Monday, October 31, 2011

Manager: Carlos Condit Mad at Georges St-Pierre, Not UFC, for Losing Title Fight

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Malki Kawa had a bad feeling when he heard his phone ring and looked at the caller ID. It was then that he realized UFC president Dana White was on the other line. UFC 137 had just ended 30 minutes earlier, and it was already after midnight on the east coast. It was not a time for mindless chit-chat. It was a time for serious business.

As is his style, White cut to the chase. Georges St-Pierre no longer wanted to fight Kawa's client Carlos Condit next. Instead, the UFC welterweight champ wanted to fight Nick Diaz, the winner of UFC 137's main event. We all now know the outcome. St-Pierre got the fight he wanted, and he'll be fighting Diaz in early February. Condit? He wasn't too happy, and he didn't exactly "step aside" as White told the media at the post-fight press conference.

"I could understand them coming to us like that," Kawa said on Monday's edition of The MMA Hour. "The issue with the whole 'he decided to step aside,' obviously, that wasn't the case. There was no just stepping aside. There was a little bit more than that. It's going to take more than that. I think we're way more upset with Georges and the way Georges handled it than we are with the way Dana presented it or anything like that."

Everything changed in the moments after UFC 137. Diaz got the ball rolling by saying St-Pierre was scared and by questioning his injury just after his main event win. According to White, St-Pierre then "flipped out" and demanded that he bypass Condit and face Diaz next.

But as Kawa pointed out, Diaz had previously called out St-Pierre after he was originally replaced with Condit, and St-Pierre never responded. In addition to that, St-Pierre had gone on record saying that believed Condit presented the tougher challenge.

"I don't know if the emotions of the moment got to him, and he just decided to do that," Kawa said. "It's kind of un-Georges-like."

Kawa said that he and Condit didn't step aside as graciously as it sounded, describing the ordeal as "gut-wrenching."

"[Carlos'] words were, 'My heart hurts,'" he said.

But ultimately, Kawa said that they are "company men" who made the move that the promotion wanted. He also suggested that there was some financial reward for bowing out.

"Dana always does the right thing and in this case, he'll do the right thing again," he said.

Kawa said he tried to keep things in perspective by noting that he originally got Condit moved into the title slot with some hustle of his own, and that sometimes, that sort of thing works against you. He even candidly admitted that if he was Diaz's manager, he would have lobbied for the fight, too.

"Are we pissed off about it? Absolutely," he said. "But it's not like I've never been on other end of stick where I put one of my fighters ahead of someone else and another guy got shafted or screwed over. It's just business, it's not personal. It's nothing personal with Georges. Are we upset with him? Absolutely."

Meanwhile, Condit has every intention of fighting again instead of waiting to take on the St-Pierre vs. Diaz winner. Kawa said the UFC has thrown out some possibilities, but that nothing has been decided upon. The biggest factor is that it has to be someone that Condit can gain something from in fighting, mentioning Josh Koscheck and Jake Ellenberger as possibilities.

"It's more about whoever brings the most to the table," he said. "We want to make it a big-money fight. Whoever that is. Make it a big-money fight. A No. 1 contender, possibly make it a five-rounder if we could. And somebody who win, lose, or draw, we can take something from it."

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/31/manager-carlos-condit-mad-at-georges-st-pierre-not-ufc-for-lo/

Michael Owen

The MMA Hour With Chris Leben, Matt Mitrione, Brad Pickett, Malki Kawa

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The MMA Hour returns on Monday with another two-hour live show. Here's who will be stopping by:

* UFC 138 headliner Chris Leben will preview his fight against Mark Munoz.

* Matt Mitrione will discuss what went wrong in his loss to Cheick Kongo on Saturday night.

* Brad Pickett will talk about his UFC 138 co-main event fight against Renan Barao.

* Carlos Condit's manager Malki Kawa will explain why Condit chose to give up his title shot to Nick Diaz.

* Jason Hehir, the producer of UFC on FOX Primetime, will talk about the critically-acclaimed show.

Plus, we'll discuss all the news coming out UFC 137 and we want to hear from you. 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.

(Editor's note: The show is now over but the video should be back up Tuesday or Wednesday).

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/31/the-mma-hour-with-chris-leben-brad-pickett-malki-kawa/

Robinho Roger Federer Ronaldinho Ronaldo Rory McIlroy

B.J. Penn Wisely Decides to 'Take Some Time Off' to Consider His Future

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BJ PennNow that he's had a chance to think it over, maybe B.J. Penn isn't "done" with MMA after all. In a short post on his website entitled "UFC 137: BJ Penn's Message to the Fans," the 32-year-old former UFC lightweight and welterweight champ seemed to leave the door open for a possible return to competition.

"I want to thank all the fans for their love and support," Penn wrote. "I have decided to take some time off to enjoy life, train and teach. I will keep you guys posted with what's next."

It's not exactly a vow to return to the cage, but it is a departure from the dejected note Penn sounded in the Octagon immediately following his unanimous decision loss to Nick Diaz at UFC 137. It's also the right move for a fighter at a career crossroads, who could certainly benefit from some time to relax and think things over.

