Umakhanov
 
Jul 24, 2005
12,836
2,137
0
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HDNET NOT airing DREAM1...showing XFL (Xtreme fighting leauge) instead

http://mmajunkie.com/news/3916/hdnet-to-air-xfl-not-dream-1-on-saturday.mma


"HDNet, a Mark Cuban-owned channel geared toward MMA coverage, will broadcast this weekend's Xtreme Fighting League event, but DREAM's inaugural show will not be carried by the all-high-definition cable station.

HDNet officials today told MMAjunkie.com that Saturday's "DREAM 1" event, which features the opening round of a lightweight grand prix and the DREAM debut of former UFC fighter Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic, has not been picked up for broadcast by the station."
 
Feb 7, 2006
13,049
2
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Assuério Silva Interview

With Pancrase’s heavyweight belt, Assuério Silva restarted his history at MMA after a bad time at UFC. With a signed contract with HCF, Assuério told TATAME in an exclusive interview about the event, his trains with Antonio Samuray, new Brazilian reinforcement at UFC, and promised a strong back to MMA. “Those people that believe that Assuério Silva is over are wrong… The opponents should get ready, I’m coming with everything”. Check the exclusive interview with Assuério Silva at TATAME’s site.

I’ve signed a contract with HCF… How many fights would you do?

I’ve signed with HCF and my first fight will be at May 10th, but I don’t know against who it’ll be. I believe that in a month they’ll give me my opponent, after the event of March 29th.

Are you training with Antonio Samuray?

He went to Europe, we used to train at Fortaleza and he did some fights for Europe Top Team. I kept contact and existed the possibility to train with me at Total Punch team, possibility that is right now. Samuray is with us since two weeks ago. I was looking after putting him to fight at Pancrase, but the UFC came and we signed that.

How are the trains with Samuray?

That guy is a rock, a strong train. He has everything to be the champion at 93 kg category. I bet all my chips at him, beats strong, is talent and power. He’s a Paraiba! (laughs)

How do you think will be his fight against Thiago Silva at UFC?

Knockout. He is an ordem from northeast, that guy doesn’t know him here, he has a lot of fights at northeast by knockout, tough fights, none easy, he is a rock and has everything to be champion. He’s training well.

In which team are you training now?

Total Punch MMA Team, that has three partners, Marcos, Neto and Fabian. We’re investing on thins team and we have everything, ring, working out room… We have one of the best structures of Curitiba.

When will you defend your Pancrase belt?

I left the belt free. I was waiting other events, a better offer, they started offering me and I’m without fighting for three or four months. I went to fight last time and the opponent and he didn’t showed up, after that I didn’t fought anymore. They made me a proposal and made contact with Pancrase, we made an arrangement and I devolved the belt, and now I’m going to HCF and offered me a proposal of 5 fights.

What did you thought about Minotauro’s fight at UFC?

Speechless. Minotauro is a warrior, a Vale-tudo monster and a proud for everyone. Our Ultimate champion, the belt couldn’t be in better hands.

And Anderson Silva’s victory?

Anderson is a monster, speechless too. Anderson is the man and have proved this a lot of times and has the belt to prove it, and I believe it’ll be in his hands for a long time. I like him because we trained together and I know about his potencial.

Who do you believe can beat Anderson Silva?

At his category, I believe that nobody can beat him. He is investing a lot on his training, always had been a athlete that likes to trains and I believe that it’ll be tough to beat him.

Have you trained with Shogun at Curitiba?

Not yet. We would train, but he injuried his knee. I trained with Ninja, we did four training and I’m waiting them to create his gym. They came here at Total Punch and I’m waiting them to create the training center to do this training partnership, train hard.

Do you still think about UFC?

Of course. It’s everyone’s dream. I’m doing a campaign and started well with Pancrase’s belt. Those people that believe that Assuério Silva is over are wrong… I’m starting now and I’m very focused, and from now I promise all victories. The opponents should get ready, I’m coming with everything.