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The Ultimate Fighting Championship today announced its star-studded line up for the launch of the UFC Fan Expo, a two-day fan exposition of Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) activities scheduled for Friday, July 10 and leading right up to the start of the historic fights on Saturday, July 11 inside Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Included in the UFC Fan Expo will be meet and greets with legendary UFC and WEC fighters, MMA demonstrations, fan-inspired special events, training and development sessions as well as other combat related opportunities and entertainment.

All the UFC Fan Expo activities will be planned in conjunction with UFC 100, including the weigh-in event on Friday, July 10 that is free and open to the public.

Scheduled to appear are:

Lyoto “The Dragon” Machida
Royce Gracie
Randy “The Natural” Couture
Chuck “The Iceman” Liddell
“Sugar” Rashad Evans
Forrest Griffin
Quinton “Rampage” Jackson
Kenny “Ken-Flo” Florian
Steve “The Robot” Cantwell
Shane “The Engineer” Carwin
Marcus “The Irish Hand Grenade” Davis
Tyson Griffin
Clay “The Carpenter” Guida
Dustin “McLovin’” Hazelett
Keith “The Dean of Mean” Jardine
Anthony “Rumble” Johnson
Martin “The Hitman” Kampmann
Josh “Kos” Koscheck
Joe “J-Lau” Lauzon
Junie “The Lunatic” Browning
Nate “The Great” Marquardt
Gray “The Bully” Maynard
Karo “The Heat” Parisyan
Diego “Nightmare” Sanchez
Sean “The Muscle Shark” Sherk
Mike “Quick” Swick
Nate Diaz
Efrain Escudero
Renzo Gracie
Gary “Big Daddy” Goodridge
“The Texas Crazy Horse” Heath Herring
Wanderlei “The Axe Murderer” Silva
Mauricio “Shogun” Rua

The big guns of the WEC will also be on hand to sign autographs, with current champions Miguel Torres and Mike Brown sharing the convention center floor with Urijah Faber, Jens Pulver, Brian Bowles, Joseph Benavidez, Donald Cerrone, Leonard Garcia, Ben Henderson, and Alex Karalexis.

Tickets for the UFC Fan Expo can be bought exclusively at www.ufcfanexpo.com. Customers that purchase Expo tickets in advance will receive $10 off the two-day pass.

Source: http://mmamania.com/2009/06/24/ufc-stacks-the-2009-fan-expo-with-more-than-30-of-its-top-fighters



Would be awesome to be able to participate in this expo and later on watch the UFC 100 live. So much cool things at the same time :)

Posted by Rob Thursday, June 25, 2009 0 Comments

This is an little teaser from Spike TV on the upcoming TUF 10, which will include Kimbo Slice.

The show will be aired around Sept. 16 on Spike TV.

Posted by Rob Tuesday, June 23, 2009 0 Comments

Sherdog.com reports from Las Vegas with live play-by-play of the “Ultimate Fighter” season nine finale, which is headlined by Clay Guida vs. Diego Sanchez.

In addition to live play-by-play and forum discussion, open up another browser window for Jake Rossen's live UFC blog on Sherdog.

Click here for quick results.


Hit F5 on your keyboard to refresh often, as play-by-play is updated in real time.

Jason Dent vs. Cameron Dollar
Round 1
They touch gloves. Dent paws a left jab. Dollar lands an overhand right. Dent lands a decent leg kick. Hard right to body from Dollar. The crowd is heavily behind Dollar. Dollar lands a hard right uppercut and scores a takedown when he blocks a Dent knee. They're up. Another hard right to dent's body. Dollar is starting to be more aggressive. Nice straight left to the face from dollar. A right hand begins a flurry from Dollar as Dent covers up. A left to the body from Dent and Dollar shoots in. Dent sprawls but locks up an anaconda choke. It's deep. Dollar is fighting it. Dent rolls over and sinks it deeper. Dollar is struggling to get out. Dollar has no choice but to tap out. The official time is 4:46 of the first.

Nick Osipczak vs. Frank Lester
Round 1
The fight starts with a right leg kick by Lester. Lester misses a ”Superman” punch. Osipczak lands a straight right and Lester slips down onto his back. Osipczak quickly goes to side control. Lester scrambles and pulls guard. Lester scrambles again and gets back up, but Osipczak pins him along the fence. Lester reverses control and now has Osipczak pinned against the cage. Referee Kim Winslow restarts them. They plug away and Osipczak tags him with a right hand. Lester gets his back and tries to Suplex, but Osipczak's balance is strong. They separate and go toe-to-toe. Osipczak hurts Lester with a straight right and lands a glancing right knee as the American shoots. Osipczak quickly seizes his back and locks in a rear-naked choke. Perfect execution without the hooks, causing Lester to tap at 3:40 of round one.

Mike Ciesnolevicz vs. Tomasz Drwal
Round 1
Drwal scores a takedown and is in Ciesnolevicz's half guard. Very little action. Ciesnolevicz scrambles up. They clinch. Drwal pressed him against the fence. Drwal scores another takedown and again is in Ciesnolevicz's half guard. Ciesnolevicz scrambled up again and eats a left hook from Drwal. Drwal scores another takedown but can't keep the American down. Drwal has his opponent pressed against the cage again. They separate. Hard straight left from Drwal. Drwal flurries and hurts Ciesnolevicz. Drwal chases him down and lands a perfect knee to Ciesnolevicz's face, dropping him onto his back. Drwal unloads onto his woody foe. Referee Herb Dean steps in at 4:48 of the opening frame.

Brad Blackburn vs. Edgar Garcia
Round 1
Blackburn rocks Garcia with a right cross immediately. Garcia shakes it off. Blackburn misses a punch and Garcia ducks under. Blackburn tries a standing guillotine, but Garcia lifts him up and slams him hard onto his shoulders. Blackburn gets back up and rocks Garcia again with a right. Nice short left hook by Garcia finds its target. The pace slows a bit but Blackburn lands two good leg kicks. They both land hard left hooks at the same time and smile. Garcia lands three stiff left jabs. Blackburn lands another decent left leg kick. And another. Garcia lands a solid right hand and knee on Blackburn in a frenzy at bell. The round ends and Blackburn is limping. Replays show the knee was to the groin. 10-9 Garcia.

