Thursday, September 30, 2010

'Mini-Calzaghe' Nathan Cleverly defeats Karo Murat to earn title shot

? Nathan Cleverly in line for a shot at the WBO title
? James DeGale also a winner at Magnificent Seven

For lovers of sanctioned violence, Nathan Cleverly set the standard on a night of rolling cuts and bruises at the LG Arena by stopping the unbeaten Karo Murat after nine rounds to put himself in line for a shot at the WBO light-heavyweight title.

The slug-fest Frank Warren sold in Birmingham as "The Magnificent Seven" provided more fun than your average riot and, at the centre of the mayhem, was the clever young maths graduate from Wales who knows more angles than Pythagoras. He bombed Murat with so many head-jolters that the referee Mark Nelson refused to let the Armenian come out for the 10th, the official stoppage point.

On a night when another Welshman, Enzo Maccarinelli, suffered excessive punishment, Cleverly kept up a phenomenal workrate against a plodding but accomplished opponent and, although occasionally reckless, looked world class.

He has yet to learn how to pace himself at this level ? the 27-year-old Murat was, by some way, his toughest assignment, having stopped 13 of 22 opponents in a professional career that only started four years ago ? but you could not fault his commitment, speed or ring craft.

Two of the judges gave every round to Cleverly; Murat convinced the third official he was worth one session ? but that does not tell the story of a gruelling fight in which several rounds were close.

Nelson called the doctor to Murat's corner after round two, aware that there was blood coming from one of his ears. By the end of the ninth, and after four more medical inspections, he adjudged he had taken enough punishment.

Murat, as tough by inclination as by background (his Armenian parents fled persecution in Iraq for Bavaria during the first Bush war), looked as if he'd had enough. To drain the fight from someone of Murat's pedigree was some performance.

Now Cleverly must steel himself for an examination at the highest level against another German-based fighter, the WBO champion J�rgen Br�hmer ? who beat Ricky Hatton as an amateur but has grown in weight by more conventional methods than the troubled Mancunian.

Arthur Abraham, who was ringside to support Murat, said of Cleverly: "He's a very tough fighter, a mini-Calzaghe." Abraham also expressed frustration about the postponement of his fight with Carl Froch, who pulled out of their upcoming Super Six fight with a back injury during the week. "I think it's a mental problem," he said.

He did concede Froch's hard 12-rounder against Mikkel Kessler (who has since pulled out with eye problems) might have taken something out of him.

The Armenian-German admitted the Showtime tournament was troubled, but it was up to the boxers to make sure they stayed in the tournament.

Michael Jennings would beat most welterweights in the country, but not Kell Brook. He was stopped 47 seconds into round five but, in truth, the bout was heading in one direction, and that was in favour of the Sheffield fighter, unbeaten still and living up to the outrageous comparisons with his hero Naseem Hamed, who looked content in retirement at ringside. Brook now has the WBO inter-continental title, a trinket but also a bargaining chip for bigger prizes.

James DeGale kicked off the evening in brilliant style by stopping the tough Scouser Carl Dilks in round one.

DeGale, who had to sweat off six pounds at the last minute to make the super-middleweight limit, has earned himself a shot at another Liverpool fighter, the British champion Paul Smith, and that should be a tougher affair.

Mancunian Matthew Hall could not handle the seasoned Lukas Konecny, who took the vacant European light-middleweight belt with a sixth-round stoppage. Hall later announced his retirement.

The 8,000 fans who filled the arena had expected fireworks in the heavyweight rematch between the British champion, Derek Chisora, and Sam Sexton, who was putting his Commonwealth title on the line. It fizzed rather than sparkled, though, until the Londoner did to Sexton what he did the first time and belted him into a beaten hulk on the ropes, seven seconds from the end of round nine.

Chisora, who stopped Sexton on his feet in the fading stages of their six-rounder in June, 2008, was much the busier fighter last night. Sexton has the aerodynamics of the popemobile but one of the best jabs in the division, yet he chose to clasp his gloves to his ears between his own brief flurries. That's a good way to reach 90, no way to win a fight.

Matthew Macklin, who has had enough trainers to open a shoe shop, took back the European middleweight title he relinquished in March when he stopped the determined and unbeaten Georgian Shalva Jomardashvili at the start of the sixth round.


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Amir Khan Roman Gonzales

James Thompson Says Japanese Judges 'Raped' Him at Dream.16

by Michael David SmithJames Thompson lost a split decision to Japan's Yusuke Kawaguchi at Dream 16, and he said afterward that the Japanese judges had cheated him out of a victory he earned.

"I feel absolutely disgusted," Thompson said. "I thought I completely won. How did I not win? How did I not win? I've been screwed. I've been absolutely raped. You're looking at a violated man."

 

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Roman Gonzales Oscar DeLa Hoya

Mike Jones to Face Jesus Soto-Karass, not Kell Brook

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Unbeaten Philadelphia welterweight (147 pounds) Mike Jones will procede with his planned bout against Mexican-born Jesus Soto Karass on the under card of the Manny Pacquiao-Antonio Margarito fight at the Dallas Cowboys Stadium, foregoing an opportunity to face England's unbeaten Kell Brook in London in December for the WBO interim crown.

BoxingScene.com reported that English promoter Frank Warren recently approached Top Rank Promotions' CEO, Bob Arum, concerning the prospect of the 27-year-old Jones (22-0, 18 knockouts) meeting the 24-year-old Brook (22-0, 15 KOs) for the crown.

But that would mean that the nearly 6-foot-1, Jones would have to pull out of his fight with Karass (24-4-3, 16 KOs) of Los Angeles, losing a chance at plenty of visability and exposure.

"I sent [Top Rank Promotions Vice President] Carl Moretti an e-mail today and said, 'Listen, we're fighting in Dallas, because I could have made this fight on my own, and they've been calling me on this fight [with Brook] for a month,'" said Peltz. "I mean, it would have made sense at the time, but with a chance to fight in Dallas, it doesn't really make sense. Unless the finances are through the cieling for a fight with Brook, we're fighting in Dallas. I mean, how much through the cieling are they going to be?"

 

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Vic Darchinyan Steve Molitor

The UFC and roids: Dana White says he's not the boss, the government is

Dana White finally got to vent about Chael Sonnen's positive drug test and one-year suspension handed down by the California State Athletic Commission. He's not happy with the criticism lobbed his way. Some fans and MMA bloggers think it's time for White to put his foot down about steroids in the sport. White said he's not the guy who makes the decisions, it's the state commissions.

"The commission could give a flying rat's ass about what I think," White told the media gathered at the UFC 119 prefight presser. "They oversee me! They tell me what I'm going to do."

White said stop comparing him to guys like NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and NBA commissioner David Stern.

"People say you're the commissioner of the sport. Here's the reality, the government tells my fighters what's going to happen to them," said White. "The big misconception that Dana White runs the athletic commissions couldn't be further from the truth so I have to sit back now and see what happens with Chael Sonnen."

