Monday, November 7, 2011

MMA Fighting Sold to Vox Media

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VOX MediaVox Media, the parent company of SB Nation, announced on Monday that it has acquired MMAFighting.com from AOL.

"I'm really excited to announce here that MMAFighting and SB Nation are going to team up together," Vox Chairman and CEO Jim Bankoff said in an appearance on The MMA Hour.

Bankoff said the MMAFighting.com audience shouldn't expect to see many changes in the site.

"When you talk about MMAFighting, it's the team of people behind it and the audience and community that the team has built up, and the audience it engages in," Bankoff said. "We're going to do everything we can to support the people who make it all possible and support the audience that makes it all possible."

MMAFighting.com will join MMANation, MMAMania and Bloody Elbow as part of SB Nation's portfolio of combat sports sites. Bankoff said MMAMania and Bloody Elbow would remain separate sites, while over time MMAFighting will become the MMA hub of SB Nation.

"SB Nation, unlike a lot of other sports sites, has from the beginning put an emphasis on the coverage of MMA," Bankoff said. "We're proud of the people behind those sites."

Bankoff said MMAFighting.com will remain largely the same site going forward that it is now.

"All the great work that is done, whether it's the interviews, the video, the community interaction, all of that is going to stay at the level if not be bigger and better than where it is today," Bankoff said.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/07/mma-fighting-sold-to-vox-media/

Camilo Villegas

UFC 138: Terry Etim Submits Edward Faaloloto in 17 Seconds

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The British fighter Terry Etim thrilled the fans in England at UFC 138 on Saturday with a stunningly fast submission victory over Edward Faaloloto.

Etim hit Faaloloto with a couple of punches early, then as Faaloloto went low to attempt a takedown, Etim sunk in a guillotine choke and wrapped Faaloloto up while they were still standing. Faaloloto attempted to slam Etim down, but that only allowed Etim to sink the choke in tighter, and Faaloloto had to tap.

The entire fight lasted just 17 seconds.


Etim, who has been sidelined for more than a year and a half with injuries, said afterward that he was motivated to get his career back on track.

"I think that's what 19 months off does. I was so hungry to get back in," he said. "It's absolutely killed me but I'm back now and ready to make an impact in this lightweight division. Let's do this."

Etim did it in a big way to get the UFC 138 broadcast started right.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-terry-etim-submits-edward-faaloloto-in-17-seconds/

David Villa Deco Dejan Stankovic Didier Drogba Diego

Patel Is Waiting to See If Flower Will Reward Him For Shedding The Pounds

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Samit Patel has finally looked long and hard at himself in the mirror and realised he needs to shed a few pounds for international cricket.

Why it should have been an issue for him to find the motivation to change and to train with greater intensity is a mystery.

If he was as confident as he appears in his natural talent, being ignored by England team director Andy Flower for two years because of his lack of fitness and conditioning seems a dreadful waste.

The 26-year-old has cut out the fast food and put in the hours on the training ground to win himself a place for the five-match ODI series against India.

Now he has kept his part of the bargain, it is time for Flower to keep his and intigrate the Nottinghamshire all-rounder into a side, in conditions where he can flourish.

For so long England have bemoaned their lack of a genuine second spin option when they travel to the sub-continent and conditions which are crying out for quality spinners.

Graeme Swann is truly world class, but beyond that England have relied on batsmen who can turn their arm over with medium pace cutters to for their other option to take pace off the ball.

Patel is a genuine spinner and his left arm variety gives England a new edge. What is more important, is that with the bat, Patel can produce match-winning innings and has served his time in international cricket.

That is why it would send the wrong message to Patel and others on the county circuit if Scott Borthwick is elevated ahead of his team mate when the first game starts on October 14.

Patel finally feels he has done enough to belong at this level. He is reaping the rewards for his hard work.

He does not require praise for that, not something that should be an accepted part of a professional sportsman's life, but he deserves the extended chance which was intimated was waiting for him if he sorts his fitness out.

Patel has always been confident he would be back and said: "If I did the right stuff I was very confident of getting back and I had good vibes from the management," he said.

"I knew my cricket wasn't the issue, it was the other stuff. I hope I've overcome that now. I have not done it fully yet, it doesn't change overnight, there is a long way to go."

Hard work and results over the next month could clinch Patel's place in the ODI squad for some time to come. He knows it is in his own hands, Flower permitting.

 

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Source: http://www.fanhouse.co.uk/2011/10/06/samit-patel-is-waiting-to-see-if-andy-flower-will-reward-him-for/

Rory McIlroy Ruud van Nistelrooy Ryan Giggs Ryan Palmer Sam Querrey

The MMA Hour With Alistair Overeem, Mark Munoz and Media Roundtable

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Alistair OvereemThe MMA Hour is back in your life on Monday with another loaded two-hour show.

* Alistair Overeem will break major news about his career and discuss his UFC 141 fight against Brock Lesnar.

* Mark Munoz will talk about his recent win at UFC 138 and what's next for him.

* MMA Fighting's Mike Chiappetta and ESPN.com's Chuck Mindenhall will join us for another media roundtable to discuss all the comings and goings in the world of MMA and all the news coming out of UFC 138 and preview UFC on FOX 1.

* We will also address the future of MMAFighting.com and The MMA Hour with a guest to be announced on the show.

* Plus, we'll give away two sets of the Ultimate Fight Collection, 2011 Edition. It's a 20-disc DVD set that has over 40 hours of footage of UFC fights from July 2010-June 2011 and 10 hours of content never before available on DVD. It will go on sale exclusively at Best Buy on Tuesday, Nov. 8. It will go to the best calls of the day, and the winners have to be United States residents.

* Unfortunately, Fedor Emelianenko has cancelled his appearance.

So, give us a shout at: 212-254-0193, 212-254-0237 or 212-254-0714.

*** You can also stream the show live on your iPhone or iPad by clicking here.

Watch the show live below beginning at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT. Subscribe to The MMA Hour on iTunes: audio feed here; video feed here. Download previous episodes here. Listen to the show via Stitcher here.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/07/the-mma-hour-with-fedor-emelianenko-alistair-overeem-media-rou/

William Gallas Xavi Zach Johnson Ze Roberto Zlatan Ibrahimovic

Tim Sylvia, Andrei Arlovski Earn ProElite Victories

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A pair of former UFC heavyweight champions were in action on Saturday night in Moline, Illinois, and both of them won. But neither looked particularly impressive in the process.

