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UFC 173 Fight Card

FC 173 sure looks a lot different than it did a few weeks ago. UFC middleweight champion Chris Weidman was forced off the card with a knee injury and his bout with Lyoto Machida was moved back to July, so the promotion was forced to scramble to fill the void. What they came up with was a bantamweight title fight and an exciting welterweight bout, along with a contender’s bout at light heavyweight

With top contender Raphael Assuncao currently nursing a rib injury, champion Renan Barao will instead defend his title against Team Alpha Male’s T.J. Dillashaw in the main event. The co-main is a light heavyweight bout between Daniel Cormier and Dan Henderson, while the middle of the main card will be anchored by a bout between Robbie Lawler and Jake Ellenberger. Francisco Rivera will step into Dillashaw’s place in a bout against Takeya Mizugaki that is on the main card as well.

Here’s a look at what is booked for the Mandalay Bay Events Center:

Main Card
Preliminary Card
Fight Pass Card
Aaron Phillips vs. Sam Sicilia

Source: www.bloodyelbow.com By: Tim Burke

TUF Brazil 3: Episode 9 Recap

The focus of this week’s episode immediately centers around the fight between Marmota and Warlley. The final middleweight match in the quarterfinal round, Chael Sonnen places a trust in Warlley that we havent seen in previous fights this season. He boldly states that, “If Marmota beats Warlley, I’ll call Dana White and tell him to sign this guy.” The American Gangster is never short on confidence, but he seems especially secure in Warlley’s ability to keep Team Sonnen’s winning streak going.

We then learn a little bit more about each fighter. Marmota has very humble roots, and talks about how he often went hungry as a child. He was adopted at the age of 7, but lost his mother at the age of 14. Other fighters often talk about the support they receive from their family, but not Marmota. He says that no one in his life back up his decision to fight and he did it all on his own. This has molded his style and he fights, “like there’s no tomorrow.”

Warlley’s path to MMA began early on in life. Only 23 years old, he mentions that he was expelled from three different schools for fighting. He may have gotten into fights on the playground, but Warlley has another disagreement to handle at the TUF house. The other members of Team Sonnen are sitting outside and try to talk to him about his attitude on the training mat. They like him personally, but find him far too arrogant and don’t appreciate the way he talks to them during practice. If you assumed that Warlley heard their concerns and responded in a measured way…you’d be wrong. He doesn’t understand what they’re talking about and flat out says, “I won’t change.”

After the not so successful intervention, Chael and Wanderlei get physical. Don’t worry, it’s notanother altercation, it’s this season’s coaches challenge. With the World Cup taking place in Brazil this summer, the challenge is soccer themed. After navigating a number of agility and soccer ball handling drills, each coach must score a goal. The first person to complete the course three times wins. The two start off close, but Wanderlei struggles with the ball handling drill. Chael takes the lead from that point and never relinquishes it. He wins the challenge along with 75,000 Reals (about $33,000). Team Sonnen hasn’t won many games this season, but as Bomba puts it, “Thank God we won the most important game — the money game.” Wanderlei takes a little grief for losing to an American in a soccer challenge, but he’s not worried. He promises he’ll win the fight. Unlike Bomba, that’s the only game that matters to him.

After a hard day of training both teams come back to the house and discover a rack of Hawaiian shirts in the middle of the living room. They’re treated to a luau themed party with all the remaining women competing to be the next Octagon girl. There’s food, music and (most importantly) tiki drinks. As one can imagine, the cocktails lead to the classic adult party game “Truth or Dare.” There are even dares that lead to a couple of the fighters to kiss some of the girls ON THE LIPS! Good thing they air this season on the internet, because who knows if the FCC would approve such actions.
> Watch: Meet the Octagon Girls!

The next day Chael Sonnen stops by with the rest of the coaching staff to check on Warlley’s weight. It’s there that we learn that Peregrino in addition to being the comedian of the house is also quite the cook. Chael is surprised by Peregrino’s many traits while Warlley just calls him a “weird dude.” Enough about the multi-faceted nature of our favorite pilgrim, it’s fight time!