If you've been following combat sports for a while, this slight change of heart shouldn't come as a surprise. Even though Penn told UFC commentator Joe Rogan that the loss to Diaz was "probably the last time you're ever going to see me" in the cage, that statement came at an emotional time for "The Prodigy."

If he does decide to come back, Penn certainly wouldn't be the first UFC star to declare himself officially retired after a loss, only to return at a later date and in a different frame of mind.

Randy Couture, following his second knockout loss to Chuck Liddell at UFC 57 in February of 2006, told fans that it was the last time they'd see him fighting in the Octagon. Thirteen months later he was back to take on Tim Sylvia for the UFC heavyweight championship, and he'd go on to compete for four more years before calling it quits (again) this past April.

As anybody who's ever come home after a horrible round and golf and declared themselves done forever with the game already knows, the agony of defeat and sound decision-making don't necessarily go together. That's exactly why, even when things started heading downhill for Liddell, he always said he'd decide on retirement in the gym -- not the cage.

Whatever he chooses in the end, Penn's decision not to decide just yet is the right move. He can still compete at the UFC level if he wants to, but if the fire isn't there and the upside doesn't seem worth all the pain and suffering anymore, he'd be wise to move on in life.

At least now we know he'll take some well earned time away to settle on a decision. Hopefully it will be one he can live comfortably with, and without second-guessing himself years from now.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/31/b-j-penn-wisely-decides-to-take-some-time-off-to-consider-his/

Sergio Agüero Sergio Ramos Shunsuke Nakamura Simao Sabrosa Stanislas Wawrinka

Report: Anderson Silva and Vitor Belfort to Coach Brazilian Edition of TUF

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Just last week, UFC president Dana White confirmed that Brazil would be the first country to produce an international edition of The Ultimate Fighter.

According to a new report, the show will bring with it a pair of top-level coaches, including the man that many believe to the best fighter in history.

Extra Globo, a major news outlet in Brazil, is reporting that Anderson Silva and Vitor Belfort will coach the two teams in the series, which is set to begin in March 2012.

The newspaper is part of the massive Globo Organization. Its television arm recently struck a deal with the UFC to broadcast the promotion's events and is also the future home of TUF in Brazil.

The UFC on Monday though said that coaches have yet to be chosen.

The upcoming edition of TUF: Brazil is likely to air in the US on FUEL under the terms of the UFC's new deal with FOX-owned networks.

Meanwhile, the UFC is trying to finalize a next opponent for Silva. He had been expected to face Chael Sonnen on Super Bowl weekend, but with a welterweight title fight between Georges St-Pierre and Nick Diaz now penciled into that event, Silva-Sonnen may be moved to a different date on the calendar.

In US editions of TUF, opposing coaches have historically competed against each other at the end of the season, but given Silva's recent first-round KO over Belfort, it seems likely that if those two are in fact coaches, the inaugural Brazilian edition of the show will not follow that custom.

White had been scheduled to meet with Silva's representatives over the weekend, but he did not respond to a Monday morning MMA Fighting inquiry about whether that meeting had actually occurred.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/31/report-anderson-silva-and-vitor-belfort-to-coach-brazilian-editio/

Ben Crane Bill Haas Bo Van Pelt Bubba Watson Camilo Villegas

Back for More: Donald Cerrone-Nate Diaz Planned for UFC 141

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LAS VEGAS - Someone must have told Donald Cerrone when Chris Lytle retired, the UFC had a job opening for its Bonus King position.

The "Cowboy" will go after his fourth bonus of 2011 and will tie the UFC's record for most fights in one calendar year when he meets Nate Diaz at UFC 141. The UFC on Monday afternoon confirmed the lightweight scrap will serve as the co-main event.

UFC 141 will take place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Dec. 30, a rare Friday pay-per-view for the UFC to avoid going head-to-head with the New Year's Eve holiday the following day. Scheduled to headline the card is a heavyweight contenders fight between former UFC champ Brock Lesnar and recent signee Alistair Overeem, the former Strikeforce heavyweight champion who was released from that promotion earlier this year only to sign with the UFC.

Cerrone on Saturday won his sixth straight fight and fourth in the UFC since merging over from the WEC when he submitted Dennis Siver in the first round at UFC 137. Of his four UFC fights so far in 2011, Cerrone has three post-fight bonus awards - one each for Fight of the Night, Knockout of the Night and Submission of the Night, which came against Siver.

Diaz snapped a two-fight losing skid last month when he submitted Takanori Gomi in the first round at UFC 135, winning Submission of the Night. That came after back-to-back decision losses to Dong Hyun Kim at UFC 125 and Rory MacDonald at UFC 129. Diaz has been nearly as active as Cerrone - he will fight for the fourth time this year.

Cerrone's bonus money in 2011 totals $215,000. His show and win purse totals out to $174,000 this year. A win and another bonus against Diaz would put him over the half-million mark for the year - not bad for a fighter who last year at this time was winning $10,000 bonuses in the WEC. Diaz has won seven bonuses in his last 11 fights.

The UFC record for non-tournament fights in one calendar is five, currently shared by Roger Huerta in 2007, plus Chris Leben and Nate Diaz's brother Nick, both in 2006. Assuming no delays in Cerrone's fight with Nate Diaz in December, he'll join that small group.