Tim Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski were both victorious at Saturday night's ProElite event, yet save for one high kick from Arlovski at the very end of his fight, it was a dreadful affair all around.

Sylvia took a unanimous decision over Andreas Kraniotakes, 30-27 on all three judges' cards. The fight consisted of a lot of clinching from Sylvia, and the crowd loudly booed at the end of the fight and again as Sylvia got his hand raised in the cage afterward.

Arlovski knocked out Travis Fulton with a shocking head kick with one second remaining in the third round of a fight that had been, up to that point, a dud. HDNet announcer Michael Schiavello accurately described the fight as "a cure for insomnia" heading into the third round, but Arlovski finally got busy in the third, and when the opportunity arose just as the fight was coming to an end, he threw a left high kick and landed his shin perfectly against Fulton's jawline, knocking him cold.

Reagan Penn, the brother of B.J. Penn, looked even worse than Sylvia and Arlovski in losing a unanimous decision to Evan Cutts, 30-26, 30-27 and 30-27 on the judges' scorecards. It was the second pro fight of Penn's MMA career, and it's hard to see any reason he'll have a third fight.

And in the first round of ProElite's eight-man heavyweight tournament, four men advanced to the semifinals:
-- Ryan Martinez handed Mark Ellis the first loss of his career, winning by unanimous decision, 30-27 on all three judges' cards. It was an extremely disappointing showing from Ellis, who entered the cage as a heavy favorite but left with the crowd loudly booing his lackluster performance.
-- Jake Heun brutalized Ed Carpenter, knocking him down with a kick-punch combination and then finishing him off with ground and pound for a first-round TKO.
-- Cody Griffin was losing the fight after two rounds but came back on fire at the start of the third, battering Justyn Riley, knocking him down and finishing him with punches on the ground to win a third-round TKO.
-- Richard Odoms beat Rodney Housley by unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring it 30-27. The fight wasn't particularly competitive or particularly compelling -- which meant it fit in well with this disappointing fight card.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/06/tim-sylvia-andrei-arlovski-earn-proelite-victories/

Ashley Cole

UFC 138 Live Blog: Cyrille Diabate vs. Anthony Perosh Updates

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Cyrille Diabate vs. Anthony Perosh is a fight on the main card of UFC 138.This is the UFC 138 live blog for Cyrille Diabate vs. Anthony Perosh, a light heavyweight bout on the main card of the UFC 138 fight card in Birmingham, England.

Diabate (17-7-1) has won two of his three UFC fights, including a decision win over Steve Cantwell at UFC Live: Sanchez vs. Kampmann. Perosh (11-6) is 1-1 since he returned to the UFC.

The live blog is below.



Round 1: The lanky Diabate is repeatedly feigning with his knee, threatening the grappler Perosh and trying to dissuade him from moving in for a takedown. Perosh bides his time circling on the outside. Diabate lands a left hand as Perosh attempts to close the distance. Perosh summons his courage to dive low, but his single leg takedown attempt is easily stopped. Perosh tries to pull guard, but Diabate postures up and scores with left hands. Diabate then gets back to his feet. Perosh moves in and takes Diabate down with 90 seconds remaining. Perosh thought about an arm-triangle but didn't get close. It's not enough for Perosh as Diabate takes the round 10-9.

Round 2: Diabate looks confident and moves forward with strikes. Perosh takes advantage and ducks low for a takedown. He quickly advances to full mount, then takes Diabate's back with 3:30 left. Diabate turned into the choke to relieve pressure and Perosh let it go. Perosh went for an arm triangle but released it because Diabate had his defense set with his hand on his ear. Diabate gave up his back and Perosh fired off hard strikes from the top. Perosh then sunk in the choke and got the tapout for his second straight win.

Winner: Anthony Perosh via rear naked choke submission, Rd. 2, (3:09)


 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-live-blog-cyrille-diabate-vs-anthony-perosh-updates/

Pavel Nedved Petr Cech Phil Mickelson Philipp Lahm Rafael Nadal

UFC 138: Anthony Perosh Submits Cyrille Diabate

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Anthony Perosh submits Cyrille Diabate at UFC 138.Anthony Perosh survived an early barrage on his feet and then looked tremendous on the ground, beating Cyrille Diabate with a second-round submission on Saturday at UFC 138.

The victory was the second in a row for Perosh, who has been surprisingly successful since coming to the UFC in 2010 as a late replacement to fight Mirko Cro Cop. Perosh lost that fight, but he's now won both of his UFC fights since then.

"The first win was a big relief, and the second one in a row was even better for me because I didn't want the first one to be a fluke," he said. "I'm here to stay at light heavyweight."


Diabate landed a good combination very early in the first round to open a cut on Perosh's face, and he also landed a body kick that turned Perosh's ribs red. In the early going it looked like it was going to be all Diabate, but Perosh did a nice job of catching a body kick and taking Diabate down into side control. However, while Perosh stayed on top for the rest of the round, Diabate did a nice job of neutralizing Perosh and not taking much damage. It was a first round that Diabate deserved to win.

In the second round, however, it was a different story: Perosh took control early, getting full mount on the ground and attempting to get into position for an arm-triangle choke a couple of times. When that didn't work, Perosh stayed in the mount until Diabate tried to buck him off, then took Diabate's back, battered him with ground and pound, sunk in a rear-naked choke and forced Diabate to tap.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-anthony-perosh-submits-cyrille-diabate/

Ashley Cole Ben Crane Bill Haas Bo Van Pelt Bubba Watson

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Barao, Pickett, Mills and Etim Win UFC 138 Bonuses

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Renan BaraoRenan Barao, Brad Pickett, Che Mills and Terry Etim are all $70,000 richer after picking up bonuses for their performances at UFC 138.

Barao and Pickett won the Fight of the Night bonus for their fast-paced bantamweight brawl in the co-main event. Pickett is an Englishman who had the Birmingham fans on his side, and he came out swinging to get the crowd roaring. But it was Barao who showed he had too much for Pickett to handle, ultimately forcing Pickett to tap out to a rear-naked choke after just over four minutes of intense action.