White told Ariel Helwani of mmafighting.com that there's a lot more to the Sonnen story and that we all need to wait until the appeal is heard by the California State Athletic Commission. But he did state that Sonnen has always been a standup guy and reiterated what he told Yahoo! Sports' Kevin Iole last week. White said various commission's penalties are severe enough. White doesn't want to pile on fighters who violate drug rules. But he did take time to point out the difference between violators like Chael Sonnen and former UFC heavyweight champ Josh Barnett.

"People are all going to make mistakes. I judge you by how you react to the mistakes you make," said White. "There's guys out there like Josh Barnett. Josh Barnett tested positive three times and this guy denies it every time. Everybody's a liar but him. I just saw an interview he did where he said he could really give a [expletive] about anybody else but himself. And that's why Josh Barnett isn't and will never be in the UFC. This isn't the kind of guy that I respect or want to do business with."

Barnett recently signed a deal with Strikeforce. He tested positive in 2002 after UFC 36 and was stripped of his title. He also tested positive in 2009 before a scheduled fight for Affliction against Fedor Emelianenko.

David Haye Antonio Margarito

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Paul Daley vs. Scott Smith Set for ?Strikeforce: Henderson vs. Babalu? on Dec. 4

A welterweight slugfest is in the works for "Strikeforce: Henderson vs. Babalu," as Scott Smith is expected to drop down from middleweight to welcome former UFC contender Paul Daley to the promotion at the Dec. 4 Showtime-televised event in St. Louis.

Roman Gonzales Oscar DeLa Hoya

TUF 12 recap: 'Bruce Leroy' and GSP show smarts in Episode 2

On the second episode of "The Ultimate Fighter 12", we may have a gotten a preview of a recurring theme with Georges St. Pierre duping Josh Koscheck, and the always smiling Alex Cacares lulling an opponent to sleep.

The show returned for the second episode with 14 fighters having fought their way into the house. Now it was time to choose teams. Both coaches made out their draft big board but GSP decided to draw up a dummy sheet and try to sucker Koscheck into thinking he was going to pick Marc Stevens. Stevens was coached by Koscheck at the University of Buffalo. Kos thought he'd sneak a peek, saw GSP's fake list and fell for the bait. Both coaches had Michael Johnson rated No. 1 but Koscheck took Stevens with the top pick and Johnson fell right into GSP's hands.

It also meant St. Pierre had control of the fight selection and he took an approach no other coach has in the recent history of TUF. He let the most enthusiastic fighter choose his own fight. According to GSP, a motivated fighter is one who'll probably win. There's no one on the show with more vim and vigor than Cacares aka "Bruce Leroy" out of Miami. Cacares, 21, calls out Jeff Lentz, a banger with good wrestling. Koscheck is smiling ear-to-ear thinking that GSP just made a big mistake. We're not sure why since Bruce Leroy was a No. 4 pick and Lentz was a No. 7 pick.

A huge fan of martial arts' legend Bruce Lee and named after a character in the 1985 film "The Last Dragon", Cacares is seen meditating, doing breathing exercises and showing off wacky kicks in the backyard. Lentz even comments that it may look cool but the technique is terrible.

At the same time, the producers of TUF make sure to highlight the fact that Lentz appears to have a two-pack-a-day smoking habit. In reality, he probably puffed on three or four cigs in a 24-hour period but it looks like he's constantly smoking. It sets up the question about his cardio.

By the looks of the fight, the smoking may have played a role. Lentz talked about throwing hands and beating Cacares so badly that he'd want to go home but that wasn't the approach he took. Lentz worked the clinch against the cage for almost the entirety of the fight round. He looked for trips and judo throw takedowns. He got a couple but Cacares got to his feet quickly. Lentz did put an exclamation point on the first with a big judo throw but he worked so hard that he returned to the corner with his mouth open.

Lentz came out for the second looking winded and Cacares was able to take advantage. Bruce Leroy scored a takedown, had Lentz's back and then got reversed. Lentz was in Cacares' half guard but allowed the fighter on the bottom to easily get it back to full with 3:38 left in the round. From there, Cacares freed his left leg and threw it up on Lentz's shoulder that was the beginning of the end. The wilting Lentz tried to slam off the triangle attempt by Cacares, but didn't put up much of a fight after that. Bruce Leroy moves on with a submission win and leaves Lentz behind to smoke and drink all he wants.

Bruce Leroy is cocky. Next week's tease includes a mention that he may have crossed the line in rubbing the victory in Lentz's face a little too much. He's certainly confident and afraid of no one. The kid is built like a beanpole but apparently he's been in his share of scraps. Before getting into legitimate mixed martial arts training, he was a street fighter cashing around $600 a fight. Lentz should've watched the "Bruce versus Chocolate" fight on YouTube. You can't slam your way out of a Bruce triangle. 

Bernard Hopkins Shane Mosley

New work from Matt Beard

Californian COTW surf artist Matt Beard has a new website online and has posted a whole series of great new paintings titled "Orange... and a little beyond" …And if you're in San Clemente, California... Head to the Surfing Heritage Foundation on Saturday 1st May 2010 (6-9pm) for the opening reception to an exhibit of Matt's new art. The exhibit runs until 28th May. Click here for more info on the show.

Lined Up by Matt Beard

www.beardart.com

Roman Gonzales Oscar DeLa Hoya

Mayhem Miller Welcomes the Challenge of Submitting Sakuraba

by Michael David Smith

In Kazushi Sakuraba's first MMA fight, in 1996, he submitted to an arm triangle choke from Kimo Leopoldo. In more than 40 fights since then, Sakuraba has never tapped.

Royce Gracie couldn't make him tap in a total of 105 minutes over two fights. Gracie's relatives Ralek, Ryan, Renzo and Royler couldn't make Sakuraba tap either. Neither could great submission specialists ranging from Antonio Rogerio Nogueira to Ken Shamrock.

On Saturday in Japan, Jason Mayhem Miller wants to make Sakuraba tap again.

 

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Felix Sturm Amir Khan

UFC 119 picks, Vegas-style

UFC 119 betting odds (Courtesy Lagasse Stadium Las Vegas):

Official picks in bold
Mirko "Cro Cop" (+200) v. Frank Mir (-250) - Heavyweight
Antonio Rogerio Nogueira (+170) v. Ryan Bader (-200) - Light heavyweight
Sean Sherk (+180) v. Evan Dunham (-220) - Lightweight
Jeremy Stephens (+120) v. Melvin Guillard (-150) - Lightweight
Matt Serra (+115) v. Chris Lytle (-145) - Welterweight

Spike Television
Joey Beltran (+140) v. Matt Mitrione (-170) - Heavyweight
Joe Doerksen (+250) v. C.B. Dolloway (-330) - Middleweight

Non-televised
Julio Paulino (+125) v. T.J. Grant (-155) - Lightweight
Sean McCorkle (+220) v. Mark Hunt (-300) - Heavyweight
Waylon Lowe (Even) v. Steve Lopez (-130) - Lightweight
Pat Audinwood (+180) v. Thiago Tavares (-220) - Lightweight

Juan Manuel Lopez Andre Ward

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

How to Throw a Cross PunchHow to Throw a Cross Punch

Master Scott teaches you how to throw a cross punch in taekwondo, which is taken out of boxing.