After UFC 137 on Saturday, Cerrone said he wanted to get back in the cage as soon as possible, and even mentioned he'd love to be on the UFC's December card.

"I want to keep fighting," Cerrone said at the post-fight press conference. "I don't want to sit and wait.

Cerrone even mentioned earlier in Fight Week that he was considering a move down to featherweight to fight Nam Phan, whom he believes disrespected his friend and teammate Leonard Garcia following his rematch win over him earlier this month. But that will get put on hold to stay at lightweight to fight Diaz.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/31/back-for-more-donald-cerrone-nate-diaz-targeted-for-ufc-141/

Samuel Eto’o

Back for More: Donald Cerrone-Nate Diaz Planned for UFC 141

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LAS VEGAS - Someone must have told Donald Cerrone when Chris Lytle retired, the UFC had a job opening for its Bonus King position.

The "Cowboy" will go after his fourth bonus of 2011 and will tie the UFC's record for most fights in one calendar year when he meets Nate Diaz at UFC 141. Multiple outlets have reported the two lightweights have agreed to meet on the UFC's year-end card in Las Vegas, and MMA Fighting on Monday morning confirmed with sources close to the fighters that the bout is being planned. MMA Junkie first reported the news Sunday night.

UFC 141 is expected for the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Dec. 30, a rare Friday pay-per-view for the UFC to avoid going head-to-head with the New Year's Eve holiday the following day. Scheduled to headline the card is a heavyweight contenders fight between former UFC champ Brock Lesnar and recent signee Alistair Overeem, the former Strikeforce heavyweight champion who was released from that promotion earlier this year only to sign with the UFC.

Cerrone on Saturday won his sixth straight fight and fourth in the UFC since merging over from the WEC when he submitted Dennis Siver in the first round at UFC 137. Of his four UFC fights so far in 2011, Cerrone has three post-fight bonus awards - one each for Fight of the Night, Knockout of the Night and Submission of the Night, which came against Siver.

Diaz snapped a two-fight losing skid last month when he submitted Takanori Gomi in the first round at UFC 135, winning Submission of the Night. That came after back-to-back decision losses to Dong Hyun Kim at UFC 125 and Rory MacDonald at UFC 129. Diaz has been nearly as active as Cerrone - he will fight for the fourth time this year.

Cerrone's bonus money in 2011 totals $215,000. His show and win purse totals out to $174,000 this year. A win and another bonus against Diaz would put him over the half-million mark for the year - not bad for a fighter who last year at this time was winning $10,000 bonuses in the WEC. Diaz has won seven bonuses in his last 11 fights.

The UFC record for non-tournament fights in one calendar is five, currently shared by Roger Huerta in 2007, plus Chris Leben and Nate Diaz's brother Nick, both in 2006. Assuming no delays in Cerrone's fight with Nate Diaz in December, he'll join that small group.

After UFC 137 on Saturday, Cerrone said he wanted to get back in the cage as soon as possible, and even mentioned he'd love to be on the UFC's December card.

"I want to keep fighting," Cerrone said at the post-fight press conference. "I don't want to sit and wait.

Cerrone even mentioned earlier in Fight Week that he was considering a move down to featherweight to fight Nam Phan, whom he believes disrespected his friend and teammate Leonard Garcia following his rematch win over him earlier this month. But that will get put on hold to stay at lightweight to fight Diaz.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/31/back-for-more-donald-cerrone-nate-diaz-targeted-for-ufc-141/

Cristiano Ronaldo Daniel Alves Daniele De Rossi David Albelda David Beckham

Tyson Griffin Says He Strayed Too Much From Game Plan at UFC 137

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LAS VEGAS - MMA Fighting caught up with Tyson Griffin after his first-round knockout loss at UFC 137. Griffin discusses why he missed weight by three pounds, what happened during his fight against Bart Palaszewski and what's next for him.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/tyson-griffin-says-he-strayed-too-much-from-game-plan-at-ufc-137/

Nick Watney Nicolas Almagro Nikolay Davydenko Novak Djokovic Owen Hargreaves

Donald Cerrone Would Like to Fight Again This Year

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LAS VEGAS - Donald Cerrone faced the media after his win at UFC 137. Cerrone discusses if he would fight teammate Clay Guida if he beats Ben Henderson, if he still wants to fight Nam Phan, his "stripper and gambling problems" and much more.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/donald-cerrone-would-like-to-fight-again-this-year/

Thierry Henry Thomaz Bellucci Tim Clark Tomas Berdych Torsten Frings

Ben Askren Beats Jay Hieron, Keeps Bellator Welterweight Title

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After 25 minutes of action, Ben Askren is still Bellator's welterweight champion.

Askren defeated Jay Hieron by split decision on Saturday night, keeping the Bellator welterweight belt but not satisfying himself with his performance.

"I'm not pleased at all -- I'm supposed to be getting better," Askren said afterward. "In no way did I dominate Jay like I wanted to and that's why I'm disappointed. The judges could have gone either way on this one."

Although he's a great wrestler, Askren knows he's not a complete enough fighter to put himself on the same level as the truly elite in the sport, and he acknowledged as much after escaping with the win over Hieron.