This was Barao's first bonus in his fourth fight under the Zuffa banner. Pickett had previously won a Fight of the Night and a Submission of the Night award, with both of those coming in the WEC. For both men, the bonus makes this the most lucrative fight of their career.

UFC newcomer Che Mills finished off Chris Cope in just 40 seconds, and as a result he won the Knockout of the Night award. For Mills, the $70,000 bonus undoubtedly makes this by far the biggest payday of his MMA career.

And Terry Etim, who needed just 17 seconds to force Eddie Faaloloto to tap to a guillotine choke, walked away with the Submission of the Night award. Etim has now won the Submission of the Night bonus a whopping four times.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/barao-pickett-mills-etim-win-ufc-138-bonuses/

Alex Alexandre Pato Andrea Pirlo Andres Iniesta Andriy Shevchenko

UFC 138: Anthony Perosh Submits Cyrille Diabate

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Anthony Perosh submits Cyrille Diabate at UFC 138.Anthony Perosh survived an early barrage on his feet and then looked tremendous on the ground, beating Cyrille Diabate with a second-round submission on Saturday at UFC 138.

The victory was the second in a row for Perosh, who has been surprisingly successful since coming to the UFC in 2010 as a late replacement to fight Mirko Cro Cop. Perosh lost that fight, but he's now won both of his UFC fights since then.

"The first win was a big relief, and the second one in a row was even better for me because I didn't want the first one to be a fluke," he said. "I'm here to stay at light heavyweight."


Diabate landed a good combination very early in the first round to open a cut on Perosh's face, and he also landed a body kick that turned Perosh's ribs red. In the early going it looked like it was going to be all Diabate, but Perosh did a nice job of catching a body kick and taking Diabate down into side control. However, while Perosh stayed on top for the rest of the round, Diabate did a nice job of neutralizing Perosh and not taking much damage. It was a first round that Diabate deserved to win.

In the second round, however, it was a different story: Perosh took control early, getting full mount on the ground and attempting to get into position for an arm-triangle choke a couple of times. When that didn't work, Perosh stayed in the mount until Diabate tried to buck him off, then took Diabate's back, battered him with ground and pound, sunk in a rear-naked choke and forced Diabate to tap.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-anthony-perosh-submits-cyrille-diabate/

David Suazo

UFC 138 Undercard Live Blog: Omigawa vs. Young, Edwards vs. Maguire, More

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Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young is a fight on the UFC 138 undercard.This is the UFC 138 undercard live blog for the five non-televised bouts in support of UFC 138 in Birmingham, England.

Featured in these five Facebook bouts are Justin Edwards vs. John Maguire, Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young, Rob Broughton vs. Philip De Fries, Chris Cope vs. Che Mills and Chris Cariaso vs. Vaughan Lee.

The live blog is below.



Chris Cariaso vs. Vaughan Lee

Round 1: Big Dan Miragliotta is your referee, towering over the bantamweights as we start the action. Lee lands a head kick as Cariaso ducks low for the takedown. Cariaso doggedly holds on, giving himself a few moments to recover. Lee takes him down from a clinch 1:30 into the round. Lee lands a hard right, then hunts a guillotine from the top, but it's not tight enough. Cariaso manages to get back to his feet. Lee is bullying Cariaso around from the clinch, and he trips Cariaso down again. Cariaso defends well but it's clearly Lee's round, 10-9.

Round 2: The duo exchange leg kicks early. Cariaso lands a left hand and Lee flashes a pair of kicks at him, then takes him down. Lee really wants the guillotine, he looks for it at every turn. Cariaso scored with a hard elbow from the standing position. Lee checked to see if he was bleeding, but he's not. Cariaso turned the tables with a takedown of his own midway through. Lee was active from the bottom, but Cariaso managed to earn mount with more than 90 seconds left. Lee took no damage and quickly scrambled back to guard. Cariaso spent the rest of the round on top, landing few strikes, but he still did enough to earn the 10-9.

Round 3: Lots of clinch work in the first 90 seconds of the round as the pair fight to achieve the offensive position. They're broken up, and Lee looks for the takedown. This time, Cariaso defends it. Moments later, he ducks low and puts Lee on his back. That could win him the fight.. He moves to side control, the mount. Cariaso with a right hand. Lee gives his back, and Cariaso goes for the choke. Nothing doing there. Back to full mount. Cariaso thinks about an arm triangle, but instead keeps his top position and rains down punches and elbows from the top. Lee can't escape, and Cariaso dominates to the final horn, so it's his round 10-9.

Winner: Chris Cariaso via split decision (29-28, 29-28, 28-29)

Chris Cope vs. Che Mills

Round 1: Mills is walking forward, unafraid. He tags Cope with a right, then drops him with a left knee to the head. The ref looks close to stopping it but doesn't. Mills swarms and drops bombs. He drops Cope again with another knee and this time, it's over. That's how you make a debut.

Winner: Che Mills via TKO, Rd. 1 (0:40)

Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young

Round 1: Omigawa tried an early takedown but Young resisted it. Young fired off a head kick that slipped past Omigawa's head. Young peppered the legs with kicks. Young is very light on his feet and looking to control angles. Omigawa initiates a clinch, and trips Young down. Young works his way up and aggressively fires off a knee to the head. Omigawa backs off and they reset. Young lands a headkick. Omigawa wants a grind, Young wants space. Young's fast hands score, and he takes Omigawa down late. Omigawa threatens with a guillotine and ends on top, but it's Young's round, 10-9.

Round 2: Young has some swelling on his right eye, apparently from a head clash. Omigawa takes him down early. He worked to side control and thought about a kimura but Young craftily avoided it, then reversed the position and got back to his feet. Young let his hands go, but Omigawa closed the distance and tripped him down. Omigawa got full mount with :45 left, but did little with it. He got mount again and landed a couple short punches. He controlled nearly the entire round, so he gets the 10-9.

Round 3: Young landed an early left hook, taking the aggressor's role. He scored with an uppercut as he continued to fire off combos. Omigawa clinched and took him down. Not good for Young. Omigawa tried a heel hook, but Young slipped free and back to his feet. Still anyone's fight. Young tried a takedown, Omigawa used a guillotine hold to roll Young over and he ended up on top. Omigawa seems to be more interested in positioning than offense from the top, so this one could be tough to score. Omigawa hunted a kimura but gave that up in favor of a few elbows. Young pulled free, ended up on top with a few right hands as the horn sounded. Omigawa 10-9.