Round 2
Blackburn was given no time to recover from the groin shot. Both guys are pawing out jabs. Slow pace. Hard left jab by Blackburn smacks the face of Garcia. Hard right leg kick by Blackburn. Garcia is very tentative. An errant kick grazes Garcia's groin. He's OK. Blackburn is now moving around well, giving Garcia all sorts of angles. The crowd is now getting a bit restless. Garcia finally opens up with a right cross, right-leg kick combo. Nice short left hook lands for Blackburn very late. The second is an easy round for Blackburn, 10-9.

Round 3
They hug at start of the third. A very tentative round to start. A minute in and nothing has landed. Both guys are pawing out jabs. Hard short left hook by Garcia. Garcia misses a huge left and then another. Nice right hand by Blackburn follows a leg kick. Garcia now has a small trickle of blood on the right side of his hairline. Blackburn lands a left kick to the body followed by a right-low kick and a left hook. A right hook lands for Garcia. 20 seconds left and it's anybody's fight. Blackburn scores a single-leg takedown, but Garcia quickly scrambles back to his feet. A short left hook drops Blackburn with five seconds left. It might have won him the round. 10-9 Garcia.

Official scores:
Adalaide Byrd: 29-28 Garcia
Patricia Morse Jarman: 29-28 Blackburn
Tony Weeks: 29-28 Blackburn

The crowd hates the verdict. The boos are intense. Blackburn said he hurt his shoulder early in the fight.

Melvin Guillard vs. Gleison Tibau
Round 1
Guillard just misses a right and a left. He misses again. Tibau lands a stiff-straight left onto Guillard's chest and then pins him against the fence. Tibau scores a single leg from there, but Guillard gets right back up. They separate. Guillard is very active on his feet, but he can't land anything clean. Guillard lands a hard-leg kick but Tibau catches it and takes him down. Guillard scrambles back up, but Tibau scoop-slams him back down. Guillard scrambles back to his feet. Guillard misses a whizzer at the horn. 10-9 Tibau.

Round 2
A right hand by Guillard lands early, but Tibau charges his foe into the fence. Guillard defends the takedown well. Guillard stuffs another single leg. They separate. A right leg kick by Guillard connects. Tibau again presses Guillard against the fence. Guillard misses another whizzer and stumbles onto his back, but he scrambles back up. Good right head kick, right cross by Guillard. Tibau shakes it off. A stiff right jab by Tibau followed by a double-leg takedown late. Tibau is in half guard at the horn. 10-9 Guillard.

Round 3
A hard “Superman” punch by Guillard lands immediately. Tibau scores a takedown and is in Guillard's half guard. Tibau scoots to full mount. Guillard pulls back to half guard. Back to full mount for Tibau. Some decent strikes by Tibau follow a missed kimura. Guillard pulls back to half guard. Very little action. Guillard scrambles up to his feet. Guillard missed a double leg and is then pinned back against the fence. Tibau scores another takedown. Tibau lands some decent elbows from within half guard. 10-9 Tibau.

Guillard takes a split decision. The scores are not announced.

In addition to live play-by-play and forum discussion, open up another browser window for Jake Rossen's live UFC blog on Sherdog.

Joe Stevenson vs. Nate Diaz
Round 1
Diaz immediately closes on Stevenson, looking to throw hands, but Stevenson drops levels and gets a single-leg takedown. Diaz immediately goes for a guillotine, and switches to a “Cromado”-style figure-four grip, but Stevenson escapes, and stands above Diaz’s open guard. Stevenson weakly punches his way to half guard. Diaz rolls to quarters position, but Stevenson controls his body, and stays on top. Stevenson gets a back crucifix on Diaz, and tries to figure four his arm on the other side. Diaz gets up to his feet, and tries to pull his arms free, but Stevenson hooks his far leg, and rolls into a modified cradle position that ties up Diaz awkwardly. As Diaz escapes and rolls to top position, Stevenson locks up a deep guillotine that forces Diaz into defensive action. Diaz gamely rolls and momentarily gives up mount, but escapes and gets back to guard with Stevenson on top of him. Fantastic technical grappling so far. Stevenson scores another takedown, and works to pass to half, but Diaz bucks and scrambles back to his feet. Stevenson gets a front headlock and looks for knees, and Diaz drops to a knee so Stevenson can’t knee him in the head as the round ends.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson
Loretta Hunt scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson

Round 2
Southpaw Diaz stalks Stevenson with his hands open, taunting him. Stevenson shoots again, as Diaz locks on another guillotine, and rolls to a partial mount. Stevenson has arms under Diaz’s legs and rolls back to top position, but Diaz continues to work for the guillotine. Stevenson gets to his feet, and controls Diaz with another front headlock, and again Diaz drops to a knee to limit Stevenson’s attack, forcing him to knee to the body. Stevenson gets a leg, and rolls to finish the takedown. Diaz prevents Stevenson from passing to side control. Diaz’s gets his legs in a triangle position, but Stevenson quickly postures up and breaks his legs apart. Diaz gets back to his feet, and Stevenson pushes him against the fence. Stevenson pushes for a single leg, while Diaz looks both for a guillotine, and a far side kimura to defend. Stevenson hits a single leg, and as Diaz attempts to hit a switch, Stevenson sits back on him and takes top position. As Stevenson chips away, Diaz again uses his long legs to attempt a triangle, but Stevenson again postures out. Diaz gets up, and Stevenson fights for a single as the horn sounds.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson
Loretta Hunt scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson

Round 3
Diaz comes out and shakes his head as Stevenson attempts to touch gloves with him. Stevenson again gets position for a single, and as he attempts to roll to finish it, Diaz uses control on his farside arm to prevent finishing the takedown. Stevenson rolls again, and the same sequence unfolds. Diaz gets back to his feet, and as Stevenson looks to get rear waist control, Diaz hits a pretty harai goshi throw and Diaz stands over Stevenson, raking him with long punches, and Stevenson scrambles to his knees. Diaz goes for an arm-in guillotine which Stevenson escapes, and Diaz quickly looks to take his back and go for a rear-naked choke, which again, “Joe Daddy” escapes. After the wild scramble, Stevenson controls Diaz’s upper body, and delivers more knees to the body. Stevenson fights for a single-leg takedown, and Diaz again looks to figure four his right arm. They disengage with 50 seconds to go. Diaz punches to Stevenson fruitlessly, and as Stevenson clinches up, Diaz nearly hits an uchimata. As Diaz pumps his hands, Stevenson feebly looks for a trio of takedowns, as Diaz thwarts him, and punches his head until the bout ends.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Diaz (29-28 Stevenson)
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Stevenson (30-27 Stevenson)
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Stevenson (30-27 Stevenson)

All three judges score the bout 29-28 for Joe Stevenson, who takes the win via unanimous decision.