"My goal is to be the best fighter in the world and I wasn't that tonight -- I wasn't even close," Askren said.

Saturday night's Bellator card also featured the two semifinal fights in the promotion's heavyweight tournament, and both of them ended very quickly.

In one heavyweight semifinal, Eric Prindle knocked out Ron Sparks with a brutal left hook just 40 seconds into the first round. Prindle sent Sparks face-first into the canvas with the punch and landed a couple more shots on the ground before referee Chuck Wolfe jumped in to stop the fight (accidentally kneeing Sparks in the face in the process). In the other heavyweight semifinal, Thiago Santos needed just 38 seconds to submit Neil Grove, landing a big shot on the feet and forcing a tap with a rear-naked choke on the ground.

Prindle and Santos will fight next month, with a shot at Bellator heavyweight champion Cole Konrad on the line.

"When you watch us, don't blink," Prindle said.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/29/ben-askren-beats-jay-hieron-keeps-bellator-welterweight-title/

Anthony Kim

Mirko Cro Cop Goes Out With Grace and Fan Adulation, but No Victory

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LAS VEGAS -- Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic didn't get the sweet swan song he had hoped for, but the heavyweight striker did accomplish one of his goals, closing out his career with a crowd-pleaser at UFC 137.

Cro Cop ultimately fell to Roy Nelson in a third-round TKO. The Croatian had his moments in the fight, flooring Nelson briefly in the second round and keeping it competitive, with all three cageside judges having the bout tied 19-19 heading into the final frame. Nelson took over in the third and finished him with strikes 90 seconds in. Still, the 10,313 fans in attendance at the Mandalay Bay Events Center saw enough heart in Cro Cop's performance to send him off with a standing ovation.



"Cro Cop's been a good guy since day we signed him," UFC president Dana White said. "Again, the guy is a warrior and legend, and done tons of great things in the sport. I know he's very disappointed in his run in the UFC. But I said it to you guys at the press conference before. I'm 42. At 38, to still be fighting with guys a lot younger, faster and more explosive than you, he came out and did what he said he was going to do. At the press conference he said, 'I'm going to give you guys a fight. Whether I win or I lose, it won't be a boring fight like the Frank Mir was. And it was not."

Cro Cop tried to leave the cage shortly after losing, but was asked to stay for a post-fight interview with Joe Rogan. In a classy move, he thanked the promotion for treating him "like a king" and apologized for his inability to bring the same magic to the octagon that he had in the PRIDE ring earlier in his career.

Upset at the outcome of the fight, did not attend the post-fight press conference, however.

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Nelson, who snapped a two-fight losing streak with the victory, credited the veteran's performance and skill.

"He came to bang and he came to throw," said Nelson (16-6). "He's one of those guys who can still fight. He hits hard, he's very competitive. It's one of those fights that for me, I wanted to make sure I was the guy to go out there and win. It feels good to be back in the 'W.'"

Cro Cop, once considered the most fearsome striker in the heavyweight division, closed out his career losing each of his last three fights by stoppage.

He went just 4-6 in his 10-fight run in the octagon, but retires with a record of 27-10-2 with 1 no contest. In the end, fans won't necessarily remember the numbers. What they will remember for sure are his devastating high kicks which led to many of his 20 knockout finishes, and led him to coin the phrase, "right leg, hospital, left leg, cemetery."

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/mirko-cro-cop-goes-out-with-grace-and-fan-adulation-but-no-victor/

Diego Diego Forlan Diego Milito Dimitar Berbatov Dustin Johnson

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Donald Cerrone Would Like to Fight Again This Year

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LAS VEGAS - Donald Cerrone faced the media after his win at UFC 137. Cerrone discusses if he would fight teammate Clay Guida if he beats Ben Henderson, if he still wants to fight Nam Phan, his "stripper and gambling problems" and much more.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/donald-cerrone-would-like-to-fight-again-this-year/

David Beckham David Ferrer David Silva David Suazo David Villa

Ben Askren Beats Jay Hieron, Keeps Bellator Welterweight Title

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After 25 minutes of action, Ben Askren is still Bellator's welterweight champion.

Askren defeated Jay Hieron by split decision on Saturday night, keeping the Bellator welterweight belt but not satisfying himself with his performance.

"I'm not pleased at all -- I'm supposed to be getting better," Askren said afterward. "In no way did I dominate Jay like I wanted to and that's why I'm disappointed. The judges could have gone either way on this one."

Although he's a great wrestler, Askren knows he's not a complete enough fighter to put himself on the same level as the truly elite in the sport, and he acknowledged as much after escaping with the win over Hieron.

"My goal is to be the best fighter in the world and I wasn't that tonight -- I wasn't even close," Askren said.

Saturday night's Bellator card also featured the two semifinal fights in the promotion's heavyweight tournament, and both of them ended very quickly.

In one heavyweight semifinal, Eric Prindle knocked out Ron Sparks with a brutal left hook just 40 seconds into the first round. Prindle sent Sparks face-first into the canvas with the punch and landed a couple more shots on the ground before referee Chuck Wolfe jumped in to stop the fight (accidentally kneeing Sparks in the face in the process). In the other heavyweight semifinal, Thiago Santos needed just 38 seconds to submit Neil Grove, landing a big shot on the feet and forcing a tap with a rear-naked choke on the ground.