Master Scott teaches you how to throw a cross punch in taekwondo, which is taken out of boxing.

Steve Molitor Celestino Caballero

How to Do Shadow BoxingHow to Do Shadow Boxing

Personal Trainer John Betancourt explains how to do shadow boxing.

Personal Trainer John Betancourt explains how to do shadow boxing.

Giovani Segura Vic Darchinyan

Guillard starts off UFC 119 main card with split decision win

INDIANAPOLIS -- Melvin Guillard won a split decision over Jeremy Stephens at UFC 119, 29-28, 28-29 and 30-27. This is Guillard's third win in a row

Stephens started the round by knocking down Guillard, but the tide quickly changed. With strong movement and powerful punches, Guillard ruled the first round. He got the better of each exchange with Stephens, and even showboated a bit when avoiding strikes.

In the second round, Stephens attacked with more leg kicks, while Guillard focused his attack on Stephens' body.  The round was interrupted twice as both fighters received unintentional shots to the groin.

Stephens complained of a groin strike halfway through the round. Stephens was given a second to recover, and the fight continued without crowd complaint. However, when Stephens landed a clear kick to Guillard's groin, Conseco Fieldhouse became filled with boos.

For the third round, Guillard continued with body shots, kicks and impressive movement. Stephens had a shot near the end of the fight when he wobbled Guillard with a punch, but then missed on a flying knee right after, giving up his opportunity to end the bout.

"I trained hard and I felt like I did enough to get the win tonight. I did more and I honestly don’t think he hit me in the face one time," Guillard said after the fight. "I knew he wanted to stand and bang. I was a state champion in wrestling and a brown belt in judo so I could’ve taken it to the ground but I wanted to stick to my game plan.”

Chris John Manny Pacquiao

MMA talk hits national airwaves on a football Monday! Rome mocks Sonnen

Monday's Jim Rome show was another example of "be careful what you wish for MMA" when it comes to media coverage. Now that more media big boys are on board, they'll often latch onto the negative stories before the positive ones. It was a bit shocking to hear the national radio host talking MMA on a Monday that didn't follow a fight card weekend, but the Chael Sonnen saga was simply too good for Rome to pass up.

The Premiere Radio and ESPN television host became very familiar with Sonnen right before UFC 117. Rome did a nice job of pressing Sonnen on his over-the-top comments about Lance Armstrong cheating, taking steroids and "giving himself cancer." Sonnen denied making the comments and then denied it again even upon hearing the audio. He was an easy punching bag on Monday when Rome discovered that the fighter himself tested positive for performance enhancing drugs.

Rome did bring up a good point. In the end, are there really any long-range repercussions for the sport? Will Sonnen getting nabbed scare anybody? Rome says no, because the penalties can never match the potential windfall from taking PED's, winning and moving up the rankings.

Rome also found time to play some drops (5:45 mark) from Sonnen's Q&A last week at Ultimate Fight Night 22. Sonnen said he'd like to stab Brock Lesnar (video -- 5:25 mark). At least he's got no worries about any disciplinary action for that stupid comment; Sonnen more than overshadowed it with his positive test.

More details are slowly trickling in about the drug-test results in California. Sonnen is looking at a year suspension and minimum fine of $2,500. George Dodd from the California State Athletic Commission told SI.com's Josh Gross that Sonnen admitted before the Anderson Silva fight that he'd taken something.

"He only indicated that he was taking it but he never indicated why," Dodd said. "[Sonnen] just let me know he was taking [something] and that's when I called over an inspector to get it documented. But when you do take it you still have to show a medical reason."

Sonnen's urine sample first tested positive on Sept. 2. A second test was done at UCLA's Olympic Drug Testing lab and produced the same result.

The scheduled February rematch between Sonnen and Silva appears unlikely. Unless he wins an appeal, Sonnen's suspension will run through Sept. 2, 2011.

In a press release, the UFC stated that the Yushin Okami-Vitor Belfort fight at UFC 122 is now a No. 1 contender fight in the middleweight division.

Thanks to The Jim Rome Show and FoxSportsRadio920 for the audio

Timothy Bradley Juan Manuel Lopez

Bob Arum: Odlanier Solis Now Promoted by Don King

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Cuban-born former 2004 Olympic gold medalist and heavyweight contender Odlanier Solis of Miami has been granted an "amicable" release from his contract with Top Rank Promotions and signed with promoter, Don King, Top Rank CEO, Bob Arum, told FanHouse on Friday.

"He did so with our permission. It was an amicable deal," said Arum. "Solis is better off with King in the heavyweight division, which we're not active in. They offered us our money back and everything, and so he's going to work with Don King."

Solis was reportedly set to pursue his 13th knockout and his seventh consecutive stoppage against an opponent to be determined in December, according to a release from Solis' his co-promoter, Arena Sports, earlier this month.

 

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Celestino Caballero Miguel Cotto

Monday, September 27, 2010

UFC 119: Sean Sherk Beats Evan Dunham

by Michael David SmithIn a battle of a 37-year-old former UFC lightweight champion and a 28-year-old who may be a future champion, it was the veteran Sean Sherk who walked away with a split decision win over Evan Dunham Saturday at UFC 119.

The fans in Indianapolis booed the decision in a very close fight that could have gone either way, leading Sherk to complain in the Octagon afterward.

"The crowd wants to boo? We just came out here and put on a great performance for you guys," Sherk said. "You guys should be happy."

 

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Amir Khan Roman Gonzales

Trigg, Monson, Sokoudjou, Other UFC Vets Slated for Israel FC

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Frank Trigg, Jeff Monson, Ricco Rodriguez, Hermes Franca, Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou, Charles "Krazy Horse" Bennett, Daniel Gracie and Shonie Carter are all slated to compete in Israel on Nov. 9 for the Israel Fighting Championship group.

The matchups after the jump.

Juan Manuel Marquez Sergio Martinez

WEC 51: TUF 12?s Pablo Garza In Against Tiequan Zhang

A late change has been made to Thursday's "WEC 51: Aldo vs. Faber" fight card, as Chinese prospect Zhang Tie Quan has another new opponent for his WEC debut in fellow lightweight newcomer Pablo Garza, who replaces Jason Reinhardt.

Jorge Arce Mikkel Kessler

UFN 22 weigh-in: Marquardt must be wary of having a limb removed

Nate Marquardt is being put through the mental meat grinder. It's been the story around much of his UFC career. Tonight at Ultimate Fight Night 22, he's got two mental hurdles to cross. Rousimar Palhares isn't exactly the "title contender or holder" Marquardt thought he'd be facing at this point in his career and the Brazilian's questionable tactics on the mat can play mind games with any opponent.

Marquardt and Palhares both made weight yesterday in anticipation of their main event bout at UFN 22 and now it's time to see what unfolds if the fight hits the floor. That's basically Palhares' only shot at pulling the upset. But if it gets down there, the guy has developed a reputation as a beast who'll attempt to take a limb home, legally or not. 