Ross Pearson vs. Andre Winner
Round 1
The two former training partners touch gloves and smile to start the bout. Winner shoots a jab to the body but misses. Pearson throws a four-punch combo, just landing a chipping right hook. The pair trade inside low kicks. Pearson rushes with another punch flurry, and Winner blocks it. Winner ducks under and fights for underhooks, pushing Pearson into the fence. Both are battling for a takedown, each with over-unders. Winner pushing hard for two underhooks, and referee Herb Dean lets the two continue to pummel. Winner swims to the Thai plumb, but lets it go as Pearson changes levels and goes for a double-leg takedown. Winner lands a sharp right elbow, and a knee to the body, and pushes Pearson’s back to the fence. Each look for a foot sweep, and Winner throws an errant knee to the body that appears to catch Pearson low, as Herb Dean calls for a break to allow Pearson to recover. After resuming the bout, the pair trade uppercuts inside in a very give-and-take round. Winner throws some soft knees in close, as the two continue to pummel inside. Winner lands a flurry of knees and punches as the round ends.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-10
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Winner
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Pearson

Round 2
Pearson lands an outside leg kick, and then puts one inside before landing a one-two combination that forces Winner back. Winner ties Pearson up again, and the two head toward the fence to resume their in-fighting battle. As they work hard inside, Pearson drops for a single-leg takedown and pushes Winner across the cage. Winner defends, and pounds to Pearson’s body as he looks for double underhooks. Both continue to pummel hard, as Winner lands sporadic, glancing knees to the body. Pearson launches a knee to the body that misses, but lands a nice uppercut. Winner lands a glancing right elbow. Winner lands a short left elbow as the pair break off the cage. A head kick by Pearson is blocked by Winner. Pearson lands a nice counter right hook as Winner comes forward. The pair tie up to the fence again. Pearson turns Winner and puts his back to the fence. Pearson chops with a glancing right knee to the body. Winner looks to impress the judges with a flurry of punches, putting a right hook to the body of Pearson as the round ends.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-10
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Pearson
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-10

Round 3
The two throw hands, but only Winner lands flush, with a left hook. Pearson bulls Winner to the cage, and the two continue their ongoing inside battle for position. Winner chips away right hands and right knees to the body as Pearson pushes into him. Pearson lands a short uppercut, and lands a knee to the body. The two trade hooks in the middle of the cage, but Pearson lands an extra right hook that forces Winner to push him into the fence. Pearson lands hooks to the body and a nice uppercut, and Winner punches back and pushes him back into the fence. Pearson lands a leg kick, and Winner lands a glancing right hand. Pearson drops and looks for a single leg takedown, but Winner is able to land on his knees, and get back to his feet. Pearson lands an uppercut, and a short chopping right in close, and Winner lands two uppercuts. With 40 seconds to go, the pair trade punches in the center of the cage, with Pearson landing the cleaner punches of the exchange. Winner pushes him to the fence, and the pair trade punches inside. Pearson lands a sharp knee right before the horn. As the fight ends, a tired Winner drops to his knees, while Pearson leaps onto the cage.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Pearson (30-29 Pearson)
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Pearson (29-28 Pearson)
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Pearson (30-28 Pearson)

All three judges score the bout 29-28 for the unanimous victor, and “The Ultimate Fighter 9” lightweight winner, Ross Pearson.

Chris Lytle vs. Kevin Burns
Round 1
The pair begin by winging punches, with nothing landing. Lytle throws an overhand right that misses, but ducks a wild hook from Burns, who slips after throwing it. Lytle lands an awkward overhand right counter as Burns lunges in. Lytle jumps in with a pair of hooks that land on Burns. Burns lands a nice leg kick, and a jab. A winging left hook by Lytle is blocked, and Burns lands a right hook – the only clean punch thus far. Lytle continues rushing Burns with winging punches, but doesn’t land. Lytle puts a sharp hook on Burns’ body. Burns kicks to the body as Lytle loads a right hand. Lytle’s overhand right continues to be blocked. Burns lands a knee as Lytle bends over to fire another overhand. A left inside low kick from Burns catches Lytle on the cup, and Herb Dean calls for a brief respite. A short Burns hook catches Lytle jumping in. Lytle is rocked by another short round hand jumping in on Burns, and Burns puts another right hand on him that puts him on the mat. Burns flurries all over Lytle, who fights his way off his knees, and goes for a double-leg takedown. Burns lands a right elbow that hurts Lytle, and continues to smash Lytle with hooks, uppercuts and knees over the last 10 seconds as a dazed Lytle tries to hang on. Fortunately for the former firefighter, the round ends.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Burns
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Burns
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Burns

Round 2
Exchanging punches, Lytle lands a big right hook that puts Burns on his heels. The two flurry wildly, and Burns gets Lytle off of him with a sharp knee to the body. Lytle continues to walk Burns down, and puts two right hook on Burns’ body. Burns shoots in for a takedown, Lytle locks up a guillotine, but Burns passes to the far side to escape. Lytle scrambles back to his feet. Another Lytle right hook to the body hurts Burns. Lytle goes to the well once more with two more right hooks to the body two minutes into the round. Burns appears to be slowing. Lytle lands three more right hooks to the body over the next minute, and though Burns lands a glancing knee, it doesn’t deter Lytle from putting another right hook to his gut. Another inside leg kick from Burns lands on the cup, but Lytle takes only a brief moment to recover before Herb Dean restarts the bout. The two trade kicks to the body. A wide right hand by Lytle misses, and his left hand glances off of a retreating Kevin Burns. Lytle lands two more right hands to the body on a fading Burns. As the pair tie up inside, they miss their respective volleys of punches, but Burns lands another inadvertent shot to the groin with a knee. Lytle again only takes a moment to recover, and Herb Dean opts not to penalize Burns. Burns lands a pair of kicks as the round ends.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Lytle
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Lytle
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Lytle