Prindle and Santos will fight next month, with a shot at Bellator heavyweight champion Cole Konrad on the line.

"When you watch us, don't blink," Prindle said.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/29/ben-askren-beats-jay-hieron-keeps-bellator-welterweight-title/

Feliciano Lopez Fernando Torres Fernando Verdasco Filippo Inzaghi Florent Malouda

Tyson Griffin Says He Strayed Too Much From Game Plan at UFC 137

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LAS VEGAS - MMA Fighting caught up with Tyson Griffin after his first-round knockout loss at UFC 137. Griffin discusses why he missed weight by three pounds, what happened during his fight against Bart Palaszewski and what's next for him.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/tyson-griffin-says-he-strayed-too-much-from-game-plan-at-ufc-137/

Guillermo Garcia-Lopez

Bart Palaszewski: I Knew I Could Put Tyson Griffin Away

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LAS VEGAS - Bart Palaszewski faced the media after his first-round knockout win at UFC 137. Palaszewski talked about if he was surprised Tyson Griffin missed weight at UFC 137, if he was going for a knockout, his weight cut and the emotions he faced in his UFC debut.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/bart-palaszewski-i-knew-i-could-put-tyson-griffin-away/

Dustin Johnson Eduardo Da Silva Ernests Gulbis Ernie Els Fabio Cannavaro

Cesar Gracie Thinks GSP vs. Diaz Will Be Biggest Fight in UFC History

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LAS VEGAS -- Nick Diaz's manager and trainer Cesar Gracie talked to the press following Saturday night's UFC 137 event about Diaz's win, his new fight against GSP, Diaz's complaint about not getting good enough sparring partners and more.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/cesar-gracie-thinks-gsp-vs-diaz-will-be-biggest-fight-in-ufc-hi/

Ivan Ljubicic Jamie Carragher Jason Day Javier Mascherano Javier Zanetti

St-Pierre Doesn't Understand Why Cesar Gracie Keeps Picking on Him

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LAS VEGAS - MMA Fighting caught up with UFC welterweight Georges St-Pierre at UFC 137. GSP gives the latest on his injuries, reacts to Cesar Gracie's comments and says when he might be able to fight next.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/st-pierre-doesnt-understand-why-cesar-gracie-keeps-picking-on-h/

Roger Federer Ronaldinho Ronaldo Rory McIlroy Ruud van Nistelrooy

Everyone Boards the Nick Diaz Bandwagon, Including Champ Georges St-Pierre

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LAS VEGAS -- It doesn't matter what Nick Diaz says, you want to hear it. It doesn't matter who he fights, you want to see it. It doesn't matter if you want him to win or lose, you have a strong opinion either way. In a matter of weeks, he has become the most riveting, polarizing man in MMA.

Soon, he might become its biggest star.

That may sound a bit illogical right now, but excuse me, I've spent the whole week absorbing the philosophies of the 209's most famous export, and I'm sold. Illogical is the new normal.

There are obviously several stars in the UFC sky that eclipse Diaz in the popularity department, from Brock Lesnar to Anderson Silva to Georges St-Pierre. But that could change.




Diaz's allure is two-fold. In the cage, he's a tremendously skilled athlete with unshakeable belief in his skills and unbreakable stamina. Outside of it, he is a fascinating subject with a unique world view and an inability to hold back from saying what is truly on his mind.

In the past, the only thing holding him back from real stardom was a lack of visibility. After Diaz left the UFC in 2006 -- after two straight wins, by the way -- he began an odyssey of fights around the world, in promotions from PRIDE to EliteXC to DREAM to Strikeforce.

No matter how well he fought -- and he went 11-1 with 1 no contest since the start of 2007 -- the perception existed that he was cleaning up in the B leagues. Now back in the UFC, that argument is no longer valid.

Just a few months ago, Penn was fighting top welterweight contender Jon Fitch to a draw. On Saturday, Penn, could do little with Diaz, especially after the first round. According to FightMetric, Diaz out-struck Penn by an overwhelming total of 218-58 in the last two rounds. He also bloodied and bruised him in a way we've rarely seen.

Diaz also may benefit from his own counter-culture behavior. Polarizing is always good. Many sports superstars are loved and hated in equal measures, including LeBron James and Tiger Woods. Diaz isn't a bad guy, he's just a different breed. Like all great athletes, he is intensely driven. He doesn't have a chip on his shoulder; he has a boulder.

But he does make us scratch our heads. As you're probably aware, he missed two press conferences leading up to UFC 137 that cost him a title match and led to a matchup with Penn that he didn't especially want. The switch angered Diaz, but it also helped raise his profile. People who supported him rallied around him. And those who didn't know much about him invariably spent time trying to to learn more about him and whether he was self-destructing or simply didn't play by anyone else's rules.

By the time the UFC 137 conference call came about, and Diaz was late, he had become such a story that he was a worldwide trending topic on Twitter. And by the time his fight with Penn came about, certainly nearly anyone with any hint of interest in MMA had his interest piqued.

"He blew up out of nowhere," UFC president Dana White said. "Part of it is his attitude, but I think people love a real fighter. He's definitely a real fighter."