Winner: Michihiro Omigawa via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Rob Broughton vs. Philip De Fries

Round 1: De Fries immediately shoots in and Broughton is ready for it. They clinch against the cage. They stalemate and restart. De Fries, who has all of his seven wins by submission, wants it on the ground. He ducks under a punch but Broughton gets underhooks and stays upright. Finally, he drops down to his opponent's ankles and puts Broughton on his back. De Fries works to advance position. He's all about looking for a submission, and only occasionally remembers to throw strikes from the top. The punches don't have any steam on them. De Fries takes Broughton's back with :15 left, but runs out of time. The round is his though, 10-9.

Round 2: De Fries puts Broughton down with an early double-leg takedown. De Fries takes Broughton's back and puts the hooks in. Plenty of time to work. Broughton works free for a moment. Broughton snatches a kimura from the bottom and De Fries rolls, leaving Broughton in top position. De Fries is insistent on a kimura. Broughton punishes his body with elbows and De Fries lets it go. Broughton works into a mounted crucifix, throwing blows from the top. The late series of punches and elbows take it for him, 10-9.

Round 3: De Fries looks relatively fresh after his rough second round, and takes Broughton down from the get-go. De Fries works on positioning for a while, and gets full mount with 2:00 left. Finally, a hard punch from mount. Well, that didn't last long. De Fries moves to side control, then north-south. Very lackluster offense given the great positioning from him. Ref Dan Miragliotta has seen enough and resets them. Only 15 seconds left though, and neither really lets their hands go. It's De Fries, 10-9.

Winner: Philip De Fries via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Justin Edwards vs. John Maguire


Round 1: An early Edwards kick lands below the belt, so we have a timeout just as we're getting started. Edwards throws a spin kick and then drops Maguire with a right hook. Maguire defends and reverses, ending up on top. Maguire looks for offense from the top. Edwards uses the wall to get to his feet, but Maguire drags him back down. Back to their feet again, Maguire with knees to the head. A grappling scramble has them jockeying for position. Edwards tries a guillotine. Edwards pulls out and lands strikes to the body and head. After a rough start, Maguire rebounds to take the round 10-9.

Round 2: After a grappling heavy round, the two start off circling each other in the striking game. Edwards with leg kicks and they clinch. Maguire takes Edwards down with a suplex, then quickly gets his back and sinks in a body triangle. Maguire softens him up with punches from the back, Edwards occasionally firing back an elbow. Maguire switches to an arm bar in the final moments but can't yank Edwards arm free. Still, it's Maguire's round 10-9.

Round 3: Edwards with heavy leather. A body punch lands. Maguire snatches a single leg takedown. Edwards looks for a knee bar, Maguire grabs a foot and Edwards separates. Back to their feet, Maguire lands knees from the clinch. Edwards had a guillotine but lost the position and Maguire ended up on top with half the round left. Maguire to full mount. After some strikes, Edwards gives up his back and Maguire locks a body triangle again. Edwards escaped and ended up on top, but not for long. Maguire got the position back. Maguire again, 10-9.

Winner: John Maguire via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)



 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-undercard-live-blog-omigawa-vs-young-edwards-vs-magu/

Frank Ribery Frederic Kanoute Gabriel Milito Gael Monfils Gary Neville

Tim Sylvia, Andrei Arlovski Earn ProElite Victories

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A pair of former UFC heavyweight champions were in action on Saturday night in Moline, Illinois, and both of them won. But neither looked particularly impressive in the process.

Tim Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski were both victorious at Saturday night's ProElite event, yet save for one high kick from Arlovski at the very end of his fight, it was a dreadful affair all around.

Sylvia took a unanimous decision over Andreas Kraniotakes, 30-27 on all three judges' cards. The fight consisted of a lot of clinching from Sylvia, and the crowd loudly booed at the end of the fight and again as Sylvia got his hand raised in the cage afterward.

Arlovski knocked out Travis Fulton with a shocking head kick with one second remaining in the third round of a fight that had been, up to that point, a dud. HDNet announcer Michael Schiavello accurately described the fight as "a cure for insomnia" heading into the third round, but Arlovski finally got busy in the third, and when the opportunity arose just as the fight was coming to an end, he threw a left high kick and landed his shin perfectly against Fulton's jawline, knocking him cold.

Reagan Penn, the brother of B.J. Penn, looked even worse than Sylvia and Arlovski in losing a unanimous decision to Evan Cutts, 30-26, 30-27 and 30-27 on the judges' scorecards. It was the second pro fight of Penn's MMA career, and it's hard to see any reason he'll have a third fight.

And in the first round of ProElite's eight-man heavyweight tournament, four men advanced to the semifinals:
-- Ryan Martinez handed Mark Ellis the first loss of his career, winning by unanimous decision, 30-27 on all three judges' cards. It was an extremely disappointing showing from Ellis, who entered the cage as a heavy favorite but left with the crowd loudly booing his lackluster performance.
-- Jake Heun brutalized Ed Carpenter, knocking him down with a kick-punch combination and then finishing him off with ground and pound for a first-round TKO.
-- Cody Griffin was losing the fight after two rounds but came back on fire at the start of the third, battering Justyn Riley, knocking him down and finishing him with punches on the ground to win a third-round TKO.
-- Richard Odoms beat Rodney Housley by unanimous decision, with all three judges scoring it 30-27. The fight wasn't particularly competitive or particularly compelling -- which meant it fit in well with this disappointing fight card.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/06/tim-sylvia-andrei-arlovski-earn-proelite-victories/

Rafael van der Vaart Retief Goosen Ricardo Carvalho Ricardo Quaresma Richard Gasquet

UFC 138: Michihiro Omigawa Beats Jason Young, Notches First UFC Win

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Omigawa beats Jason Young at UFC 138.Michihiro Omigawa finally has a win inside the Octagon.

Omigawa, who had a sensational run in Japan in 2009 and 2010, just hadn't been able to turn it on in the UFC, losing his first four fights in the Octagon. But on Saturday at UFC 138, Omigawa finally got his first UFC win, beating Jason Young by unanimous decision at UFC 138.

All three judges scored the fight 29-28 for Omigawa, who struggled with Young's stand-up in the first round but controlled the fight on the ground in rounds two and three.