Round 3
Lytle catches a lazy kick from Burns, and hits him right an overhand right. A gash over Burns’ left eye now streams blood down his face. Burns lands a knee to the body that stops Lytle. Lytle walking Burns down, trying to put right hands on the wound. Lytle lands a right hook to the body, and Burns responds with one of his own. A “Superman” punch from Burns misses. Lytle lands a two-punch combination. The left ribs of Burns catch another pop from Lytle’s right hand. A wild overhand right from Lytle stumbles Burns, despite being partially blocked. Burns continues to circle on the outside of the Octagon as Lytle walks him down. Lytle lands a left straight, right hook to the body, left hook combo, and stops Burns’ movement. Another overhand right from Lytle lands, as he looks to finish a game but exhausted Burns with a minute left. A pair of kicks from Burns are blocked. Lytle lands yet another right hook to Burns’ battered body. With 10 seconds to go, the pair wildly wing at one another, neither landing effectively. As the horn goes, they embrace.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Lytle (29-28 Lytle)
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Lytle (29-28 Lytle)
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Lytle (29-28 Lytle)

All three judges score the bout 29-28 for the unanimous winner, Chris Lytle.

Damarques Johnson vs. James Wilks
Round 1
Wilks lands a left-right cross combo that rock Johnson early, and goes for knees as Johnson pushes him to the fence. Wilks lands another two-punch combination, grabs the clinch and attacks with knees again. Johnson tries him up inside. Wilks goes for an uchimata, and when Johnson blocks, he picks the ankle and gets the takedown. Wilks stands above Johnson punching down, and drops back for a heel hook, which Johnson rolls out of, assuming top control. Johnson lands a hard elbow, and Wilks goes for another heel hook. As Johnson punches behind him, Wilks rolls and has an awkward calf slicer on Johnson’s far leg. Johnson escapes, and gets back into Wilks’ guard. Johnson defense an omoplata, but Wilks locks up a triangle choke. As Johnson pulls out, Wilks transitions to an omoplata, and forces to quarters position. Johnson gets up, and Wilks controls his waist, tripping him down to the mat again. Johnson stays turtled, and Wilks looks to take the back. Wilks gets his hooks in, and looks to finish a rear-naked choke with a gable grip, but Johnson shoves his arm off. Wilks continues to fight for the choke. After getting his arm under Johnson’s chin, Wilks figure fours his arms and squeezes for the finish, as Johnson taps out at 4:54 of the first round. A multi-faceted domination by James Wilks, “The Ultimate Fighter 9” welterweight winner.

Diego Sanchez vs. Clay Guida
Round 1
Sanchez races out and takes the center, and the pair throw dozens of frantic punches. Guida is being raked repeatedly by Sanchez, who continues to fire rights and lefts and knees. Insane action for the first 30 seconds. Guida’s mouthguard has come out in the fracas. Sanchez lunges at Guida with another knee. Only a minute has elapsed thus far, as Sanchez continues to flurry with crosses and uppercuts. Guida finally gets off the fence, and scores a double-leg takedown into Sanchez’s full guard. Sanchez working a high guard, as he controls Guida’s head. Guida tries to leap forward with elbows, with little contact. Sanchez scoots to the cage, but Guida turns him off the fence. Sanchez works rubber guard, and then bucks Guida off of him and scrambles back to his feet. After two minutes of action, Josh Rosenthal finally calls for a break, and gets Guida’s mouthpiece rinsed and put back in. Guida’s nose is bloodied. A crisp, clean head kick absolutely smashes Guida and drops him flat to his back, but Guida shows remarkable recovery, and gets back up. Sanchez puts Guida back on the fence, and unloads with uppercuts and hooks to the head and body. A desperate Guida goes for a takedown, but Sanchez defends, and pushes him into the fence. Sanchez goes for a single-leg of his own. Guida defends, but Sanchez gets rear waist control and slams him to the mat. With 30 seconds left in a dominant round, Sanchez begins to work from Guida’s half guard. Sanchez lands an elbow, and Guida scrambles to his feet. Sanchez lands a right hook as the frenetic round expires.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-8 Sanchez
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Sanchez
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Sanchez

Round 2
Sanchez looks for another head kick, which Guida avoids this time. Sanchez rushes Guida with a four-punch combo, but doesn’t land. Guida shoots a low takedown, and puts Sanchez on the mat. The TUF 1 winner throwing elbows from his back, with one butterfly hook. Guida lands an elbow. Sanchez controlling Guida’s posture with butterfly hooks, but Guida stays on top. Sanchez turns his hips, and digs for a kimura. Guida pulls his arm out, and flurries on Sanchez. Sanchez overhooks Guida’s arms and looks to stagnate his foe, as the crowd chants “Guida, Guida, Guida.” Sanchez launches a salvo of elbows from his back, the cleanest strikes on the ground thus far. Sanchez tries to establish rubber guard, but is unable to land anything meaningful. Sanchez continues to launch elbows at Guida’s head, which is now bleeding from the storm of elbows. Sanchez rotates for an armbar, which Guida slips out of. Sanchez’s face and chest are now bloody from Guida’s head. Round expires.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-9 Sanchez
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Sanchez
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-9 Guida

Round 3
Guida pushes forward with punches and kicks, but can’t close the distance. Sanchez wades in with a right hook, but slips to his knees. Another left head kick from Sanchez, and Guida avoids again. Sanchez lands an uppercut in an exchange, the most significant punch of the most conservative round thus far. Each miss a right cross. Guida leaps in with a glancing hook, but Sanchez circles away. A slapping overhand right from Guida lands, and as Sanchez throws his hands, Guida lands a right hook. Another “Guida, Guida, Guida” chant comes from the crowd. Guida shoots lazily, and Sanchez looks to turn the corner and take his back. Sanchez digs his forearm under Guida’s chin, but loses his position. Sanchez continues to choke Guida, but ineffectively, as Guida escapes and assumes top control. Sanchez works for a kimura from his back with a minute to go in the bout. With 10 seconds to go, Sanchez rotates for an armbar, but Guida pulls his arm out and flurries wildly, mostly missing, as the bout expires.