The next day Chael Sonnen stops by with the rest of the coaching staff to check on Warlley’s weight. It’s there that we learn that Peregrino in addition to being the comedian of the house is also quite the cook. Chael is surprised by Peregrino’s many traits while Warlley just calls him a “weird dude.” Enough about the multi-faceted nature of our favorite pilgrim, it’s fight time!

ROUND ONE

Warlley opens the round with some hard kicks. Marmota answers back and throws an overhand that narrowly misses. Marmota closes the distance with a flurry and the two grapple against the fence. Warlley slowly fights for position and locks up a full clinch. He throws a devastating head knee that rocks Marmota. Visibly stunned, Marmota tries to recover, but two more knees to the face force the referee to jump in and stop the action at the 3:38 mark of the first round. Team Sonnen keeps their win streak and Warlley just might have earned the knockout of the season.

Warlley celebrates, Marmota says, “Today wasn’t my day,” and Chael Sonnen’s prediction proves true. We wrap up with a sneak peek into next week’s episode. Can Team Sonnen’s streak continue? Does Jollyson bring momentum back to Team Silva? What will be the first semifinal matchup? Find out this and more next week on The Ultimate Fighter Brazil!

Source: www.ufc.com

TUF Brazil 3: Episode 8 Recap

TUF1

The first thing we se this episode is Lyoto limping around the house. He injured his foot during his fight against Borrachinha, and still can’t put any weight on it. Luckily, the doctors say that it doesn’t appear too serious. Things should improve if he stays off it for a couple days. We then move to this week’s fight announcement. Team Wanderlei has control and they choose their heavy hitter Montanha to face Team Sonnen’s Vitor Miranda. The two are former training partners, and Vitor isn’t happy that he has to square off against a former friend. Montanha doesn’t like it either, but tells us that he didn’t have a choice. It was “an order from the boss.”

When Team Sonnen assistant coach Vinny Magalhaes hears this, he calls out Wanderlei. Specifically, Vinny calls Wandy a hypocrite for making two teammates fight when he made such a deal about a similar instance on the first season of TUF Brazil. We’re then treated to a flashback, and sure enough, Wanderlei is on camera criticizing the opposing team for making two former teammates fight one another. When asked about this contradiction, Wanderlei claims that the two situations are totally different. “[Montanha and Vitor] know each other, but they don’t train or live together.”

Back at the house, the kitchen looks about as bad as any fraternity. There are so many dirty dishes that all of them can’t even fit in the sink. Cara de Sapato has had a enough of it and channels his anger toward Joilton. He yells that someone should do something about the mess and start cleaning. Upset at being yelled at, Joilton also has a problem because Cara makes this big commotion and doesn’t do anything about it. Sick of hearing everyone complain, Demente starts cleaning so everyone will shut up.

The fighters may be at each other’s throats inside the house, but the battles are even more intense at the gym. Chael Sonnen brings former UFC middleweight Yushin Okami in to help set an example for the other guys. Worried that the team has fallen into a bit of the rut, Yushin comes in and ratchets up the intensity level. The sparring rounds we see are definitely not done at a cruising speed. They’re going at each other like it were a UFC title fight.

From there we move to this week’s physical challenge. Simply titled “The Bridge,” members of each team work together to create a bridge using narrow have to create a bridge using narrow sticks that can support the one of the Octagon girls. The team then has to guide four different Octagon girls across their makeshift structures. Team Wanderlei takes the early lead and they don’t look back. They cruise to another easy win and earn an all day spa treatment.

We then learn more about each of this week’s combatants. Vitor’s first love was basketball. After a teammate took him to a Muay Thai class, though, he gave it up to dedicate himself to martial arts. He moved to the US to train, but tragedy struck when his four year old drowned in a swimming pool. It’s greatly affected him, but he tries to turn all the sadness in his heart to motivation. Not only is Montanha a former teammate of Vitor, the 25 year old is also a former fat kid. He admits that the other kids picked on him a lot, but they’re probably not interested in teasing him now. The 25 year old describes himself as “stubborn” and “competitive.” We’ll see if that carries him to victory because it’s fight time!