Diaz's words and actions are so magnetic that it appears there's no one he can't pull into his forcefield. After beating Penn, he hung out bait for welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre.

"I don't think Georges was hurt," Diaz said. "I think he was scared."

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St-Pierre, who was sitting cageside, smiled and pretended his hands were shaking. But the UFC machine was already in hyperdrive.

According to White, St-Pierre approached him backstage and said he felt disrespected by Diaz. In White's words, the normally composed GSP "flipped out." He wanted Diaz, and soon. So White audibled, contacting Carlos Condit and asking him to step aside.

Condit, stuck in a terrible situation, agreed, and White had his matchup.

To Diaz, that was hardly a reward. Even though he'd won, even though he'd been granted a title fight and a big paycheck, he seemed torn up by everything that had come before it. He characterized his own performance as "poor" and "stupid," bemoaned fighting while injured, and as has become the norm, complained about money.

If you didn't know any better, you would have thought he lost the fight.

I asked him if he took any joy in what he'd just accomplished, and he said no. I asked him if moving into a title shot and getting a big payday would make him feel any better. No, he said again. Because in his eyes, he had already earned those things. In Diaz's mind, he had to be the bad guy to get what had already been promised to him.

"The only reason I'm getting this fight is because people want to see me take an ass-whipping right about now," he said. "So, alright, great. I worked for it. I'll take my ass-whipping, I'll take my money, and I'll go home."

That may not be so true though. While Penn was the crowd favorite on Saturday, Diaz heard his fair share of cheers coming in, and he certainly got a star-like reaction upon winning. Then, he moved on to the press conference. He joined it in progress, and from the moment he walked on stage until the moment it was over 30 minutes later, not a single question was directed to any of the other five fighters on the stage.

On a night when BJ Penn and Mirko Cro Cop both said they were done fighting forever, all of the buzz was about Nick Diaz. He managed to steal headlines. He managed to steal back his title shot, too.

UFC 137 was supposed to be about Diaz vs. GSP, and it was. Just not in the way we thought. Instead of the culmination, it was just a masterful setup. Should Diaz win, stardom beckons. Because now, everyone knows who Diaz is, and everyone knows how he can fight. Whatever he says, we'll be listening. Whatever he does, we'll be watching.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/everyone-boards-the-nick-diaz-bandwagon-including-champ-georges/

Kaka

Ramsey Nijem Disappointed With Bruce Buffer at UFC 137

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LAS VEGAS - MMA Fighting caught up with Ramsey Nijem after his first UFC win at UFC 137. Nijem says why he's disappointed with Bruce Buffer for not using his "stripper" nickname, what Danny Downes handed him at weigh-ins and why he wasn't able to finish him.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/ramsey-nijem-disappointed-with-bruce-buffer-at-ufc-137/

Ernests Gulbis Ernie Els Fabio Cannavaro Fabio Quagliarella Feliciano Lopez

Cesar Gracie Thinks GSP vs. Diaz Will Be Biggest Fight in UFC History

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LAS VEGAS -- Nick Diaz's manager and trainer Cesar Gracie talked to the press following Saturday night's UFC 137 event about Diaz's win, his new fight against GSP, Diaz's complaint about not getting good enough sparring partners and more.

 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/30/cesar-gracie-thinks-gsp-vs-diaz-will-be-biggest-fight-in-ufc-hi/

Samir Nasri Samuel Eto’o Sergio Agüero Sergio Ramos Shunsuke Nakamura

UFC 137 Live Blog: Cheick Kongo vs. Matt Mitrione Updates

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Cheick Kongo faces Matt Mitrione at UFC 137.LAS VEGAS -- This is the UFC 137 live blog for Cheick Kongo vs. Matt Mitrione, a heavyweight bout on tonight's UFC pay-per-view card at the Mandalay Bay Events Center.

Kongo (16-6-2) is coming off an incredible come-from-behind knockout win over Pat Barry at UFC Live in June. Mitrione (5-0) last defeated Christian Morecraft by knockout on the same Versus card.

The live blog is below.


Round 1: Mitrione is talking to Kongo in the early moments, though neither throws a strike in the opening 45 seconds. Finally, Kongo throws out a cursory jab. Kongo has his right hand cocked but it's attached to his face. And Mitrione is dancing around. Very little in the way of real action early. Mitrione finally throws a swinging right hook that misses and they clinch. Lot of boos as they stalemate their. Kongo is controlling the position with the underhooks until ref Herb Dean breaks them up. Kongo lands a right hand and Mitrione charges forward, missing a straight left. Kongo throws a kick, Mitrione catches it and throws him down. Kongo gets back up, then lands a hard right hand. Best punch of the round. Round ends with very little real offense. I'm calling it a 10-10.

Round 2: Kongo comes out early with some purpose. Right hand, Mitrione responds with a left. Kongo with leg kicks. Kongo has his best moment of the fight with a combo, two punches landing. Mitrione really hasn't landed much yet. Still, he's the one walking forward all the time. Kongo lands. A Mitrione right hook then finds Kongo's jaw. Most of Mitrione's offense comes as a counter to Kongo's stuff. Another close round, but I'll score that one for Kongo, 10-9.