Jordan Breen scores the round: 10-10 (30-27 Sanchez)
TJ De Santis scores the round: 10-9 Guida (29-28 Sanchez)
Loretta Hunt scores the round 10-10 (29-29 Draw)

Judge Patricia Morse Jarman turns in a 29-28 scorecard for Guida. However, judge Glenn Trowbridge scores the bout 29-27, and Nelson Hamilton scores the bout 29-28 for the winner by split decision, Diego Sanchez.

Source: http://sherdog.com/news/news/ufc-live-play-by-play-18077

Joe Daddy Stevenson didn't surprise me so much, but I think that Nate Diaz could have handled it better.

When I was watching the first episode of TUF 9, I thought that Ross could become an interesting fighter. The problem is that he doesn't seem to be able to finish the fight, but that maybe will change in the future.

Later on it was a brawl event...

James Wilks impressed me with he's control over Johnson, because i predicted that Johnson would control James and win the fight. Really impressive.

Then for the main event. Diego just ran Clay over in the beginning, like a train... no stop. Clay recovered well, but was totally smashed up and blood everywhere. In the ground game, Clay had control over Diego, but as soon as the stood up it was like slugfest. Good fight overall.

Posted by Rob Monday, June 22, 2009 0 Comments




Gago Drago vs. Yuya Yamamoto*
Albert Kraus vs. Giorgio Petrosyan*
Artur Kyshenko vs. Andy Souwer*
Nieky Holtzken vs. Buakaw Por. Pramuk*
MASATO vs. Tatsuya Kawajiri
Hinata vs. Dhabar Askerov
Yoshihiro Sato vs. Joeri Mes+
Yasuhiro Kido vs. Leroy Kaestner+
Go Yokoyama vs. Jae Gil Noh
Kazuhisa Watanabe vs. Atsushi Yamamoto
Jae Hee Cheon vs. Norifumi "KID" Yamamoto
* - Tournament bouts
+ - Reserve bouts


Some great matchups once again from the K-1 Max. "KID"Yamamoto makes a quick comeback after the decision loss to Joe Warren (in MMA). My personal new favourite Arthur Kyshenko gets another top tier opponent in Andy Souwer hopefully he will win this fight and advance to the finals.
Nieky Holtzken and Buakaw Por. Pramuk will battle it out for the last spot in the finale. Other notables on this card are "The Contender: Asia"-alumni Dzabar Askerov, Yoshihiro Sato, Albert Kraus and Giorgio Petrosyan plus another MMA vs K-1 fight in Tatsuya Kawajiri vs MASATO. This event is sure to bring fireworks!

Posted by Stefan Friday, June 19, 2009 0 Comments


After weeks of grueling training, tense cohabitation with the opposition, and explosive elimination bouts, “The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom™” live finale is set, with Team UK teammates Andre Winner and Ross Pearson battling for the lightweight (155lb) crown, and Team US competitor DaMarques Johnson squaring off against Team UK’s James Wilks in the welterweight division (170 lbs). Emanating from The Pearl at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, on Saturday, June 20 at 9:00 PM ET, the finalists will be competing for a six-figure contract with the preeminent mixed martial arts organization in the world, The Ultimate Fighting Championship.

The televised fight card will also feature three “The Ultimate Fighter” champions in action, headlined by Season 1 winner Diego Sanchez facing Clay Guida in what promises to be an action packed battle between top lightweight contenders. The evening’s co-feature pits Season 2 winner of “The Ultimate Fighter” Joe “Daddy” Stevenson against Season 5 victor Nate Diaz in lightweight action. The televised card also features Season 4 finalist Chris Lytle against Kevin Burns in the welterweight division.

The undercard includes the following bouts:

Cameron Dollar vs. Jason Dent
Frank Lester vs. Nick Osipczak
Mike Ciesnolevicz vs. Thomas Drwal
Edgar Garcia vs. Brad Blackburn
Gleison Tibau vs. Melvin Guillard

About The Finalists:

LIGHTWEIGHTS

ROSS PEARSON – TEAM UK
Age: 24
MMA record: 9-3
Fighting out of: Sunderland, England
Gym: Sunderland Jiu-Jitsu and MMA Club, Sunderland

Ross Pearson is the sort of guy who prefers to do his talking with his fists and feet. A self-proclaimed ‘quiet lad’, Pearson makes one hell of a noise inside the cage. A standout of the Sunderland Jiu-Jitsu and MMA Club, Pearson is a 9-3 lightweight with boundless potential.

A lifelong fan of the UFC, Pearson has always enjoyed the fighting arts. He previously dabbled in taekwondo, judo and boxing. Despite enrolling at college to become a bricklayer, Pearson always believed his fighting dreams would one day come to fruition.

Pearson now appears on the way to fulfilling those dreams. Since turning pro in December 2004, ‘The Real Deal’ has lived up to both his name and expectations. Finishing most of his fights within the first round, Pearson fights at a frantic and unrelenting pace that most fighters struggle to keep up with. Always learning and always improving, the 24-year-old from the North-East appears destined for big things.

Road To The Finals:
Episode 7 – Defeated Richie Whitson via armbar
Episode 12 – Defeated Jason Dent via decision

ANDRE WINNER – TEAM UK
Age: 26
MMA record: 9-2-1
Fighting out of: Nottingham, England
Gym: Rough House, Nottingham

A competitive sportsman who had excelled in soccer and athletics at school, Winner decided to combine his natural athleticism with his love of combat sports and walked into the Rough House gym in Nottingham, England several years ago. Seeing a bag and mitts session alongside emerging UFC superstar Dan ‘the Outlaw’ Hardy convinced winner that, finally, he had found the sport he was destined to dominate. A confident striker who believes he will one day challenge for World Title honors, Winner originally tried out for Season 8 of “The Ultimate Fighter,” but did not make the cut. He returned to audition for TUF 9 a vastly more rounded fighter with some of the most razor sharp ground and pound skills of any UK fighter.

Road To The Finals:
Episode 5 – Defeated Santino DeFranco via TKO
Episode 11 – Defeated Cameron Dollar via triangle choke

WELTERWEIGHTS

DAMARQUES JOHNSON – TEAM US
Age: 26
Hometown: Salt Lake City, UT
Trains: Salt Lake City, UT with Elite Performance
MMA record: 13-6

Born and raised in Utah, DaMarques Johnson shied away from high school sports during his years at Kearns High School. It wasn’t until 2001, after he enlisted in the army, that he saw his athletic potential. After easily defeating several fellow soldiers during a sparring session, he was defeated by a much smaller foe. It was that loss that peaked Johnson’s interest in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. He immediately picked up the sport and after serving eight years active duty, including a stint monitoring the illegal drug trade in Colombia, Johnson returned to Utah and began training full-time in mixed martial arts.