ROUND ONE
Montanha uses his distinct size advantage early. Vitor throws some kicks, but the big man walks right through them. The two clinch against the fence and Montanha moves for the takedown. Vitor defends, and the two exchange knees. Montanha wears Vitor down from this position then moves in for a single leg. Vitor defends, circles away and reverses position. They break apart, and Montanha loses his balance. Vitor tries to kick, but can’t garner much offense. The referee stands them up and there’s less than a minute to go. Vitor has found his groove and he starts landing solid low kicks. He scores another low kick then adds some punches behind them. Montanha is reeling and rests against the cage. Vitor continues to pressure and connects with a thunderous body shot. He follows up with an overhand right hand that Montanha crashes to the ground. Vitor jumps on the injured man and grounds and pounds his way to a win only 23 seconds remaining.

Both coaches are impressed with each fighter’s performances. Chael praises Montanha’s strategy, but once Vitor found his range he knew that it was all over. “You don’t want to stand and trade with Vitor Miranda.” Wanderlei says that the low kicks had a big effect on Montanha. They gradually wore him down and ultimately lead to the knockout. The former teammates turned opponents walk out to the locker room arm and arm, and we’re able to pick up their conversation. Montanha says, “You know I never wanted this fight,” Vitor hugs him and responds, “We did what we had to do. You’ll have another chance.” A proud coach Sonnen smiles and the episode closes with “The tides are turning around here, and there’s a storm coming.”
We have a sneak peek into next week’s episode. Can Team Sonnen keep the momentum going? How does Team Wanderlei respond? Who wins the coach’s challenge? Find out this and more next week on The Ultimate Fighter Brazil!

Source: www.ufc.com By: Dan Downes

Josh Barnett says he’ll know when it’s time to walk away from MMA

The subject of retirement is a hot one among veteran MMA heavyweights these days.

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira is at the forefront of the list, as the former PRIDE and UFC interim champion was finished for the fifth time in his past eight fights last month when he was knocked out by Roy Nelson. Former UFC champ Frank Mir is another under frequent discussion, as he’s lost his past three fights in a one-sided manner.

Another former UFC champ, Josh Barnett, knows he can’t fight forever. But the 36-year old Seattle native says he’ll know when to walk away, and when that time comes, he’ll have no problem doing so.

Asked on a recent edition of The MMA Hour how many fights he has left, Barnett explained his position.

“I can’t put a real number on it, because I won’t know until that time comes,” Barnett said. “But I know that when it does, that’s it, I’ll have used up every aspect I have in terms of my athletic window. I can act, I can do other things, but once your athletic window is done there’s no returning to fighting.”

Barnett made headlines in recent weeks by declaring he’d like another fight with Nogueira before the latter retired. Most fighters want a chance to avenge losses, of course, and Barnett lost twice to Nogueira in PRIDE.

“What it was based on is Nogueira’s statement of, I want one more fight and then I want to retire,” Barnett said. “If he wanted to retire a year ago, that’s his perogative of course. But if he wants to make a statement that he wants only one more fight I mean, there’s really only one more fight for him to take and that’s the two of us, and that’s because, we could have a trilogy. That’s all.

“I don’t think he actually beat me the second time, but I have to accept, even if I feel the judges’ decision was the wrong one, that’s just the way it has to go, Barnett continued. “That’s why I said, you want to call out, you want to be bold, you want to have one more fight, there’s only one more fight that you should really even be considering.”

Where Barnett feels he differs from Nogueira at this stage of both’s respective careers, however, involves differing fight styles the two have employed over the course of their careers.