Round 3: Kongo backs Mitrione up early with right hands. Mitrione seems to have no fear though. That's like an invitation for him to come forward. Kongo takes Mitrione down 40 seconds in. Kongo ends up on Mitrione's back, landing punches. Mitrione gets back to his feet. Kongo dumps him down again. He's in Mitrione's half-guard but he's not exactly throwing bombs from there. Mitrione can't get back to his feet. Mitrione tries to roll forward and free, but Kongo corrals him. A pretty lackluster fight ends with Kongo taking the round 10-9.

Winner: Cheick Kongo via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-28, 29-28)

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/29/ufc-137-live-blog-cheick-kongo-vs-matt-mitrione-updates/

Ruud van Nistelrooy Ryan Giggs Ryan Palmer Sam Querrey Samir Nasri

Saturday, October 29, 2011

UFC 137: Cheick Kongo Beats Matt Mitrione

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In a heavyweight fight that didn't quite deliver the fireworks fans were hoping for, Cheick Kongo beat Matt Mitrione by decision at UFC 137.

Mitrione, a former NFL defensive tackle, and Kongo, a muscular striker, had a fight that was billed as a heavyweight slugfest but turned out to be more of a snoozefest, as both men came out looking tentative and hesitant. But Kongo got the better of the stand-up exchanges and battered Mitrione on the ground in the third round, and that was enough to earn the decision, 30-27, 30-28 and 29-28 on the judges' scorecards for Kongo.

The fans in Las Vegas booed as the fight came to an end.


For Kongo, the win was his 10th inside the Octagon, and it showed that he's still among the better heavyweights in the sport. But it also showed why he's not among the truly elite: His ground game is still rudimentary, and he's often too slow to let his hands go.

For Mitrione, the loss was his first since he was a contestant on The Ultimate Fighter, and it showed that he, too, still has a long way to go. Mitrione is a talented athlete, but he's not a complete MMA fighter yet, and this was not a great fight.

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/29/ufc-137-cheick-kongo-beats-matt-mitrione/

Zach Johnson

UFC 137: Donald Cerrone Submits Dennis Siver

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Donald Cerrone beats Dennis Siver at UFC 137.In a very impressive showing at UFC 137, Donald Cerrone made short work of Dennis Siver, hurting him badly with kicks and eventually choking him out on the ground.

A high kick across the chin made Siver stagger around the Octagon early on in the fight, and although Siver managed to hold on for dear life and recover, Cerrone eventually knocked Siver down and got on top of him in back mount, forcing him to tap with a rear-naked choke.

UFC announcer Joe Rogan suggested to Cerrone after the fight that he's nearing title contention, but Cerrone said he's not thinking about that just yet.


"I'm just here to keep fighting. Hell, I want to get another fight in December, so if I could do that it'd be great," Cerrone said.

This fight took just two minutes, 22 seconds, and Cerrone took no damage at all, so Cerrone should be able to return to the Octagon quickly. He's now on a six-fight winning streak and 17-3 in his MMA career overall, and there's every reason to expect big things for him going forward.

As for Siver, it was a disappointing loss just as he appeared to be nearing title contention himself. Cerrone showed that he's on another level.

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/29/ufc-137-donald-cerrone-submits-dennis-siver/

Javier Mascherano Javier Zanetti Jeff Overton Jim Furyk Joe Cole

UFC 137 Undercard Live Blog: Vera vs. Marshall, Downes vs. Nijem, More

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Brandon Vera faces Eliot Marshall at UFC 137.LAS VEGAS -- This is the UFC 137 live blog for the four non-televised bouts in support of tonight's UFC pay-per-view card at the Mandalay Bay Events Center.

Featured in these four Facebook bouts are Brandon Vera vs. Eliot Marshall, Danny Downes vs. Ramsey Nijem, Francis Carmont vs. Chris Camozzi and Dustin Jacoby vs. Clifford Starks.

The live blog is below.


Dustin Jacoby vs. Clifford Starks

Round 1: Lots of circling early as Jacoby circles the outside of the cage. Starks lands a right cross but Jacoby takes it well. Tight right by Jacoby moments later. Starks answers back. Action is slow-paced but most of the strikes thrown have been power shots. Both men working hard with their footwork to cut off angles. Starks counters a hook with a right hand that scores. Starks goes to the body. One minute left. Starks chases Jacoby across the cage but doesn't land much. Starks scores a takedown with :30 left. Jacoby hunts a kimura but Starks defends as the round closes. It's Starks, 10-9.

Round 2: Hard right hand early by Jacoby, his best strike of the fight so far. Starks circles away, and looks fine. Jacoby uses a spinning heel kick that only partially connects. Left hook from Jacoby. Starks times a right that scores as Jacoby leans in. Starks takes Jacoby down with two minutes left. Jacoby does a good job keeping a tight guard but Starks occasionally sneaks in a right hand to the body or head. The late second is all Starks', and he steals it away 10-9.

Round 3: The straight right is Starks' money punch, and he lands it again early. The two exchange. Jacoby lands a knee from the clinch. Moments later, Starks shoots and takes him down. Jacoby keeps a tight guard but he's behind and probably needs to be more aggressive. Starks passes to half-guard. Jacoby again looks for the kimura. Starks finally works his arm out of danger with 30 seconds left and lands some punches from the top. He's going to take the round 10-9.