A member of Elite Performance with UFC veteran Jeremy Horn, the 26-year old Johnson owns a 13-6 mixed martial arts record.

Road To The Finals:
Episode 5 – Defeated Dean Amasinger via triangle choke
Episode 10 – Defeated Nick Osipczak via decision

JAMES WILKS – TEAM UK
Age: 30
MMA record: 5-2
Division: Welterweight
Fighting out of: Orange County, California, USA
Gym: Orange County Jiu-Jitsu

Nobody was more surprised at the talent level in Team UK than California-based Brit James Wilks. A student of Erik Paulsen’s Orange County Jiu-Jitsu gym, Wilks fled to the United States in 2000 after graduating from Bournemouth University with a degree in business and management. Originally looking to pursue self-defence training for a mere six months, Wilks fell in love with life in The O.C and the rest is now history.

Wilks has since been transformed into a 5-2 mixed martial arts and a thorough student of Brazilian jiu-jitsu for the past nine years. Though fiercely proud of his English heritage, this is one competitor who has been created and molded by his stint in the USA. A unique concoction of British pride and American techniques, Wilks boasts a skill set that was originally the talk of all his Team UK counterparts.

However, upon spending time with his teammates and discovering the talent bar was set higher than even he expected, Wilks came to the realization that, despite his love of all things American, his choice to represent his home nation was the right one.

Source: http://www.mmaweekly.com/absolutenm/templates/dailynews.asp?articleid=8997&zoneid=3

Posted by Hoffa Thursday, June 18, 2009 0 Comments


Mirko Cro Cop’s exodus from the UFC is complete.

The fearsome striker will face off with Siala “Mighty Mo” Siliga at DREAM 10 on July 20, MMAWeekly.com has learned from a source close to the fight. Josh Gross at SI.com was the first to report the news.

Cro Cop is five days removed from an indecisive TKO victory over Mustapha Al-Turk at UFC 99 that ended shortly after an inadvertent eye poke caused the British fighter to wilt. That night, UFC president Dana White confirmed to Yahoo! Sports that Cro Cop had walked away from a two-fight extension with the promotion for a three-fight contract with Dream.

Several subsequent reports gave conflicting information citing Cro Cop’s departure. On Wednesday, Croatian website Index.hr ran a report that appeared to confirm White’s statements.

In the report, Cro Cop disputed the idea that his move to Dream was below the board and said the choice came down to timing.

“I have nothing to hide or to be ashamed of,” said Cro Cop. “The thing is very simple. I know the truth and Dana knows the truth — I had a one-fight deal with UFC and I fulfilled my contractual obligation. I said we’re going to sit down and talk after UFC 99.

“The problem is I’m 35 and I’m finally healthy. The UFC is offering me a fight six months from now. I said even before that I want to fight three more times this year. I don’t really care if it’s in the ring or inside the Octagon. I don’t see why I can’t fight in Japan for a few fights and then return to the UFC. That is also an option.”

Siliga, also a hard-striking kickboxer, last fought under MMA rules in December, where he lost to Semmy Schilt by triangle at K-1 Dynamite! on New Year’s Eve.

Source: http://www.mmaweekly.com/absolutenm/templates/dailynews.asp?articleid=8999&zoneid=4


Really good match up by Dream because there will be the classic match, the pure power puncher against the technician. Mighty Mo has for instance knocked out the former boxing heavyweight champ Fransoa Botha in a K1 match. Samoans is known for there toughnes and Mighty Mo is no exception. Remember when Mark Hunt and Cro Cop met in Pride, it was a totally crazy match. Really looking forward to this fight. Cro Cop has to perform much better than against Al Turk otherwise it will end like fights agains Michael McDonald and Kevin Randelman, in other words a KNOCK OUT.

Stay Fresh // Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa 0 Comments


THE CAST for season ten of The Ultimate Fighter has leaked - and SunSport can reveal who will pit their wits against Kimbo Slice.

With the ninth instalment of the show ending on Saturday at the TUF 9 Finale, mixed martial arts fans are already eager to find out which men will make up the roster for the next series.

We understand that the full list of the 16 heavyweights who will compete for a six-figure contract with the UFC will be:

KIMBO SLICE: The YouTube phenomenon and former Elite XC headliner will be the main attraction in the new season. UFC president Dana White has continually derided the 35-year-old, claiming "he would get killed in the UFC". It will be interesting to see if he is proved right.

ROY NELSON: Boasting a 13-4 MMA record, the 32-year-old is a former Elite XC fighter who is perhaps best known for being knocked out by Andrei Arlovski last October.

WES SIMS: Formerly on the UFC roster, the 29-year-old was cut after just one year in the promotion in 2004 after losing three successive fights to Frank Mir (twice) and Mike Kyle.

MARCUS JONES: Former NFL defensive end for Tampa Bay Buccaneers between 1996 and 2002. Occasional guest on the popular American radio show Bubba the Love Sponge. Trained in MMA for just over two years.

MATT MITRIONE: Another ex-NFL player, debuted as a rookie in 2002 for Minnesota Vikings. Very little MMA experience but trains with highly-regarded UFC heavyweight Jake O'Brien.

WES SHIVERS: NFL veteran and a late call-up to replace fellow pro-footballer Rex Richards. Very confident of winning the whole thing. Speaking last year, he bragged: "The only reason I have six fights now is because we have trouble finding opponents. One fight in particular, I had four opponents back out on me in a two-week period of time."

JIM YORK: Nicknamed "Big", York shares one thing in common with Kimbo - he too has beaten Britain's James Thompson. The 33-year-old New Zealander emerged victorious from their Sengoku 7 clash after KO'ing the Englishman in the opening round of their bout in March.

JUSTIN WREN: At 22 years old, The Viking is the youngest contestant in the new series. He has a 6-1 MMA record and trains with UFC star Travis Lutter's Brazilian Jiu Jitsu team.