"It's really good to get my first win here," Omigawa said afterward.


Young knocked Omigawa back with a body kick late in the first round and landed a couple of solid knees, and he deserved to win the round, although Young's right eye was badly swollen at the end of the round, thanks to an accidental clash of heads.

Early in the second round Omigawa took Young down and got into side control, but Young did a great job of pushing Omigawa off and getting back to his feet. However, Omigawa then secured another takedown and stayed in side control for most of the rest of the round, a round Omigawa clearly won.

They traded strikes in a good stand-up exchange early in the third round, then went to the ground where Omigawa attempted a heel hook that Young was able to escape. But Omigawa once again got Young down and once again stayed in control for most of the round, and that was enough to win the third, and the fight.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-michihiro-omigawa-beats-jason-young-notches-first-ufc/

John Terry Jo-Wilfried Tsonga Juan Carlos Ferrero Juan Monaco Juan Roman Riquelme

MMA Link Parade

- Watch Tim Sylvia get promoted and smacked on the butt. [Middle Easy]

- Viewer's Guide to UFC 138. [Sports Illustrated]

- "Where Are They Now?": Famous Victims Edition. [Cage Potato]

- UFC 138 Weigh-In Results. [Five Ounces of Pain]

- Stephen "Wonderboy" Thompson: Karate Lives! [Low Kick]

- M-1 Global 'Fedor vs. Monson' Will Cost You $30. [MMA Convert]

- Cain Velasquez Not Too Nervous Heading Into "UFC on FOX" [5th Round]

- Not Everyone Thinks MMA Is Bigger Than Boxing. [Bleacher Report]

- "Superhero" Brother of MMA Fighter Arrested for Assault. [The Fight Nerd]

- Munoz happy to be UFC 138 headliner. [Sports Illustrated]

- Vadim Finklelstein 'worried' about Fedor Emelianenko's next fight. [MMA Mania]

- Lauzon Signs Sponsorship Deal with Gamma Labs. [MMA Payout]

- Mark Muñoz Ready For Leben Wherever The Fight Goes. [Fightline]

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/04/mma-link-parade/

Diego Milito

UFC 138 Weigh-In Results: Thiago Alves Misses Weight Again

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Thiago AlvesFor the third time in his last seven fights, Thiago Alves has missed weight.

Alves stepped on the scale at Friday's UFC 138 weigh-in and came in at 172 pounds, one over the welterweight limit. Alves previously missed weight for his UFC 117 fight with Jon Fitch and for his UFC 85 fight with Matt Hughes. He also tested positive for a banned diuretic at UFC 66, which he allegedly took to help him make weight.

Alves made weight (171 pounds) on his second try, according to MMA Junkie. All the other fighters made weight. Full results are below.

Main Card
Chris Leben (186) vs. Mark Munoz (186)
Renan Barao (136) vs. Brad Pickett (134)
Thiago Alves (172) vs. Papy Abedi (170)
Terry Etim (156) vs. Edward Faaloloto (155)
Cyrille Diabate (206) vs. Anthony Perosh (205)

Undercard
John Maguire (170) vs. Justin Edwards (170)
Michihiro Omigawa (145) vs. Jason Young (145)
Rob Broughton (258) vs. Philip De Fries (243)
Chris Cope (170) vs. Che Mills (169)
Chris Cariaso (135) vs. Vaughan Lee (135)

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/04/ufc-138-weigh-in-results-thiago-alves-misses-weight-again/

Rafael Nadal Rafael van der Vaart Retief Goosen Ricardo Carvalho Ricardo Quaresma

Mark Munoz Beats Chris Leben at UFC 138, Wants Anderson Silva Next

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Mark Munoz defeated Chris Leben at UFC 138 in Birmingham, England.Mark Munoz turned in a tremendous performance on Saturday at UFC 138, battering Chris Leben for two rounds before the fight was stopped prior to the start of the third. Munoz controlled the fight on the ground and opened up a big cut over Leben's left eye with hard right hands, and between the second and third rounds Leben's corner decided to stop the fight.

After being awarded the victory by second-round technical knockout, Munoz said he wants the next shot at UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva.

"I pay my dues in this weight class and I think I deserve a title shot," Munoz said. "Anderson Silva is by far the best pound-for-pound fighter. I give him all the respect and honor, but I think I deserve a title shot right now. I consider him a friend, but right now I'd love to get a title shot."


Munoz, a former NCAA wrestling champion, wanted to get the fight to the ground, and he did that with little trouble just 30 seconds into the first round. Leben, however, did a nice job of tying Munoz up and getting back to his feet without taking any damage. It was a back-and-forth round the rest of the way, with both men drilling each other hard several times, although at the end of the round Leben was gasping for air while Munoz looked fresh and relaxed.

In the second round Munoz again got a takedown within the first minute, and Leben again managed to get to his feet, but this time Leben got back up only after eating some hard shots from Munoz, and Munoz secured another takedown quickly after Leben escaped. Leben did briefly attempt a guillotine choke, but by the point that Munoz escaped that choke, he had so badly damaged Leben's left eye that the referee paused the fight to ask the doctor to inspect the cut. The doctor cleared Leben to keep going, but Munoz immediately pounced and got on top of Leben again.

And once the round ended, the cut over Leben's left eye was deemed to be too much, and that was that: UFC 138 came to an end with Munoz's hand being raised. Now he's looking for a chance at the middleweight belt.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/mark-munoz-beats-chris-leben-at-ufc-138-wants-anderson-silva-ne/

Fabio Quagliarella Feliciano Lopez Fernando Torres Fernando Verdasco Filippo Inzaghi

UFC 138: Renan Barao Submits Brad Pickett, Runs Record to 27-1

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Renan BaraoRenan Barao faced tougher competition than ever before on Saturday at UFC 138, but his winning streak remains.

Barao, the Brazilian who lost his first professional MMA fight and hasn't lost since, beat Brad Pickett to improve his record to 27-1, with one no contest.

The fight lasted just 4 minutes, 9 seconds, and it was exciting throughout. They both came out swinging, with Barao appearing to land the harder shots in the early going but Pickett also giving Barao all he could handle, and the opening minutes were a lot of fun as the fans in Birmingham, England, got behind the British Pickett.