"I don't care about that, to really be honest," Marquardt told Tristen Critchfield from Sherdog. "The way I think about it is that any time someone goes for a submission hold, or a joint lock or whatever it is, they're putting your body in danger. So I defend it with everything that I have. I don't need to worry about what he's done in his past fights because I'm not going to allow him to catch me."

Palhares (11-2, 4-1 UFC) has more than a rep, he's already paid the price for dirty tactics. At UFC 111, he refused to let go of a heel hook on Tomasz Drwal. The Pole yelped in pain (pictured above) and was lucky to walk away without long term damage. New Jersey handed down a 90-day suspension to Palhares.

It's got to be in the back of any fighter's mind that Palhares is more than willing to end someone's career if necessary. Marquardt said he won't let it affect him and if it's time to hit the deck, it'll go down there.  

"I'm leaving the option open to go to the ground if necessary; I'm not afraid of going to the ground with a guy like that," Marquardt (30-8, 8-3 UFC) told ESPN U.K. "I've fought three high-level grapplers in my career, he is dangerous and I have a huge advantage on the feet, but at the same time if I see the takedown and the chance to ground and pound him, I'll go for it."

Nineteen fighters hit the scales without an issue. Efrain Escudero was the lone exception on the card. He came in at an obscene 159 pounds for a bout at 155. He forfeits 20 percent of his purse against Charles Oliveira.

Ultimate Fight Night 22 weigh-in (Courtesy MMA Junkie)

SPIKE card:
Nate Marquardt (186) vs. Rousimar Palhares (186)
Efrain Escudero (159) vs. Charles Oliveira (154)
Jim Miller (155.5) vs. Gleison Tibau (154)
Cole Miller (156) vs. Ross Pearson (156)

Non-televised undercard:
John Gunderson (156) vs. Yves Edwards (155)
Jared Hamman (205) vs. Kyle Kingsbury (206)
Dave Branch (186) vs. Tomasz Drwal (185.5)
Rich Attonito (185) vs. Rafael Natal (186)
David Mitchell (170.5) vs. Anthony Waldburger (171)
Brian Foster (170.5) vs. Forrest Petz (170)

Juan Manuel Marquez Sergio Martinez

How to Do a Squatting Exercise for BoxingHow to Do a Squatting Exercise for Boxing

Personal Trainer John Betancourt explains and demonstrates how to do a squatting exercise in boxing.

Personal Trainer John Betancourt explains and demonstrates how to do a squatting exercise in boxing.

Paul Williams Bernard Hopkins

Sunday, September 26, 2010

UFC 119 Fight Preview Show - UFC 119

The Fight Network presents a comprehensive preview of UFC 119 on Saturday night featuring Frank Mir vs. Mirko Cro Cop, Antonio Rogerio Nogueira vs. Ryan Bader, Matt Serra vs. Chris Lytle, Sean Sherk vs. Evan Dunham and Jeremy Stephens vs. Melvin Guillard.

Jorge Arce Mikkel Kessler

Enlightenment at Red Bull Illume

Congratulations to three COTW featured photographers who were named amongst the winning photographers awarded at the prestigious Red Bull Illume Image Quest 2010 awards.

Chris Burkard was named the overall winner!

"I'm overjoyed, it's hard to put into words being able to be nominated and to win this award in front of all your piers and people I respect, I'm truly blessed." - Chris Burkard

Also awarded were Australian surf photographers Stuart Gibson in the Energy category and Nathan Smith in the Close Up category. Nathan was also named the Athletes' Choice winner.

"I'm dizzy from the whole experience, said Smith. I'm humbled to be here and happy to have made the top 50 let alone win two awards that in my book are very prestigious. I'm in a room full of photographers who I look up to." - Nathan Smith

Chris Burkard receiving his award
Photo: Chris Burkard receiving his Red Bull Illume Image Quest 2010 award

Photo by Chris Burkard
Photo: Chris Burkard's photo won the Illumination category

Photo by Nathan Smith
Photo: Nathan Smith's photo won the Close Up category

Photo by Stuart Gibson
Photo: Stuart Gibson's photo won the Energy category

- Chris Burkard's website
- Stuart Gibson's website

- www.redbullillume.com

Juan Manuel Lopez Andre Ward

UFC 120 Videos Trailer for ?Bisping vs. Akiyama? on Oct. 16 in London

Click here to check out the UFC 120 fight card and stay tuned to MMAFrenzy.com for complete UFC 120 coverage.

Oscar DeLa Hoya Giovani Segura

Konrad dominates Grabowski in Bellator heavyweight tournament

Cole Konrad won a mostly boring, but dominant, decision over Damian Grabowski, 30-26, 30-27, 30-27, in Bellator's heavyweight semifinals on Thursday in Milwaukee.

Konrad started with an immediate takedown, then followed up with knees in Grabowski's side. His control from the top, with scattered knees and punches, continued for the rest of the round. Grabowski barely did anything throughout the round.

He took a bit longer to get the takedown in the second round, actually throwing a punch and controlling Grabowski in the clinch before easily taking him to the ground. The referee tired of the grapplefest halfway through the second and stood the two fighters up. It didn't take long for Konrad to take the fight right back down to the ground, and even went for a submission, grabbing Grabowski's arm in a kimura attempt. It didn't work out, but it's a big step for the NCAA champion wrestler.

You're never going to guess what Konrad did to start the third and final round. Did you guess take Grabowski down? Then you were right! But this time, Grabowski was able to get out from under Konrad. Grabowski even tried for a takedown and guillotine. Neither were successful, and Konrad scored another takedown, controlling the bout until the final bell.

Konrad will now face Neil Grove in the finals of Bellator's inaugural heavyweight tournament. Grove is a dangerous striker and will provide interesting match-up for Konrad's wrestling.

Timothy Bradley Juan Manuel Lopez

UFC 119 Post-Fight Press Conference Video

by Michael David SmithUFC President Dana White and selected fighters from the UFC 119 fight card will meet the press following Saturday night's fights, and you can watch the UFC 119 post-fight press conference right here at MMAFighting.com.

The press conference will feature the first public comments from many of the winning fighters, as well as the announcement of the Fight of the Night, Knockout of the Night and Submission of the Night bonus recipients.

The press conference will begin about half an hour after the main event ends, likely around 1:15 AM ET, and the video is below.

 

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Rafael Marquez Israel Vasquez

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Small Talk James DeGale

The Olympic gold medalist on wardrobes, vegetables and where to go out in Harlesden

Straight down to business, James: you will fight Carl "Dynamite" Dilks on 18 September. How's training going?

Training's going well. I've been in the gym for the past six weeks, getting fit and feeling nice. I can't wait. It's a British title eliminator, so hopefully by the end of the year I'll be fighting for the British title.

You visited Floyd Mayweather at his gym last year. How was that? He can be a little bit... opinionated sometimes.

That was great, that was amazing. He's one of my idols, so just to watch him train, to watch him spar, was amazing. We talked a few times. He knew I was an Olympic gold medalist. He got a bronze in Atlanta, so there was some respect there, a connection. It was just brilliant to see him.

If he ever gets it together with Manny Pacquiao, who do you think would win?