MIKE WESSEL: The Ohio native has already fought in the UFC, losing to Antoni Hardonk via TKO at UFC 92 in the second round. However, it should be noted that Wessel only took that fight on a week's notice, and UFC president Dana White was impressed enough to offer him a four-fight deal and place on season ten of TUF for his efforts.

SCOTT JUNK: Another fighter with previous UFC experience. The 30-year-old lost via heel hook in the opening round of his UFC 72 bout against Hungarian Christian Wellisch in September 2007.

ZAK JENSEN: Boasts a 7-3 MMA record and is noted for his strong wrestling ability. Has suffered defeats to fellow TUF alumni Brad Imes and Mike Whitehead.

DARRILL SCHOONOVER: An impressive 10-0 MMA record sets the big Texan apart from the rest of the cast. The 23-year-old is an early favourite to win the series and UFC contract.

BRENDAN SCHAUB: Has fought in MMA for over two years but little is known about his ability. A 4-0 record suggests he has raw skills but his lack of experience could count against him.

JON MADSEN: Part of legendary UFC welterweight Matt Hughes' stable but only has one MMA fight to his name - a KO win over Cody Griffen earlier this month.

TOM BLACKLEDGE: British MMA enthusiasts may already be familiar with Blackledge - he fights out of the Wolfslair in Widnes. He will be hoping to repeat the success of teammate Michael Bisping by winning TUF, but his 8-6 record suggests the odds may be against him.

ABE WAGNER: Big Nebraskan holds a 6-2 professional MMA record and could be the surprise package of this season

Source: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/sport/ufc/2482103/Full-TUF-10-cast-is-revealed.html

Posted by Hoffa 0 Comments

48-year-old former Olympic Gold-medalist Ray Mercer made his MMA comeback after a dissapointing loss to Kimbo Slice and he is facing none other than the former UFC Heavyweight Champion Tim "The Maine-iac" Sylvia.
Click the link below to watch the fight, its a nice fight.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqK6yJaE4mY

Posted by Stefan Sunday, June 14, 2009 0 Comments

Yeah Its My Cool And I cant Take It Off.

When we arrived to the stadium I was surprised by all the drunk people in Lannxess Arena. It was like woodstock in the 70's. People where screaming and shouting like it was the judgment day in the Terminator movies. We met some swedish people inside and outside the arena.
Unfortunately I got caught up in the drinking process and after four buckets of beer my video review became very special... enjoy!


Main Card

Rich Franklin Vs. Wanderlei Silva
(Rich Franklin Wins by Unanimous Decision at 5:00 in the 3rd round)

Cheick Kongo Vs. Cain Velasquez
(Cain Velasquez Wins by Unanimous Decision at 5:00 in the 3rd round)

Mirko Cro Cop Vs. Mostapha Al Turk
(Mirko Cro Cop Wins by Technical Knock Out at 3:06 in the 1st round)

Mike Swick Vs. Ben Saunders
(Mike Swick Wins by Technical Knock Out at 3:47 in the 2nd round)

Spencer Fisher Vs. Caol Uno
(Spencer Fisher Wins by Unanimous Decision at 5:00 in the 3rd round)

Marcus Davis Vs. Dan Hardy
(Dan Hardy Wins by Split Decision at 5:00 in the 3rd round)

Stay Fresh

// Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa 2 Comments


We have been walking around in the city of Cologne for a while and we were sitting here and talking about the main card of UFC 99. This prediction should have been done like a week ago, but everything doesn't go as planned.

So now we are making ourselves ready to go to the LanXess Arena, for UFC 99, in Colonge Germany.

While you’re waiting for UFC 99 to air, you can check out this video.

Posted by Rob Saturday, June 13, 2009 1 Comments


Yeah we are back again!

The weather is great in Cologne but the German people have to stop smoke everywhere because smoking is nasty.
I saw a mother who was pregnant and she was smoking.... come on that’s wrong!
And tonight it’s UFC 99 and I cheering for Silva, Kongo, Hardy, Uno, Filopovic (Cro Cop) and Swick

Stay Fresh

//Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa 0 Comments

During dinner at the restaurants Farmers in central Cologne, we sat down and discussed the future of MMA in Germany and Europe. We really look forward to this event and many of the fights looks on paper equali matched and entertaining.



Stay Fresh

// Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa Friday, June 12, 2009 3 Comments

It's been like 2hours trip and we have taken a cab to our hotel here in Colonge.

People were already talking about this event on the airport in Sweden. When I was standing in the queue for boarding, I saw one guy wearing an UFC t-shirt.

So I really how the Nordic people that follows MMA and also are involved in MMA, takes the opportunity to go and see UFC 99, in Germany.

Anyway, here's some pictures :)









Then we also made a little video clip

Posted by Rob 0 Comments

UFC Events are going to the UFC 99 in Colonge, Germany.
We begin by offering a small clip from our "Octagon," where our own Jimmy James Hoffa (Mike Goldberg) is "inside the Octagon".

We will continue to offer video clips and photos from UFC 99.

Stay fresh for more updates

// Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa 0 Comments


Unfortunately, our blog has been marked as potential spam blog.
We have already requested a review to unlock it.

Hopefully the Blogger-team will review this page soon and that first page will be removed.

Sorry for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Posted by Admin Wednesday, June 10, 2009 0 Comments

After weeks of speculation, the news is finally official – international superstar Mirko Cro Cop is returning to the UFC. One of the most feared strikers in MMA history, the 34-year old resident of Zagreb, Croatia will be taking on England’s Mostapha Al-Turk in main card action on June 13th’s UFC 99 card at the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany.

The 2006 PRIDE Open Weight Grand Prix champion, Cro Cop (24-6-2) holds wins over Wanderlei Silva, Josh Barnett, Hidehiko Yoshida, Mark Coleman, Kevin Randleman, Kazushi Sakuraba, and Heath Herring. And though he only went 1-2 in his first UFC stint in 2007, he is unbeaten in three straight bouts since then and is looking forward to making a run for the UFC crown his second time around.

Source: http://uk.ufc.com/index.cfm?fa=news.detail&gid=20176


Lets Get It On

I loved Crocop back in the Pride FC days, but after his poor performance agains Gabriel Gonzaga (UFC 70), Cheick Kongo (UFC 75) and Alistair Overeem (Dream 6) I thought I never would se him in the UFC again. Will the man with the hardest left high kick in MMA rise again? I really hope so because Im gonna se him live in Köln.

