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RM211

Sicc OG
Feb 10, 2006
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So, the WWE is offering Chael P. Sonnen and Wandy Silva a job??







Meltzer:

--Okay, so here's the deal with Chael Sonnen and WrestleMania. Sonnen will be attending the Hall of Fame and WrestleMania in San Jose. He's expected to talk with people in WWE. It is not a formal meeting but it is expected to happen. As far as Wanderlei Silva goes and WWE, I don't know that there's anything to that at all. Silva may be doing pro wrestling within a few weeks, but it's not official at this point, but it wouldn't be for WWE.
 

B-Buzz

lenbiasyayo
Oct 21, 2002
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Reminder that Glory is on Spike and RFA is on AxsTV tonight!

Joe Schilling wants to be Spike TV's first three-sport star
By Marc Raimondi

Joe Schilling is already one of the best kickboxers in the world. Last year, he made his Bellator MMA debut with a Knockout of the Year candidate against of Melvin Manhoef. And "Stitch 'Em Up" might not be done there.

Schilling told MMAFighting.com that he would love to compete in Al Haymon's Premier Boxing Champions promotion, which will air on Spike TV along with Schilling's other two organizations: Glory World Series and Bellator.


"If I fight in a ring, I expect to win," Schilling said. "If I fight in a cage, I expect to win. If I fight in a parking lot, I expect to win. It's all pretty much the same thing with different rules."

First up, though, Schilling has a matchup with Robert Thomas at Glory 19 on Friday night in Hampton, Va. After that, the Ohio native and Los Angeles resident said he could take a Bellator fight as early as March or April.

"I have a lot of good opportunities coming up right now," Schilling said. "There's a lot of buzz behind me and I've got some big goals with 2015 and they all start with Feb. 6."

If Schilling, 31, has his way, you'll be hearing a lot about him this year in all three sports. The highlight-reel striker says he wants to be "the Donald Cerrone of Spike TV." Cerrone, a UFC star, is known for fighting as often as possible, including two fights in a span of three weeks last month.

"I feel like I'm at the age now where I'm focused enough and mature enough to do it," Schilling said. "And I really feel like this is gonna be my big year."

Schilling made it to the Glory 17 Last Man Standing tournament finals last June, beating Wayne Barrett and Simon Marcus. He fell to Artem Levin in the championship bout.

Levin is the same guy that Schilling brought into camp as a sparring partner for Nick Diaz in advance of Diaz's UFC 183 bout with Anderson Silva last week. Schilling has worked with Diaz regularly for more than a year now, training MMA up in Stockton, Calif., with Cesar Gracie, Gilbert Melendez and the Skrap Pack. Schilling also trains regularly with Lorenz Larkin at Millenia MMA in Rancho Cucamonga.

"Every day I'm trying to get better on the ground, get better with my wrestling," Schilling said.

He didn't need that at Bellator 131 on Nov. 15 against Manhoef, who he starched with a massive right hook-left hook combination. It's likely that Bellator will continue to match him up with strikers, which could be bad news for those particular middleweights. Schilling said he is open to bouts with guys like Alexander Shlemenko and former UFC veterans.

Schilling has been kickboxing for a decade and was stunned about the attention he got from one major MMA fight that wasn't even a main event.

"I always knew there was a much bigger market for MMA than kickboxing, but I never really knew how much it was," he said.

Of course, his first sport is always going to be kickboxing and the up-and-coming Thomas represents a quandary. It's almost a lose-lose. Schilling is a rising star in two sports and Thomas is largely an unknown. A defeat would be difficult to take for Schilling's plan of a huge 2015.

"He's a young, hungry up-and-comer like I was," Schilling said. "So I know how dangerous those guys can be. I'm not looking past him at all. I used to overlook guys like that and every time I did that, it came back to bite me in the ass. It just makes him a more dangerous guy, because from my experience I don't enjoy making other people famous. I don't want to be the only good name on somebody's win column."

A win over Thomas is a key to the future -- and just the beginning for Schilling. If he has his way, this year will be by far the biggest of his career. And not just in Glory -- Bellator and Premier Boxing Champions, too.

"I'm down for it," Schilling said. "I'm at a point now where I'm working with the right people. I have the right people around me and I'm here to be successful in all three."
 
May 13, 2002
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The Silva from last Saturday looked EXACTLY like prime Silva though. He threw the same shit he always threw, looked just as sharp as ever. That gruesome leg injury you keep bringing up he kept using that leg over and over throwing kicks with it.

You bring up a year of inactivity, most champions and high level fighters only fight once a year anyway. Diaz was out for 2 years for this fight lol

The shots Diaz took would have slept most fighters, Diaz just has an iron chin. Dude has spent his career eating shots from some of the best KO artists in the game like Robbie Lawler, Paul Daley, Carlos Condit etc.

I really don't understand how you keep saying "he's not the same guy" when there was literally zero proof of that in this fight.
lol you are lying to yourself HARD by saying Silva was prime at age 39. There are no prime 39 year old fighters or athletes. He may have "looked" similar to you, probably because he was fighting Diaz, but there is nothing prime about being shy of 40.
 