I'm a Mayweather man, I think he's the best boxer on the planet. It'd be a great fight, obviously, but he's the man.

Where's your Olympic medal now?

My paps keeps that somewhere. I don't even know where it is. He keeps it nice and safe. That's something proper special, so it's tucked away somewhere nice. That rarely comes out. The MBE, though, that's on show. That's in my room.

Did your dad really lock himself in a wardrobe during the Olympic final?

Yeah, he did. It was such a big and important fight, and I think it got to him. He comes to watch me fight sometimes but because it was an Olympic final he couldn't watch it so he went and hid.

You might have been a dancer ? do you still dance a bit?

I dance in clubs when I go out, but not any more than that. I was just following my sister. She was into it first, and now she's a qualified dance teacher. Boxing took over in the end, for me. I'm still good on my feet though so maybe it did help.

You'd be perfect for Strictly Come Dancing, but you turned down a place last year...

In a few years I would definitely do something like that, but the timing wasn't right for me. It's still about the boxing.

Your nickname is Chunky. Isn't that a bit rubbish? I mean, it's not The Hitman, or Bonecrusher, or Hands of Stone, or The Executioner, or The Count of Monte Fisto really is it?

I keep it real. Ever since I walked into a gym at the age of 10 they called me chunky. Everyone in the boxing world knows me as Chunk. They don't call me James, they call me Chunk. I don't mind it. I'm used to it.

You used to get a few boos from the crowd before your fights. Are you more popular now?

Everything's going well now. I started a bit shaky a year and a half ago. I got a couple of boos, but I think I've won people over now. By 2012 I want to be knocking on the door of the world title, or maybe a champion already. They won't be booing then.

What was the last film you saw?

I went to the premiere of The Expendables a while ago. What a film. A really good film that is.

So did you get to meet Sylvester Stallone? Or just Dolph Lundgren?

I didn't actually meet them but I was around them. I got pretty close. I went with Frank Warren. We got invited, I had a hard day in training and it was my little treat.

Were you a Rocky fan?

I loved the Rocky films, yeah. Rocky IV's my favourite, the one with the Russian.

What's the last music you bought/stole using a dodgy file-sharing website?

I was downloading the other night, just random singles. The Fray, a couple of theirs, Omarion, random stuff.

What's the last book you read?

I'm not really a reader, but every Thursday and Friday I read my Boxing News. I read the papers every day, but I'm not really a book reader.

What about food? What's your treat?

I love my food. The worst thing is having to make weight before a fight. It's hard to cut down. Hopefully in 10 years I'll have retired and I'll be able to do what I want. I like steaks, but I love a homemade roast, a nice roast dinner.

What's the world's worst vegetable?

I'm a good boy, I eat up all my vegetables. But if I've got to pick one it'll have to be sprouts. I don't like them, but when they're on my plate I'll eat them.

Cheese or chocolate?

I like cheese on toast, but probably chocolate.

What's your favourite pasta shape?

I like shells, or the spirally ones. Fusilli, yeah, that's the ones.

Where did you go on holiday this year?

In the space of about eight weeks I had three ? Cyprus for five days with my family, and Marbella for four nights, then three weeks later I went to Marbella again for four nights. Short, sharp, in and out, that's the best way. A nice relaxing break.

Do you still live near your parents in Harlesden?

Yeah, I still live in Harlesden. I'm looking for a house now, somewhere more near my gym, Essex way or something like that. I bought an apartment but I'm not good at living by myself so I'm always at home. My mum feeds me, she does my washing, so I'm there most of the time.

Can you recommend somewhere in Harlesden to go out?

In Harlesden? Oh no. No, no, no. Nowhere in Harlesden. You have to wander out a bit. There's a couple of nice places like Kensal Green way and that, still north-west London, but you have to get out of Harlesden. Me? I go out in central London, me and the boys will go out to one of the clubs in town. Mo*vida, somewhere like that.

Can you tell us a joke?

I'm not good with jokes, no. I don't know a joke at all. I like being told jokes, but I can't tell one myself. Sorry.

That's all right, James. Thanks for the chat. Good luck with the fight.

Cheers Small Talk. Bye!


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Mikkel Kessler Luciano Bute

Heather Brown interview

See an interview with COTW surf artist Heather Brown on SURFBANG.com…

http://surfbang.com/art/2010/03/interview-with-artist-heather-brown.html

Heather Brown

www.heatherbrownart.com

Bernard Hopkins Shane Mosley

Dwarf looks to make it as a pro MMA fighter

There are some shorter guys fighting in the bantamweight division. And even more may be on the way when WEC adds a 125-pound division, but a dwarf fighting professionally is something we've never seen on the big stage. Tyler Freeland wants to be the first little person to break through and make a living fighting. Just 5-foot tall, Freeland is seen here sparring with MMA blogger Aaron Tru. He looks to have some skills after logging 21 amateur fights.

"Growing up sucked. I'd get picked on and made fun of all my life," said Freeland, who tried wrestling in high school to channel his aggression. Now he's moved to Las Vegas to work on MMA with Shawn Tompkins and his crew at the TapouT Training Center.

Freeland has hypochondroplasia and never got taller than his current height. He shouldn't have problems finding fights down at 145 pounds, but he does face certain challenges. His limited reach makes striking difficult and as you can see in this fight video from 2009, he's especially susceptible to submissions when sitting in someone's guard. On the positive side, he'll be a tough guy to defend the takedown against. Either way, it's a nice story to follow and gives little people a role model. 

Vic Darchinyan Steve Molitor

Indianapolis welcomes the UFC with open arms (and dolls)

INDIANAPOLIS -- The UFC hit Indianapolis for the first time this week, taking over the city's sports scene. UFC president Dana White said that the promotion's first foray into the Hoosier State has already been going well.

"We like to go to all these new markets and introduce the live event. I think it's been one of the reasons we've grown so fast and been so successful. At the live show, we infect 18-20,000 people, and when they leave, they go and infect three people. The live event is exciting. There's this buzz and this energy. We want to go into all these new markets," White said at Thursday's press conference.

"We're excited to be here. This place is known as a traditional sports town. I'm proud and happy to have the UFC here now."

White did not have an exact figure on ticket sales, but said that they have been "fantastic since day one."

Sports bars in the downtown Wholesale District have signs up reading, "Welcome UFC Fans." On Wednesday night, Buffalo Wild Wings hosted an autograph session with local fighter Matt Mitrione, and all the waitresses wore Tapout shirts. Thursday evening, Kilroy's filled their TV screens with the UFC's "Countdown to 119" and a rerun of WEC 50.

A group of around 75 fans crowded into the Old National Center -- where the Broadway show "Mary Poppins" is playing -- for the press conference on Thursday. Fans, including a young girl who carried a Brock Lesnar and Chuck Liddell doll instead of Barbies, clamored for the chance to take pictures and get autographs from the fighters on the main card.

The city's main newspaper, the Indianapolis Star, has devoted column inches to the UFC, educating MMA newbies and spotlighting the locals on the card.  With the city's beloved Colts out of town, it's easier for MMA to get front page coverage.