“Big Nog and me are two different types of fighters. Nogeuira lived by his chin, he wasn’t afraid to take a lot of punishment in order to dish out a whole lot of punishment. Personally, I know I can take a really big shot. I’d rather not. … Nogueira is still a fantastic grappler and a good athlete, I know he’s got decent boxing skills, but he hasn’t necessarily been good about making the transition to not taking it on the chin. Chuck [Liddell] was known for taking one, taking two, three, four to give one, and eventually that caught up with him. Fighters have to be a lot more judicious about the way they fight. Once you start losing your chin, you can’t fight that way any more. It just doesn’t work.”

Speaking of veteran former champions, Andrei Arlovski, the UFC champ during much of Barnett’s PRIDE heyday, is back in the UFC. For his part, Barnett welcomed the news.

“Good for Andrei,” Barnett said. “I’m sure sitting on the outside looking in as a former champion has been tough for him, and having to bounce from one fight to the next can be very difficult. Not knowing when your next fight is going to come is a really difficult way to try to stay ready. So having the opportunity to claim, ‘hey, I knocked out Roy Nelson last time we fought, and now he’s considered one of the more notable names in the heavyweight division.’ He has a claim on deserving to be there.”

Barnett has been keeping busy with non-MMA activities since his loss to Travis Browne in December. Among other things, he had a role in a Steven Seagal movie and he recently one “Most Metal Athlete” at the Golden Gods Awards.

But “The Warmaster” did admit to watching the UFC on FOX 11 bout between Browne and Fabricio Werdum, and he basically was more or less kicking himself for letting his fight with Browne, a quick first-round loss, get out of hand the way it did.

“I should have been in there for that fight, and it was really only myself to blame,” Barnett said. “I knew how the fight was going to pan out, I knew what the key to winning that fight was and I knew that Werdum had it in him to do so. In the end, I didn’t, what I saw wasnt entirely surprising to me, but still, I had to sit back and watch it instead of being the one that’s in there. So, it’s just, that fight, to me, is just deeply personal and it just sucks. I didn’t show up and I paid for it and it sucks.”

Sometime, perhaps sooner than later, Barnett will get his chance to step back into the cage and shake off his loss.

“All fights interest me,” Barnett said. “Punching people in the face and watching them cry for their momma always interests me. … I’m sure the opportunities will present themselves easily enough. There’s plenty of heavyweights out there that could use a good ass kicking, and there’s plenty who would like to see me do it.”

Source: www.mmafighting.com By: Dave Doyle

UFC 172 results: Jon Jones dismantles Teixeira

MMA: UFC 145-Jon Jones vs Rashad Evans

This time around, there was no doubt about the outcome.

The last time we saw Jon Jones in the Octagon, he went down to the wire against Alexander Gustafsson before escaping with his UFC light heavyweight title via narrow decision.

Saturday night, Jones once again went this distance. But this time, Jones put on a show. Jones picked apart a tough Glover Teixeira for 25 minutes in the main event of UFC 172. Jones retrained his title via unanimous decision, taking across-the-board 50-45 scores at the Baltimore Arena.

It was Jones’ 11th straight victory. It was also his seventh successful light heavyweight championship defense, extending his own record in the division.

“It was a lot like who what we thought it would be,” said Jones (20-1). “We foresaw a lot of it. He was a tough dude.”

Jones seemed to show off dozens of his weapons in the opening round. From his standing elbows to his low kicks to body shots, Jones threw a little bit of everything at Teixeira, even landing an axe kick in the rounds closing seconds.

The heavy-hitting Teixeria’s best bet was to get in close and hope to catch Jones. He displayed this in the second round, as he tagged Jones several times in an exchange, temporarily slowed him down.

But that turned out to be Teixeira’s only moment of real advantage of the entire fight. And worse for the challenger, from there, Jones waded into Teixeira’s wheelhouse and took the fight to him in close. In one memorable third-round exchange, the two fought in close in the clinch, and Jones wrecked the Pit fighter in close, opening up a huge cut over Teixeira’s right eyebrow with his elbows.

By the championship rounds, things seemed academic. Teixeira lost his mouthpiece three times, prompting ref Dan Miragliotta to warn him he would deduct a point. But it was moot, as Jones simply resumed picking Teixeira apart until the final horn.