Stay Fresh // Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa Tuesday, June 2, 2009 0 Comments


The 2005 Pride FC Middleweight Grand Prix winner, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, earlier this week did indeed sign a bout agreement to challenge UFC Light Heavyweight Champion Lyoto Machida, which will more than likely take place at UFC 104 from the Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif., on Oct. 24.

SuperLutas.com.br was able to confirm the rumored match up with sources close to the Brazilian’s camp.

Rua is coming off a first round technical knockout of former 205-pound champion, Chuck Liddell, at UFC 97: “Redemption” last month. He defeated Mark Coleman via third round technical knockout in a lackluster performance earlier this year at UFC 93: “Franklin vs. Henderson” to earn a crack at the “Iceman.”

It’s perhaps not the match up that most fans expected, especially when UFC President Dana White revealed over the weekend that Quinton “Rampage” Jackson would be the first to challenge Machida for his newly-won world title. But that all went out the window a few days later when Jackson apparently pressed UFC officials to settle a score with Rashad Evans via The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 10 first rather than compete to get his belt back.

That left Machida — who flattened Evans at UFC 98 to win the belt — all of a sudden without a number one contender … until now.

Keep in mind that White did not announce the bout yesterday during a media conference call because he indicated that not all bout agreements were finalized. That more than likely means Machida — who is currently celebrating his big win on a beach near Belem — may still have to agree to the fight and formalize it with a signature.

Source: http://mmamania.com/2009/05/29/ufc-104-mauricio-shogun-rua-signs-to-fight-lyoto-machida-in-october/


Lets Get It On


Peronally Im getting goose bumps for this fight, Shogun is my favorite fighter and Machida really impressed me in his last fight. I belive that Shogun will give Machida a run for his money because he is a pure striker with atletism that never have been seen inside the octagon. Everthing will be about impose your will, Rashad didnt land anything for one and a half round on Machida. Shogun got blackbelt BJJ, good takedowns, Muay Thai, Taekwondo and unorthodox striking. Machida got blackbelt BJJ, Machida Karate, unorthodox striking, good takedowns and takedowns defense.


Many doubted Shogun agains The Ice Man, but I think many must have forgotten that he was ranked number one in the world and where tearing true the Light Heavy Weight Division.


No matter what happens so will this fight be very excitng

Stay Fresh // Hoffa

Posted by Hoffa 0 Comments

Kimbo Slice, the controversial heavyweight who in 2008 headlined the most-viewed mixed martial arts card in history, will be one of 16 contestants on the forthcoming season of “The Ultimate Fighter,” the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s reality TV series.

Dana White, the UFC’s outspoken president, has repeatedly mocked Slice for his lack of fighting ability. Slice, whose real name is Kevin Ferguson, became a cult figure by competing in street fights that were posted on YouTube. Slice’s “bouts” drew tens of millions of views and led him to turn professional.

He fought for the now defunct Elite XC, garnering massive media attention but getting mocked by White and others affiliated with the UFC for a lack of ability.

White has called him a “joke,” a “bum” and “not a real fighter,” among other less than kind descriptions. He said that Slice would “get murdered if he fought in the UFC” and suggested that his lightweight champion, 155-pound B.J. Penn, would “annihilate” the 230-pound Slice.

The UFC president has repeatedly insisted he would not allow Slice to compete in the UFC unless he won his way onto the show by competing on “The Ultimate Fighter,” which beings taping Wednesday and is scheduled to air in September.

Slice has called White’s bluff and will appear on Season 10 of the highly rated Spike TV series, White has confirmed. Fighters live in the same house and train together, and then fight during the show in a bid to earn a UFC contract.

His appearance, along with that of former UFC light heavyweight champions Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Rashad Evans as coaches, should guarantee massive ratings.

“It should be interesting, given some of the things I’ve said about him,” White said.

Slice, who has a 3-1 professional record, appeared in the main event of the first MMA card shown on network television in the U.S. when he fought James Thompson on May 31, 2008, on CBS.

Slice won by third-round stoppage in a bout that attracted a record 6.5 million viewers and remains the most-viewed MMA bout in history.

But Slice hasn’t fought since Oct. 4, when he was knocked out by a jab from late replacement Seth Petruzelli, a light heavyweight, just 14 seconds into another fight broadcast on CBS. The plug was pulled on Elite XC, which reportedly lost millions of dollars, in the aftermath of the fight.

White promised “some major surprises” as he announced on a Thursday conference call that Jackson and Evans, each of whom is a former light heavyweight champion, would serve as coaches on Season 10.

He declined to say anything further but urged reporters on the call not to miss media day, which is Tuesday at the UFC Training Center in Las Vegas.

White worked hard to keep Slice’s appearance on the show a secret, hoping to have unveiled him Tuesday. Season 10, which is being called “The Ultimate Fighter: Heavyweights,” was originally slated to feature a cast of eight heavyweights and eight middleweights, but the UFC quietly informed the middleweights who tried out that it was going with an all-heavyweight show.

And unlike in recent seasons, where the competitors had to win a fight to earn their way into the house, there will be no such arrangement this time. All 16 fighters – Spike and the UFC are keeping names of the others a closely guarded secret – will automatically move into the house.

Though White goes to great lengths to insist that nothing on the show is scripted, it’s virtually guaranteed that Slice won’t fight early in the competition. Having him around and alive in the competition is going to keep ratings elevated.

If Slice is able to advance to the live Dec. 5 finale, with a chance to earn a UFC contract with a win, ratings would likely be the largest in Spike history.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/news;_ylt=Aj_iOL.4tCMzzVc1nPi1.DE5nYcB?slug=ki-kimbo060109&prov=yhoo&type=lgnslol.


I guess Dana wanna give Kimbo a chance to step up and prove himself, but I don't think it's really fair that he/they doesn't have to fighter their way in to the house. But at the same time, it's a good move for publicity and to make a big "thing" about this sessions TUF.

Posted by Rob 1 Comments

Hello Everyone!

This is a new site which will focus on the events, happenings and rumors around UFC.
It will be a mix-up between ideas and our personal thoughts around UFC.

We'll discuss the rumors and statements around UFC and their fighters.

The goal is to make this more like an discussion board with news and ideas. So it would be a great thing if people would comment on the post and say what they think about the posts.

Posted by Admin Monday, June 1, 2009 0 Comments

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