Outside of the sports scene, it's a bit harder to to tell that a major MMA event is taking over the town. There is a bigger presence reminding the city about the upcoming International Violin Competition and "Mary Poppins."

But it's too early to judge if the UFC is a success in Indiana, or if it has made the often-touted financial impact on the compact Indianapolis downtown. What will tell the story is how many fans crowd into the Conseco Fieldhouse on Saturday night.

Mikkel Kessler Luciano Bute

Friday, September 24, 2010

Koscheck talks Holly Madison, villainy and Georges St. Pierre

When Josh Koscheck burst onto the MMA scene, he was an accomplished wrestler, but a raw fighter. A spot on the cast of the first season of "The Ultimate Fighter" changed all that. The unknown fighter has turned into one of the more successful and popular fighters to come from the reality show that helped build the UFC.

Now, Koscheck is back on the set of TUF for its 12th season, debuting Wednesday night on Spike TV. This time, he's the coach, facing off with welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre. He will face GSP in the cage on Dec. 11 at UFC 124.

For Koscheck, the experience of returning to the show was surreal.

"When I first went on TUF, I was just a wrestler. I had no idea how to fight. I had no training," Koscheck told Cagewriter. "Wrestling was my training. I was pretty much just focused on learning how to fight, and now here I am, six years later, fighting for the world championship."  

That doesn't mean he was uncomfortable in front of the cameras.

"I love the spotlight. I love the power of television. It is the greatest tool in the world to get your news out there. The more you get on TV, the more you have TV following you, the more money that equates to, the more fame you have, and fame equals money."

He doesn't even mind when the publicity is wrong. Earlier this year, a rumor spread that Koscheck was dating Playboy model Holly Madison.

"I like publicity. Whether it's good or bad. It's going to get people talking, it's going to put your name in the spotlight. I'm not dating Holly Madison. I never was. We're good friends. I'm not saying there's never a chance. We're good friends, but right now, I'm focused on winning fights and building a career rather than looking for a girlfriend."

"Who's Dan Hardy?"

Koscheck laughed off comments that fellow fighters Dan Hardy and Shinya Aoki had made about wrestling.

"Who's Dan Hardy? Let's be real. I don't know what they're saying, but if they want to do kickboxing, then they should go find a new profession. This is mixed martial arts. If you want to learn how to keep the fight standing and not be so boring and get taken down, then cry about getting taken down, go find a wrestling team and learn how to wrestle. Simple as that. If you don't want to get taken down and beat up, learn how to get up. Learn how to stop the takedowns."

As a national champion for Edinboro University's wrestling team, Koscheck knows the value of the sport.

"If people understood wrestling more and understood what it takes to compete at that level, they would give it more of a chance. There's thousands and thousands of young kids out there aspiring to be great wrestlers, they're having less and less chances of going to college because they're taking programs away."

"Life would be boring if you didn't have controversy"

Koscheck promises that he did his part in making TUF an interesting show.

"If this show is successful, it's probably not going to be because of Georges St. Pierre's personality," he said with a laugh.

Koscheck knows he's seen as a heel. Though he genuinely is a nice guy in person, he says being a villain comes naturally.

"I didn't have to work on it. I've always been an ornery little [expletive]. I have a knack for getting under people's skin. I want to be an entertainer. I want to be the guy who makes money outside of the cage. If I've got to be the villain to do it, then I'll do that. 

"Life would be boring if you didn't have controversy. This sport would be boring if you had guys who were just like a Georges, who looks like a robot, talks like a robot, and fights like a robot. You need guys out there with personality. There's not many guys who are out there who are willing to do that. I'm willing to do that. 

"Georges St. Pierre was a better guy that day"

He's now looking forward to fighting the "robotic" GSP. He lost the first chance at GSP in a unanimous decision at UFC 74, just two years into his fight career. Still, he won't make excuses.

"Regardless of [whether] it was too early or not, I had the opportunity to go in and win, and I didn't do that. I'm never going to make an excuse saying, it was too early. I was too young. Georges St. Pierre was a better guy that day. I know what I've got to do to make changes, and to take my second chance and come out with a victory. Come December 11, in Montreal, I have to find a way to win. I plan on doing that."

Koscheck does not plan on resting on his laurels when facing GSP.

"I want to keep this fight in position to win. I have to make sure my wrestling is up to par, because George is one of the best at disguising wrestling in MMA. He's fast. I have to be able to control the fight and put the fight in my position. I believe that my best chance is to keep the fight on my feet and knock Georges out."

Koscheck believes that he's in the better position to win since GSP will have more pressure on him, fighting in front of a home crowd and defending the belt.

"He's already beat me once. I have no pressure to go into Montreal and win this belt. He's the guy who's the champ. I'm the underdog. I like being the underdog. I like that I get to bet money on myself, which, I already have. I like that I get to hear a lot of 'F YOU KOSCHECK!' and a lot of boos."

"I plan on pissing off 22,000 people on December 11."

Check back Wednesday for more from Koscheck.

Celestino Caballero Miguel Cotto

Marketing 101 by McKee: Lightweight's chops have him on the verge of UFC deal

Antonio McKee has developed a reputation as a boring fighter, but he's far from it outside the ring and cage. Sometimes that's as important as what you do in your fights. McKee talked the talk, then walked the walk two weeks ago at MFC 26. He guaranteed a dominant performance, then delivered one against Luciano Azevedo and is now mulling over a contract that'll give him his first shot at the UFC. On Friday, McKee said he's verbally agreed to a deal and is going over the final details of the contract. All this at the age of 40.

McKee told Marcos Villegas that he's still looking over the contact and that's he's loyal to the MFC but he sure sounds like going to be with the big boys of MMA soon.

"I've worked on a lot of stuff. I've got a lot of surprises. So if people are studying those old tapes, you're going to be in for a rude awakening," said McKee (4:17 mark). "And if you do, I'm sorry you may leave the ring like Azevedo did. I don't want to hurt people. I just want to show people that I'm the best in the world."

McKee (25-3-2) is a wrestler by heart. His takedowns have helped him maintain an unbeaten streak that dates to 2003.

"If I'm on top. I've got many weapons there," said McKee (5:34 mark). "As you can see, I exposed one of them last week and that was that vicious elbow. See, I went to Thailand and had a metal plate put in my elbow. So when I hit people it's just going to cut everyone open and you're not going to be able to stop that."

Just what MMA needs! The real life Dusty Rhodes and his bionic elbow. Let's hope McKee brings the loaded boots as well. McKee also had a fight against Drew Fickett on the horizon. That's probably on hold for now. McKee suggests that's a break for Fickett, whom he says he'll smash too.

Jean Pascal Nonito Donaire

How to Wrap Your Hands for BoxingHow to Wrap Your Hands for Boxing

Derek Roche shows how to wrap your hands for boxing.

Derek Roche shows how to wrap your hands for boxing.

Chris John Manny Pacquiao

After lackluster loss to Oliveira, Escudero cut by the UFC

After his less-than-thrilling loss to Charles Oliveira, "The Ultimate Fighter" winner Efrain Escudero has been cut from the UFC. He Tweeted the news, and said that he was talking to Strikeforce and Bellator.