But Barao took control of the fight when he hit Pickett's face with a brutal knee, then knocked him down with a combination of punches and then at the first opportunity took Pickett's back. Barao sunk in a body triangle and had control of Pickett, and when Barao secured a rear-naked choke, all Pickett could do was tap.

"When I hit him with the knee, I knew I could land the combinations, and I jumped on his back to finish with the submission," Barao said afterward.

Pickett, whose record falls to 20-6, is a fine fighter and one of the world's best bantamweights. But he's not as good as Barao -- Barao is one of the world's truly elite, and he may be a future bantamweight champion.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-renan-barao-submits-brad-pickett-runs-record-to-27-1/

Ronaldinho Ronaldo Rory McIlroy Ruud van Nistelrooy Ryan Giggs

Saturday, November 5, 2011

UFC 138 Undercard Live Blog: Omigawa vs. Young, Edwards vs. Maguire, More

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Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young is a fight on the UFC 138 undercard.This is the UFC 138 undercard live blog for the five non-televised bouts in support of UFC 138 in Birmingham, England.

Featured in these five Facebook bouts are Justin Edwards vs. John Maguire, Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young, Rob Broughton vs. Philip De Fries, Chris Cope vs. Che Mills and Chris Cariaso vs. Vaughan Lee.

The live blog is below.



Chris Cariaso vs. Vaughan Lee

Round 1: Big Dan Miragliotta is your referee, towering over the bantamweights as we start the action. Lee lands a head kick as Cariaso ducks low for the takedown. Cariaso doggedly holds on, giving himself a few moments to recover. Lee takes him down from a clinch 1:30 into the round. Lee lands a hard right, then hunts a guillotine from the top, but it's not tight enough. Cariaso manages to get back to his feet. Lee is bullying Cariaso around from the clinch, and he trips Cariaso down again. Cariaso defends well but it's clearly Lee's round, 10-9.

Round 2: The duo exchange leg kicks early. Cariaso lands a left hand and Lee flashes a pair of kicks at him, then takes him down. Lee really wants the guillotine, he looks for it at every turn. Cariaso scored with a hard elbow from the standing position. Lee checked to see if he was bleeding, but he's not. Cariaso turned the tables with a takedown of his own midway through. Lee was active from the bottom, but Cariaso managed to earn mount with more than 90 seconds left. Lee took no damage and quickly scrambled back to guard. Cariaso spent the rest of the round on top, landing few strikes, but he still did enough to earn the 10-9.

Round 3: Lots of clinch work in the first 90 seconds of the round as the pair fight to achieve the offensive position. They're broken up, and Lee looks for the takedown. This time, Cariaso defends it. Moments later, he ducks low and puts Lee on his back. That could win him the fight.. He moves to side control, the mount. Cariaso with a right hand. Lee gives his back, and Cariaso goes for the choke. Nothing doing there. Back to full mount. Cariaso thinks about an arm triangle, but instead keeps his top position and rains down punches and elbows from the top. Lee can't escape, and Cariaso dominates to the final horn, so it's his round 10-9.

Winner: Chris Cariaso via split decision (29-28, 29-28, 28-29)

Chris Cope vs. Che Mills

Round 1: Mills is walking forward, unafraid. He tags Cope with a right, then drops him with a left knee to the head. The ref looks close to stopping it but doesn't. Mills swarms and drops bombs. He drops Cope again with another knee and this time, it's over. That's how you make a debut.

Winner: Che Mills via TKO, Rd. 1 (0:40)

Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young

Round 1: Omigawa tried an early takedown but Young resisted it. Young fired off a head kick that slipped past Omigawa's head. Young peppered the legs with kicks. Young is very light on his feet and looking to control angles. Omigawa initiates a clinch, and trips Young down. Young works his way up and aggressively fires off a knee to the head. Omigawa backs off and they reset. Young lands a headkick. Omigawa wants a grind, Young wants space. Young's fast hands score, and he takes Omigawa down late. Omigawa threatens with a guillotine and ends on top, but it's Young's round, 10-9.

Round 2: Young has some swelling on his right eye, apparently from a head clash. Omigawa takes him down early. He worked to side control and thought about a kimura but Young craftily avoided it, then reversed the position and got back to his feet. Young let his hands go, but Omigawa closed the distance and tripped him down. Omigawa got full mount with :45 left, but did little with it. He got mount again and landed a couple short punches. He controlled nearly the entire round, so he gets the 10-9.

Round 3: Young landed an early left hook, taking the aggressor's role. He scored with an uppercut as he continued to fire off combos. Omigawa clinched and took him down. Not good for Young. Omigawa tried a heel hook, but Young slipped free and back to his feet. Still anyone's fight. Young tried a takedown, Omigawa used a guillotine hold to roll Young over and he ended up on top. Omigawa seems to be more interested in positioning than offense from the top, so this one could be tough to score. Omigawa hunted a kimura but gave that up in favor of a few elbows. Young pulled free, ended up on top with a few right hands as the horn sounded. Omigawa 10-9.

Winner: Michihiro Omigawa via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Rob Broughton vs. Philip De Fries

Round 1: De Fries immediately shoots in and Broughton is ready for it. They clinch against the cage. They stalemate and restart. De Fries, who has all of his seven wins by submission, wants it on the ground. He ducks under a punch but Broughton gets underhooks and stays upright. Finally, he drops down to his opponent's ankles and puts Broughton on his back. De Fries works to advance position. He's all about looking for a submission, and only occasionally remembers to throw strikes from the top. The punches don't have any steam on them. De Fries takes Broughton's back with :15 left, but runs out of time. The round is his though, 10-9.

Round 2: De Fries puts Broughton down with an early double-leg takedown. De Fries takes Broughton's back and puts the hooks in. Plenty of time to work. Broughton works free for a moment. Broughton snatches a kimura from the bottom and De Fries rolls, leaving Broughton in top position. De Fries is insistent on a kimura. Broughton punishes his body with elbows and De Fries lets it go. Broughton works into a mounted crucifix, throwing blows from the top. The late series of punches and elbows take it for him, 10-9.

Round 3: De Fries looks relatively fresh after his rough second round, and takes Broughton down from the get-go. De Fries works on positioning for a while, and gets full mount with 2:00 left. Finally, a hard punch from mount. Well, that didn't last long. De Fries moves to side control, then north-south. Very lackluster offense given the great positioning from him. Ref Dan Miragliotta has seen enough and resets them. Only 15 seconds left though, and neither really lets their hands go. It's De Fries, 10-9.