“A lot of it was improv,” said Jones, who was a heavy favorite of the crowd, which included his NFL-playing brothers, Arthur and Chandler. “The game plan was takedowns and going at him from range. But I realized he was winding up on his punches, and you can’t do that when someone is on top of you. I realized I was a lot better hand fighter than he was.”

For his part, Teixeira, who had a 20-fight win streak which dated back to 2006 snapped, was gracious in defeat. “he surprised me,” said Teixeira (22-3). “My game plan was to push him, but hey, he’s a great champion.”

Source: www.mmafighting.com By: Dave Doyle

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Chael Sonnen Vs. Wanderlei Silva Delayed Until July

 

It appears for a second time a match up between Chael Sonnen and Wanderlei Silva has been delayed.

UFC President Dana White spoke to Yahoo! Sports this week and confirmed that the bout has been bumped from the May 31st card and will now instead take place at UFC 175 in July.

A heavyweight bout between Junior dos Santos and Stipe Miocic will now headline the card in Brazil. It was originally scheduled for UFC 173.

Source: www.mmanews.com By: Chris Howie

Tito Ortiz Vs. Alexander Shlemenko Set For Bellator PPV May 17th

After being called out by Bellator middleweight champion Alexander Shlemenko, it appears for UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Tito Ortiz will step back into action on May 17th at the first ever Bellator pay-per-view.

Shlemenko posted the following video challenging Ortiz despite the weight difference:

Ortiz would follow that up with a tweet stating that he was cleared to fight again and with a mention of the champions call out.

F4Wonline.com spoke with sources close to Bellator stating that the fight had now been added to the card which now looks like this:

Eddie Alvarez vs. Michael Chandler – for lightweight title Quinton Jackson vs. Muhammed Lawal – light heavyweight tournamenty final Tito Ortiz vs. Alexander Shlemenko Will Brooks vs. Nate Jolly

Source: www.mmanews.com By: Chris Howie

Ronda Rousey Vs. Alexis Davis Booked For UFC 175

UFC Women’s Bantamweight Champion Ronda Rousey is slated to face Alexis Davis at UFC 175 according to UFC President Dana White. The announcement was made over the weekend and now joins a card that will feature a UFC Middleweight title defense as Chris Weidman attempts to defend against Lyoto Machida while Wanderlei Silva and Chael Sonnen are also expected to be part of the main card portion.

The event takes place on July 5th in Las Vegas, NV.

Source: www.mmanews.com By: Chris Howie

TUF Nations Finale Quick Match Results

The Ultimate Fighter Nations finale took place Wednesday evening (April 16th) in Quebec City, Quebec and we have complete quick match results from the event below:

Main Card (Live on Fox Sports 1, 7:00 PM ET)

-Tim Kennedy defeated Michael Bisping by Unanimous Decision (49-46, 49-46, 49-46) -Patrick Cote defeated Kyle Noke by Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28, 30-27) -Elias Theodorou defeated Sheldon Westcott by TKO (Punches, Round 2, 2:41) -Chad Laprise defeated Olivier Aubin-Mercier by Split Decision (28-29, 29-28, 30-27) -Dustin Poirier defeated Akira Corassani by TKO (Punches, Round 2, 0:42)

Preliminary Bouts (Live on Fox Sports 1, 5:00 PM ET)

-KJ Noons defeated Sam Stout by TKO (Punches, Round 1, 0:30) -Sarah Kaufman defeated Leslie Smith by by Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) -Ryan Jimmo defeated Sean O’Connell by KO (Punches, Round 1, 4:27) -George Roop defeated Dustin Kimura by Unanimous Decision (29-28, 30-27, 29-26)

Preliminary Bouts (Live on UFC Fight Pass, 3:15 PM ET)

-Mark Bocek defeated Mike De La Torre by Split Decision (28-29, 30-27, 29-28) -Nordine Taleb defeated Vic Grujic by Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) -Richard Walsh defeated Richard Indich by Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) -Mitch Gagnon defeated Tim Gorman by Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

Source: www.mmanews.com By: Chris Howie





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