When Escudero won Season 8 of "The Ultimate Fighter," he looked like a fighter with unlimited potential. But between that win over Phillippe Nover for the TUF title and the loss to Oliveira, Escudero lost something. He looked tentative in the Oliveira match before getting submitted. The fighter who had TKO'ed Cole Miller missed weight and mugged for the crowd instead of working to win the fight. 

Escudero is just the second TUF winner to be cut by the organization. Travis Lutter, who blew weight before his scheduled title bout with Anderson Silva, is the other.

Israel Vasquez Chris John

Jim Miller Beats Gleison Tibau at UFC Fight Night 22

by Michael David SmithAs he continues to climb up the lightweight ladder, Jim Miller notched another big win Wednesday night with a hard-fought decision over Gleison Tibau fought at UFC Fight Night 22.

The judges scored the fight 30-27, 30-27 and 29-28 for Miller, and although the fight was a little closer than those scores would suggest, it was still a very good showing for Miller, who is now 18-2, with his only two losses coming by decision to the two best lightweights in the world, Frankie Edgar and Gray Maynard.

 

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Felix Sturm Amir Khan

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Neil Grove, Cole Konrad Advance at Bellator 29

by Michael David SmithWith two fights down and one to go, Neil Grove is tearing through the Bellator Fighting Championships heavyweight tournament. Next he'll have to face Cole Konrad, who has been winning less dynamic fights, in the tournament final.

Grove destroyed Alexey Olenik Thursday night, whacking Olenik with a head kick, pouncing on him on the ground and finishing the fight with a series of hammer fists that led the referee to call it off after just 45 seconds of fighting. It was the second first-round TKO for Grove in the Bellator tournament; he previously defeated Eddie Sanchez by first-round TKO in the quarterfinals.

"If you fight you come out to win, not to score points," Grove said. "My job is to finish the fight quite quickly."

 

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Nonito Donaire Fernando Montiel

Heath and 'JT Money' might be turning the corner after MFC 26

Over the years it's been difficult to talk any sense into guys like Jesse Taylor and David Heath. There's no arguing that they both have talent. The UFC recognized that. Taylor was a cast member during Season 7 of "The Ultimate Fighter" and Heath fought five times for the promotion. But too often they've both been their own worst enemies. It's part of the reason they were both fighting in Edmonton tonight. The good news is both are showing signs of wising up. Taylor grinded out a tough win over Tom Watson while Heath scored a spectacular TKO finish of Solomon Hutcherson.

Taylor is 14 fights removed from his stint on TUF 7 but he's still trying to erase the stigma of getting booted off the show. He was one fight shy of going for the TUF 7 title and a guaranteed contract with the promotion. After a semifinals win, he decided to celebrate his spot by going out for a night on the town in Las Vegas. Sin City got the best of him. After a night of partying, he arrived the Palace Station Hotel and kicked out a limousine window. Once inside the casino, owned by the Fertittas (they also own the UFC), Taylor harassed employees and customers. In a painful final episode, Taylor begged for forgiveness but was sent packing by UFC owner Dana White.

Heath did nothing that serious but his stubbornness cost him his job and sent him packing for the minors. He's tiny for a light heavyweight but insisted on trying to compete with the big boys. Heath bit off a little more than he could chew when he faced Renato "Babalu" Sobral at UFC 74.

Before the fight, Heath (pictured at the weigh-in) insulted the Brazilian's wife. As a result, Babalu choked out Heath and then refused to let go of the anaconda choke for a few extra seconds. Babalu was booted from the promotion and Heath lasted one more fight in the UFC but got thrown around like a rag doll by Tim Boetsch.

It took two years and a 6-3 record in lesser promotions for Heath to finally realize middleweight is where he should be fighting. The revelation paid off tonight against Hutcherson. It didn't happen easily though.

Hutcherson scored a takedown early in the first and kept Heath on his back for the remainder of the round. But Heath wasn't entirely helpless. He let loose a huge elbow from the bottom that broke Hutcherson's nose which starting squirting blood. Whether it was seeing his own blood or the pain, Hutcherson was a different fighter in the second.

Heath's boxing took over. The Californian jumped into a beautifully timed Superman punch (pictured above) that floored Hutcherson. He pounded away with four more hammerfists that bounced Hutcherson's head off the canvas.

Heath still showboats too much and takes way too many shots but he's going to win some fights down at 185 pounds.

Taylor still has to work on his stamina but he was overpowering for 12-of-15 minutes against Watson. "JT Money" took the Jackson's Submission fighter down whenever he wanted. He worked what looked like a nasty rear-naked choke for over a minute in the second but Watson survived. The takedowns and top control led to a unanimous decision win, 30-26 on all cards. It was Taylor's 17th win.

The big upset of the night came in the main event where MFC favorite Ryan Ford was shocked by Douglas Lima (pictured below on the left). MFC president Mark Pavelich suggested that Ford was going to get another shot at 170 champion Pat Healy with a victory. That won't happen now. Lima gave Ford a grappling lesson and arm-barred him at 0:48 of the second round.

In a one-sided affair, Dwayne Lewis destroyed former UFC fighter Mike Nickels. Lewis caught Nickels with an early uppercut. Nickels crumbled to the mat and turtled up. For some reason, the referee allowed Lewis to get off 10 more shots before stopping the fight at 1:30 of the first.  

Giovani Segura Vic Darchinyan

How to Throw a Short Left UppercutHow to Throw a Short Left Uppercut

The short left uppercut, a real power shot here which travels as few as 3 inches and as such is a classic infighting punch! If this left uppercut lands, it's a heartbreaker for the opponent! Pure devastation!

The short left uppercut, a real power shot here which travels as few as 3 inches and as such is a classic infighting punch! If this left uppercut lands, it's a heartbreaker for the opponent! Pure devastation!

Nonito Donaire Fernando Montiel

UFC Fight Night 22 Marquardt vs. Palhares Weigh-In Video

by Michael David SmithNate Marquardt will weigh in today for UFC Fight Night 22.All 20 fighters stepping into the Octagon Wednesday night at UFC Fight Night 22 will first step on the scale at Tuesday's weigh-in, and if you can't be there at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas, you can watch live right here at MMAFighting.com.

In the main event, middleweights Nate Marquardt and Rousimar Palhares will have to make the 186-pound limit.

The weigh-in begins at 5 PM ET and the video is below. To read the results, click here.

 

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Juan Manuel Marquez Sergio Martinez

Who Deserves To Be In That Torch-Pass Match With Pacquiao?

When Manny Pacquiao gave Oscar dela Hoya the beating that would send the latter into retirement, many viewed the match as a symbolic “passing of the torch” from dela Hoya, boxing’s most recognizable superstar, to Pacquiao, a younger pugilist who has already taken the boxing world by storm and is on his way to becoming a transcendental star himself.

But with a Pacquiao retirement looming at the horizon because of politics and all, who is that young fighter that deserves to be the other half of Pacquiao’s last professional match? Who should be worthy of the privilege to fight Pacquiao in that figurative passing of the torch?