Jan 29, 2005
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lol you are lying to yourself HARD by saying Silva was prime at age 39. There are no prime 39 year old fighters or athletes. He may have "looked" similar to you, probably because he was fighting Diaz, but there is nothing prime about being shy of 40.
and yet you fail to mention what looked different in any way shape or form from prime Anderson of 2 years ago. You mention age, yet fail to realize he's on roids that more than likely extended his prime. He literally looked no different. His reflexes and sharpness of punches and kicks looked exactly the same as it always has.

Being a B-Hop fan and seeing the way he handled Jean Pascal at age 46 you should be the first to know age isn't anything but a number for exceptional athletes who have taken care of themselves.

Randy Couture and Dan Henderson both had their best years in their career after age 40 respectively after extremely long careers lol

Until you say why Anderson didn't look prime and not just "he's 39" which doesn't even make sense considering he was wrecking people at 37 I'm going to assume you just want to discredit Diaz.
 
May 13, 2002
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Hopkins wasn't prime or even close to it when he fought Pascal, that's what made his victories post 40 so great. Hopkins peaked around 2001-2002, you could clearly see a decline by the time he fought Allen III and Allen himself said he wasn't the same guy that knocked him out years before. That's a two year difference. Compare Hopkins at 37 to 39 and the decline is obvious. 37 was the absolute peak for Bhop, it only went down after that. You can't stay prime forever.

Just because there are exceptions like Hopkins and Couture doesn't make it true for everyone else, those are freaks, and their ring smarts and styles of fighting allowed them to continue at an advanced age (as well as taking care of their bodies and extreme discipline and dedication).

You put Silva in the ring against a top fighter he's going to get smashed. Again, look at who he was fighting. Roy Jones looked AMAZING when he fought Jeff Lacy, didn't mean he wasn't shot to shit it just so happened Lacy sucked and was even further gone. Now I'm not saying Diaz is Jeff Lacy of course lol but you see my point, consider the opponent, the speed (lack there of), style etc. Of course Silva is going to look decent against Diaz.

I'm not trying to discredit Diaz I'm just being honest - he's not that great. I understand he's a warrior, he marches to the beat of his own drum, he's entertaining, etc etc but he's not great, there is nothing remarkable about him as a fighter (other than being a tough SOB). I always thought if they fought a few years ago it would resemble more of Silva vs Forrest, a complete mismatch.
 
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You put Silva in the ring against a top fighter he's going to get smashed. Again, look at who he was fighting... Of course Silva is going to look decent against Diaz.

I'm not trying to discredit Diaz I'm just being honest - he's not that great. I understand he's a warrior, he marches to the beat of his own drum, he's entertaining, etc etc but he's not great, there is nothing remarkable about him as a fighter (other than being a tough SOB).
I don't think Silva looked decent against Diaz. he barely scored higher on points that were barely there. that was his hardest fight other than Weidman 1 & 2.

and i'm not saying Diaz is "remarkable", but what's "remarkable" about Silva? he has great accuracy and "flow", and he got some decent Taekwondo, Muay Thai, and BJJ. he doesn't have the "best" "anything". but he has enough to put on a good show and stay clearly above most competition.

Diaz might have the best "hands" in MMA and very very very top tier BJJ that he mixes up with a little Judo and Sambo. he has arguably the best cardio in MMA and probably throws more punches than anybody. I don't know what "remarkable" means to you in MMA but Diaz is as elite as Silva in many regards other than holding a UFC belt.
 
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2-0-Sixx @2-0-Sixx Guess we agree to disagree. You say put him in the ring with a top fighter he's going to get smashed, but I'm looking at the Top 15 in he division right now and Anderson destroys them all except for Weidman and maybe Jacare if Jacare can get him to the ground. I have no idea what top fighters you're talking about...

Champion: Chris Weidman - Weidman still wins
1: Anderson - Can't fight himself
2: Jacare Souza - Great fight, if it stays standing Anderson by KO, Jacare could win by sub if it goes to the ground.
3: Lyoto Machida - Extremely boring fight, neither will engage. If Anderson catches him Machida goes to sleep, don't see Machida catching Anderson though.
4: Vitor Belfort - Anderson by KO...again
5: Luke Rockhold - Anderson by KO, Rockhold will try and be way too aggressive which is what Anderson likes.
6: Yoel Romero - Yoel gasses out after 3 minutes, Anderson finishes him in the 2nd.
7: Gegard Mousasi - Manages to lose every big fight he's in, doesn't seem to have the mental game when it comes to big fights. Anderson by decision.
8: Tim Kennedy - Anderson by destruction, Kennedy don't have the wrestling Chael or Weidman have to be successful against Anderson.
9: Michael Bisping - Anderson by destruction, 1st or 2nd round KO.
10: Thales Leites - Although improved since their joke of a fight 7 years ago, Anderson by destruction
11: CB Dollaway - lol Anderson annihilates CB
12: Costa Philipou - lol see above
13: Mark Munoz - another guy who loses every big fight he's in and gets finished brutally in them all. Anderson by KO
14: Tim Boetsch - lol another annihilation
15: Brad Tavares - lol see above
 
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I don't think Silva looked decent against Diaz. he barely scored higher on points that were barely there. that was his hardest fight other than Weidman 1 & 2.
Well right, I meant he looked decent considering everything. He definitely didn't look like the same guy to me, he certainly isn't a prime fighter anymore that's for sure.

and i'm not saying Diaz is "remarkable", but what's "remarkable" about Silva? he has great accuracy and "flow", and he got some decent Taekwondo, Muay Thai, and BJJ. he doesn't have the "best" "anything". but he has enough to put on a good show and stay clearly above most competition.