Winner: Philip De Fries via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Justin Edwards vs. John Maguire


Round 1: An early Edwards kick lands below the belt, so we have a timeout just as we're getting started. Edwards throws a spin kick and then drops Maguire with a right hook. Maguire defends and reverses, ending up on top. Maguire looks for offense from the top. Edwards uses the wall to get to his feet, but Maguire drags him back down. Back to their feet again, Maguire with knees to the head. A grappling scramble has them jockeying for position. Edwards tries a guillotine. Edwards pulls out and lands strikes to the body and head. After a rough start, Maguire rebounds to take the round 10-9.

Round 2: After a grappling heavy round, the two start off circling each other in the striking game. Edwards with leg kicks and they clinch. Maguire takes Edwards down with a suplex, then quickly gets his back and sinks in a body triangle. Maguire softens him up with punches from the back, Edwards occasionally firing back an elbow. Maguire switches to an arm bar in the final moments but can't yank Edwards arm free. Still, it's Maguire's round 10-9.

Round 3: Edwards with heavy leather. A body punch lands. Maguire snatches a single leg takedown. Edwards looks for a knee bar, Maguire grabs a foot and Edwards separates. Back to their feet, Maguire lands knees from the clinch. Edwards had a guillotine but lost the position and Maguire ended up on top with half the round left. Maguire to full mount. After some strikes, Edwards gives up his back and Maguire locks a body triangle again. Edwards escaped and ended up on top, but not for long. Maguire got the position back. Maguire again, 10-9.

Winner: John Maguire via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)



 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-undercard-live-blog-omigawa-vs-young-edwards-vs-magu/

Marcos Baghdatis

UFC 138: Michihiro Omigawa Beats Jason Young, Notches First UFC Win

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Omigawa beats Jason Young at UFC 138.Michihiro Omigawa finally has a win inside the Octagon.

Omigawa, who had a sensational run in Japan in 2009 and 2010, just hadn't been able to turn it on in the UFC, losing his first four fights in the Octagon. But on Saturday at UFC 138, Omigawa finally got his first UFC win, beating Jason Young by unanimous decision at UFC 138.

All three judges scored the fight 29-28 for Omigawa, who struggled with Young's stand-up in the first round but controlled the fight on the ground in rounds two and three.

"It's really good to get my first win here," Omigawa said afterward.


Young knocked Omigawa back with a body kick late in the first round and landed a couple of solid knees, and he deserved to win the round, although Young's right eye was badly swollen at the end of the round, thanks to an accidental clash of heads.

Early in the second round Omigawa took Young down and got into side control, but Young did a great job of pushing Omigawa off and getting back to his feet. However, Omigawa then secured another takedown and stayed in side control for most of the rest of the round, a round Omigawa clearly won.

They traded strikes in a good stand-up exchange early in the third round, then went to the ground where Omigawa attempted a heel hook that Young was able to escape. But Omigawa once again got Young down and once again stayed in control for most of the round, and that was enough to win the third, and the fight.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-michihiro-omigawa-beats-jason-young-notches-first-ufc/

Marin Cilic Matt Kuchar Maxi Rodríguez Michael Ballack Michael Essien

After Long Absence From UK Market, UFC Hopes for Two Shows in 2012

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Michael BispingSince making the UK market a priority a few years ago, the UFC visited the country eight times between 2007 and 2010. And even though shows there have tended to do big business, 2011 nearly came and went without a return, until the promotion managed to wedge one into the final stretches of a hectic schedule.

While some in those parts have claimed they've been neglected, UFC executives say they have already planned another event for the UK in 2012, and possibly a second.

"It's still a work in progress but it's a work we're prepared to do, committed to do," UFC managing director of international development Marshall Zelaznik said on Thursday. "Dana and Lorenzo are coming. We're committed to this market. We love coming here. The fans have been very supportive ... We're not giving up on this market and you can expect to see us here next year and I hope more times in the years to come."

The UFC has faced some troubles in the market due to unstable television contracts that have "disjointed" programming in Zelaznik's words, but each time they've brought the show to town, fans have turned out in droves. During the UFC 138 pre-fight press conference, he announced that Saturday's UFC 138 event, headlined by Mark Munoz vs. Chris Leben at the LG Arena in Birmingham, would set a gate record.

Because of time zone differences, North American TV audience sizes are often affected by events held in Europe as well, though Zelaznik did not mention that as a factor in their scheduling decisions.

The UFC's ambitious international schedule -- Scotland and Italy are two European nations they've spoken of visiting in 2012 -- is ultimately to blame, according to the company. There are only so many shows they can produce, leaving someone, somewhere disappointed as a result.

"In a perfect world we'd be here more times a year, but as you know, you've heard our mantra, we're trying to get everywhere, and there's a lot of pressure to bring the event everywhere around the world," he said.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/04/after-long-absence-from-uk-market-ufc-hopes-for-two-shows-in-20/

Cristiano Ronaldo Daniel Alves Daniele De Rossi David Albelda David Beckham

UFC 138 Undercard Live Blog: Omigawa vs. Young, Edwards vs. Maguire, More

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Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young is a fight on the UFC 138 undercard.This is the UFC 138 undercard live blog for the five non-televised bouts in support of UFC 138 in Birmingham, England.

Featured in these five Facebook bouts are Justin Edwards vs. John Maguire, Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young, Rob Broughton vs. Philip De Fries, Chris Cope vs. Che Mills and Chris Cariaso vs. Vaughan Lee.

The live blog is below.



Chris Cariaso vs. Vaughan Lee

Round 1: Big Dan Miragliotta is your referee, towering over the bantamweights as we start the action. Lee lands a head kick as Cariaso ducks low for the takedown. Cariaso doggedly holds on, giving himself a few moments to recover. Lee takes him down from a clinch 1:30 into the round. Lee lands a hard right, then hunts a guillotine from the top, but it's not tight enough. Cariaso manages to get back to his feet. Lee is bullying Cariaso around from the clinch, and he trips Cariaso down again. Cariaso defends well but it's clearly Lee's round, 10-9.