Winner: Clifford Starks via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

Francis Carmont vs. Chris Camozzi

Round 1: Carmont walks out with welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre in his corner to make his UFC debut. Carmont takes Camozzi down inside the first minute, but Camozzi uses the wall to get back to his feet. Camozzi pushes Carmont against the cage. Carmont punches his way out of the position. Camozzi tries to bully him again, pushing him into the corner. Carmont lands a few knees to the body. Carmont pulls Camozzi down but Camozzi pops right back up. Carmont throws a knee, then a pair of elbows. He's showing some diverse offense. Relatively close round but Carmont takes it 10-9.

Round 2: Carmont lands a right hand and Camozzi moves inside to initiate the clinch against the fence. Carmont likes knees from in tight, and he's landed a few any time he has the space. Camozzi is trying hard to crowd him. Carmont lands a right hand, backing Camozzi up. A nice exchange and Carmont gets the better of it. Carmont goes for the takedown, picks up Camozzi and slams him down on his back. Carmont on top with strikes and over a minute to work. Carmont looked up at the clock, Camozzi tried to take the opportunity to get up, and Carmont dropped him with a left hook. Carmont tried to finish but Camozzi covered up. Big round for Carmont 10-9.

Round 3: Carmont lands a series of strikes early. He backed up and Camozzi audibly swore, giving the crowd a laugh. Carmont is taking over the fight with his standup. Camozzi's face has been bloodied since the second round and Carmont looks pretty much unmarked. Another Carmont takedown with two minutes left. Hammer strikes from the top until he pulls Carmont into his guard. Carmont lets him up and Camozzi comes up with a flying knee into a clinch. Time's running short. Camozzi nearly had a kimura as time ran out. Carmont 10-9.

Winner: Francis Carmont via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-26)

Danny Downes vs. Ramsey Nijem,

Round 1: Left hook by Nijem to open things. Nijem flurries in with a combination, the moves in for the takedown. Downes gets back up but Nijem tags him again with right hands. Nijem scores another takedown. Downes works free for a moment before Nijem drags him down. We're up and down like musical chairs. Nijem finally takes Downes' back and looks for the rear naked choke. Downes defends that but Nijem throws strikes to free up his neck. He looks for the choke again. Downes gets free with over a minute left. He has little time to accomplish anything. Nijem takes him down again and gets right to his back. It's a very one-sided round, and it's Nijem's 10-9.

Round 2: Much better start to round two for Downes, who briefly had Nijem in an inverted triangle. Nijem got free though, and took Downes to the ground again. He immediately mounted Downes, who gave up his back. Nijem went for the rear naked choke again. Downes fought it off. Nijem looked for an Americana, Downes scrambled free. Nijem's basically having his way with him, even if he can't get the finish. He's been riding Downes' back for most of the round. Downes is surviving, but it's one-sided, 10-9.

Round 3: Nijem faked a takedown and fired off some offense that landed. Downes circled away but Nijem followed him for another takedown. The round then settles into the same thing that's come before it. Nijem in top position looking for a finish but Downes resisting. Another rear naked choke try from Nijem. With this one, he had the body triangle in and still couldn't finish. It's going the distance, and it's going to be Nijem's 10-9. Could easily be a 10-8 as well.

Winner: Ramsey Nijem via unanimous decision (30-25, 30-26, 30-27)

Brandon Vera vs. Eliot Marshall

Round 1: Vera attacking the legs and body early with kicks. Vera then jumps into a flying knee. They clinch against the cage until Vera pushes off and they re-set in the middle. Marshall flurries with a combo, and Vera answers with a right cross before another clinch. It's a stalemate and the ref breaks them up with a minute left. Vera still attacking the legs with low kicks. Marshall tries a high kick near the final horn that misses. Vera takes a slow round 10-9.

Round 2: Pace picks up to start the second. Vera just misses on a head kick and Marshall goes low, looking for the takedown. Marshall grinds him into the fence. The two jockey for position until Vera takes him down with three minutes left. Vera to half-guard, and drops elbows from the position. Marshall gets back to his feet and Vera fires off a hard knee from the clinch. They move back to the center with 20 seconds left. Marshall connects with a left hook near the close. It's Vera's 10-9.

Round 3: Marshall staggers Vera early with a right hand. Marshall then drops him with a right. Vera is in trouble as Marshall throws blows from the top. Vera covers up and gets to his feet. Marshall lands another hard left hand before Vera can initiate a clinch and give himself recovery time. Vera is just holding him against the cage, and it takes Marshall about a minute to free himself. Marshall gets the takedown with 2:00 left. He gets Vera's back. He's throwing punches from the back. He looks for an arm bar with a beautiful transition. Vera gamely defends. Marshall tries to pull him into a triangle but Vera escapes and throws punches from the top. It's Marshall's round 10-9.

Winner: Brandon Vera via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)






 

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Source: http://mmafighting.com/2011/10/29/ufc-137-undercard-live-blog-vera-vs-marshall-downes-vs-nijem/

Richard Gasquet Rickie Fowler Rio Ferdinand Robert Allenby Roberto Ayala