Diaz might have the best "hands" in MMA and very very very top tier BJJ that he mixes up with a little Judo and Sambo. he has arguably the best cardio in MMA and probably throws more punches than anybody. I don't know what "remarkable" means to you in MMA but Diaz is as elite as Silva in many regards other than holding a UFC belt.
I think Silva was a remarkable athlete, a special kind of talent. His reflexes, his natural ability, etc. Far more the athletic than Diaz. Sure, I agree Diaz has good hands, I don't think I'd go as far to call it remarkable, solid fundamentals when he wants, throws solid shots. I don't know enough about judo to comment in that so you very well may be correct about that.

I kinda viewed Silva like an MMA version of Roy Jones (to a lesser extent of course). What I mean by that is Jones used his incredible naturally gifted talent, his reflexes, speed were phenomenal. Because of that, he got away with a lot of stuff you shouldn't do in boxing, things that any trainer would say are incorrect. Once Jones aged, 35, and those natural reflexes started to slip, it was all over. He never had the solid fundamentals to fall back onto that say Bernard Hopkins had, who wasnt nearly the athlete or had the natural freakish abilities. That's how I see Silva, he got away fighting purely on his athletic talent. Those reflexes started to slide after 35 and he's no longer the same. Maybe a punch or a kick he would have slipped a few years prior he's a fraction of a second slower and getting caught. It's a natural decline that comes with age.

Diaz is awesome he's one of the few guys I'll remind myself to watch, so I don't want to seem like I'm hating on the guy, it's simply my opinion that Silva in his prime was on another level.
 
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Jon Fitch Fails Pre WSOF 16 Drug Test

Notice the $2500 fine lol word on twitter is he popped for elevated testosterone.

Jon Fitch fails pre-WSOF 16 drug test, faces fines and suspension | MMAjunkie

Yet another high-profile fighter has failed a drug test, adding to this year’s rapidly expanding list of offenders.

The California State Athletic Commission today said onetime UFC and WSOF welterweight title challenger Jon Fitch (26-7-1) was flagged for an “adverse result” following a pre-fight drug test in connection with this past December’s WSOF 16, which aired on NBCSN.

The CSAC, which oversaw the Dec. 13 event at McClellan Conference Center in Sacramento, Calif., performed a CIR test on Fitch’s urine sample and confirmed the result. The commission declined to name the substance for which he was flagged. However, multiple sources close to the fighter indicated the test found elevated levels of testosterone.

The sources spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss such matters publicly.

According to a summary of test results provided by the CSAC, Fitch gave a urine sample on the day of the event, prior to the his fight, which was then forwarded to the UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory. The sample was received and analyzed by the lab on Dec. 16.

On Jan. 15, the CSAC received a finding from the laboratory of an adverse finding. On Jan. 16, CSAC Executive Director Andy Foster ordered a CIR test on the sample. The test result was received Feb. 4 and also indicated an adverse result.

Fitch faced WSOF champ Rousimar Palhares (17-6) at WSOF 16 and fell prey to a kneebar submission in the first round. He now faces a nine-month suspension and $2,500 fine. He may appeal the commission’s finding at a future CSAC hearing.

Fitch has been a vocal critic of PED offenders, calling them “weaker-minded” and labeling the now-banned testosterone-replacement therapy “a joke” and a refuge for former steroid users.

“It is a joke,” Fitch told Fight Hub TV in 2013. “This is devised to let guys who have used steroids in their past re-boost their testosterone since they abused their bodies when they were younger. The guys using it, the ones who use the excuse of, ‘I am too old to compete with young guys” – that’s bulls***! I am 35 years old, and I promise, I would and will bet money that my testosterone levels are just as good as a younger fighter. You know why? Because I have not wrecked my body with steroids, never used ANY type of PED and train healthy and properly to compete.”

Earlier this week, the MMA world was rocked by the dual failures of UFC 183 headliners Anderson Silva and Nick Diaz. Silva was found with two steroids in his system after an out-of-competition test, and Diaz failed his third post-fight test for marijuana.

For complete coverage of WSOF 16, check out the MMA Events section of the site.
 
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didnt silva kill someone?
No, he kind of threatened to kill the dude that was fucking his wife then swat had to come get him at his house. Then when charges were dropped he got rehired by the UFC, but they fired him again when a video came out of him high as fuck off cocaine holding a gun and yelling at his wife lol