Round 2: The duo exchange leg kicks early. Cariaso lands a left hand and Lee flashes a pair of kicks at him, then takes him down. Lee really wants the guillotine, he looks for it at every turn. Cariaso scored with a hard elbow from the standing position. Lee checked to see if he was bleeding, but he's not. Cariaso turned the tables with a takedown of his own midway through. Lee was active from the bottom, but Cariaso managed to earn mount with more than 90 seconds left. Lee took no damage and quickly scrambled back to guard. Cariaso spent the rest of the round on top, landing few strikes, but he still did enough to earn the 10-9.

Round 3: Lots of clinch work in the first 90 seconds of the round as the pair fight to achieve the offensive position. They're broken up, and Lee looks for the takedown. This time, Cariaso defends it. Moments later, he ducks low and puts Lee on his back. That could win him the fight.. He moves to side control, the mount. Cariaso with a right hand. Lee gives his back, and Cariaso goes for the choke. Nothing doing there. Back to full mount. Cariaso thinks about an arm triangle, but instead keeps his top position and rains down punches and elbows from the top. Lee can't escape, and Cariaso dominates to the final horn, so it's his round 10-9.

Winner: Chris Cariaso via split decision (29-28, 29-28, 28-29)

Chris Cope vs. Che Mills

Round 1: Mills is walking forward, unafraid. He tags Cope with a right, then drops him with a left knee to the head. The ref looks close to stopping it but doesn't. Mills swarms and drops bombs. He drops Cope again with another knee and this time, it's over. That's how you make a debut.

Winner: Che Mills via TKO, Rd. 1 (0:40)

Michihiro Omigawa vs. Jason Young

Round 1: Omigawa tried an early takedown but Young resisted it. Young fired off a head kick that slipped past Omigawa's head. Young peppered the legs with kicks. Young is very light on his feet and looking to control angles. Omigawa initiates a clinch, and trips Young down. Young works his way up and aggressively fires off a knee to the head. Omigawa backs off and they reset. Young lands a headkick. Omigawa wants a grind, Young wants space. Young's fast hands score, and he takes Omigawa down late. Omigawa threatens with a guillotine and ends on top, but it's Young's round, 10-9.

Round 2: Young has some swelling on his right eye, apparently from a head clash. Omigawa takes him down early. He worked to side control and thought about a kimura but Young craftily avoided it, then reversed the position and got back to his feet. Young let his hands go, but Omigawa closed the distance and tripped him down. Omigawa got full mount with :45 left, but did little with it. He got mount again and landed a couple short punches. He controlled nearly the entire round, so he gets the 10-9.

Round 3: Young landed an early left hook, taking the aggressor's role. He scored with an uppercut as he continued to fire off combos. Omigawa clinched and took him down. Not good for Young. Omigawa tried a heel hook, but Young slipped free and back to his feet. Still anyone's fight. Young tried a takedown, Omigawa used a guillotine hold to roll Young over and he ended up on top. Omigawa seems to be more interested in positioning than offense from the top, so this one could be tough to score. Omigawa hunted a kimura but gave that up in favor of a few elbows. Young pulled free, ended up on top with a few right hands as the horn sounded. Omigawa 10-9.

Winner: Michihiro Omigawa via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Rob Broughton vs. Philip De Fries

Round 1: De Fries immediately shoots in and Broughton is ready for it. They clinch against the cage. They stalemate and restart. De Fries, who has all of his seven wins by submission, wants it on the ground. He ducks under a punch but Broughton gets underhooks and stays upright. Finally, he drops down to his opponent's ankles and puts Broughton on his back. De Fries works to advance position. He's all about looking for a submission, and only occasionally remembers to throw strikes from the top. The punches don't have any steam on them. De Fries takes Broughton's back with :15 left, but runs out of time. The round is his though, 10-9.

Round 2: De Fries puts Broughton down with an early double-leg takedown. De Fries takes Broughton's back and puts the hooks in. Plenty of time to work. Broughton works free for a moment. Broughton snatches a kimura from the bottom and De Fries rolls, leaving Broughton in top position. De Fries is insistent on a kimura. Broughton punishes his body with elbows and De Fries lets it go. Broughton works into a mounted crucifix, throwing blows from the top. The late series of punches and elbows take it for him, 10-9.

Round 3: De Fries looks relatively fresh after his rough second round, and takes Broughton down from the get-go. De Fries works on positioning for a while, and gets full mount with 2:00 left. Finally, a hard punch from mount. Well, that didn't last long. De Fries moves to side control, then north-south. Very lackluster offense given the great positioning from him. Ref Dan Miragliotta has seen enough and resets them. Only 15 seconds left though, and neither really lets their hands go. It's De Fries, 10-9.

Winner: Philip De Fries via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Justin Edwards vs. John Maguire


Round 1: An early Edwards kick lands below the belt, so we have a timeout just as we're getting started. Edwards throws a spin kick and then drops Maguire with a right hook. Maguire defends and reverses, ending up on top. Maguire looks for offense from the top. Edwards uses the wall to get to his feet, but Maguire drags him back down. Back to their feet again, Maguire with knees to the head. A grappling scramble has them jockeying for position. Edwards tries a guillotine. Edwards pulls out and lands strikes to the body and head. After a rough start, Maguire rebounds to take the round 10-9.

Round 2: After a grappling heavy round, the two start off circling each other in the striking game. Edwards with leg kicks and they clinch. Maguire takes Edwards down with a suplex, then quickly gets his back and sinks in a body triangle. Maguire softens him up with punches from the back, Edwards occasionally firing back an elbow. Maguire switches to an arm bar in the final moments but can't yank Edwards arm free. Still, it's Maguire's round 10-9.

Round 3: Edwards with heavy leather. A body punch lands. Maguire snatches a single leg takedown. Edwards looks for a knee bar, Maguire grabs a foot and Edwards separates. Back to their feet, Maguire lands knees from the clinch. Edwards had a guillotine but lost the position and Maguire ended up on top with half the round left. Maguire to full mount. After some strikes, Edwards gives up his back and Maguire locks a body triangle again. Edwards escaped and ended up on top, but not for long. Maguire got the position back. Maguire again, 10-9.

Winner: John Maguire via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)



 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/11/05/ufc-138-undercard-live-blog-omigawa-vs-young-edwards-vs-magu/

David Beckham David Ferrer David Silva David Suazo David Villa