This writer gathered the thoughts of some of the sport’s known insiders and movers and here’s what they say:

Gary Andrew Poole, TIME Magazine contributor, award-winning journalist, and author of PacMan: Behind the Scenes with Manny Pacquiao–the Greatest Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World

If Pacquiao does not fight Mayweather, I want his last fight to be with Juan Manuel Marquez. As for the “passing of the torch”, I don’t think there is an obvious answer.

Does Berto fit? Not really. Bradley. I don’t think so. Amir Khan? No. That’s not to say that there aren’t good prospects. This Frankie Gomez kid has impressed me, but he is really young and only had a handful of fights. These are all good fighters, sure.

Chuck Liddell "I'm meeting Dana White this week to talk about my future" - Chuck Liddel

Chuck Liddell spoke to Marcos our Fight Hub TV fight correspondent about what he has been doing lately. He also touched on the subject of what he will do regarding his future as he let us know that he will be meeting Dana White this week to decide what he will do, with a announcement in the next month or two.

Giovani Segura Vic Darchinyan Steve Molitor Celestino Caballero

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Reports emerge that Sonnen failed his UFC 117 drug test

Chael Sonnen had a career-defining performance in his challenge for the middleweight title at UFC 117 on Aug. 7 in Oakland, Calif. He came within two minutes of pulling off one of the biggest upsets in mixed martial arts history against Anderson Silva, winning the first four rounds until being submitted at 3:10 of the fifth at Oracle Arena.That feel-good story may be just about all wiped out by the news that Sonnen failed his post-fight drug test, according to a report on Sherdog.com. George Dodd, executive officer of the California State Athletic Commission, told Sherdog's Greg Savage on Saturday that Sonnen had failed his post-fight urinalysis."(Sonnen) received his notice yesterday," Dodd told Sherdog.com shortly after the Shane Mosley-Sergio Mora boxing match ended Saturday night in Los Angeles.Dodd didn't specify what substance Sonnen had tested positive for, but he said that all fighters on the card passed the tests for drugs of abuse, such as cocaine and marijuana, so the assumption is that Sonnen's failed test involves a performance-enhancing drug. Dodd told Savage the rest of the UFC 117 fighters tested were cleared.[Related: Key MMA fight ends in disappointment all around]MMA Junkie.com pointed out that there had been some message board chatter about Sonnen's appearance at UFC 117. For the Silva fight (weigh-in photo) and his fight at UFC 109 (weigh-in photo) against Nate Marquardt, Sonnen had an unusual amount of back acne. The scarring wasn't present in his previous fight at UFC 104 against Yushin Okami (weigh-in photo). "Backne" is one of the numerous side effects of steroid usage, though Dr. Johnny Benjamin, a medical consultant for MMA Junkie, also pointed out that there are other causes of the acne issue.Sonnen was tentatively scheduled to face Silva in a rematch in early 2011. If the report is true, expect at least a nine-month suspension to be handed down by California. If Sonnen accepts the penalty and doesn't appeal, he could be back in the Octagon by June. That means someone will get a chance to stand-in for a title shot against Silva. Nate Marquardt beat Rousimar Palhares this week to put himself back in the mix. With a win over Okami at UFC 122 in November, Vitor Belfort, scheduled on several occasions to face Silva in the past, could also be a candidate.Other popular stories on Yahoo! Sports: • Photo: Ochocinco's new ride looks a lot like a Batmobile• Video: Soccer player's incredibly unlucky goal • Video: Michigan State tops Notre Dame in OT with crazy last-second play

Giovani Segura Vic Darchinyan Steve Molitor Celestino Caballero

Oliveira wins over Escudero with third-round tap at UFN 22

Charles Oliveira continued his comet-like trajectory with a third-round submission of "The Ultimate Fighter" winner Efrain Escudero at Ultimate Fight Night 22.  In the first round, Oliveira seemed frustrated by Escudero's defense. Escudero held off a takedown and held Oliveira in the clinch. When the two finally went to the ground, Escudero ended up on top. Near the end of the round, Escudero finally threw some big elbows from the top.Oliveira continued to work for the takedown in the second round, but again, Escudero took Oliveira's back when the two hit the canvas. When they returned to their feet, Oliveira had the better stand-up. He was able to land leg kick after leg kick, without receiving many counters from Escudero.Both fighters were the recipients of groin shots early in the third round. Escudero walked his off, but it took Oliveira a while to recover. When the fight was restarted, Oliveira drove Escudero into the fence and then threw him down. Escudero reached for Oliveira's leg, which opened the door. Oliveira jumped on his back and sunk in a tight, standing rear-naked choke, forcing a tap from Escudero at 2:25 into the third round.  Oliveira, a 20-year-old from Brazil, first turned heads at UFC Live on Versus 2, where he armbarred Darrin Elkins in just 0:41 seconds.

Amir Khan Roman Gonzales Oscar DeLa Hoya Giovani Segura

TUF 12 preview: Big names galore pitch 'The Heel v. The Hero'

Countdown to TUF 12UltimateFighter.comSee More:  TUF 12 • Georges St Pierre • Josh Koscheck • lightweights
You could see this storyline coming from a mile away. Josh Koscheck and Georges St. Pierre are the coaches for Season 12 of "The Ultimate Fighter" and battle lines have been drawn. Do you side with the brash, cocky dude or the humble, respectful one? In this preview video, the UFC brings on board some of its biggest stars like Randy Couture, Kenny FLorian, Matt Hughes, B.J. Penn and Jon Jones to talk about why they love the show. Other fighters like Dan Hardy, Ryan Bader and Chael Sonnen select which coach they think will do the best job. Bader likes Koscheck. Sonnen chooses GSP. Hardy goes one further saying if he were on Koscheck's team he'd ask to leave. It looks like another good season with plenty of heat and even an appearance by Mike Tyson!   TUF 12 debuts next Wednesday following Ultimate Fight Night 22 from Austin, Tx.

James Toney Jean Pascal Nonito Donaire Fernando Montiel

Chael Sonnen to Appeal Positive UFC 117 Drug Test

Despite admitting to taking a banned substance, UFC middleweight Chael Sonnen will appeal his failed drug test to the California State Athletic Commission which showed high testosterone levels following his UFC 117 loss to middleweight champ Anderson Silva on Aug. 7.

Jean Pascal Nonito Donaire Fernando Montiel Jorge Arce

Jim Miller Beats Gleison Tibau at UFC Fight Night 22

by Michael David SmithAs he continues to climb up the lightweight ladder, Jim Miller notched another big win Wednesday night with a hard-fought decision over Gleison Tibau fought at UFC Fight Night 22.

The judges scored the fight 30-27, 30-27 and 29-28 for Miller, and although the fight was a little closer than those scores would suggest, it was still a very good showing for Miller, who is now 18-2, with his only two losses coming by decision to the two best lightweights in the world, Frankie Edgar and Gray Maynard. Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Juan Manuel Lopez Andre Ward David Haye Antonio Margarito

Neil Grove tore through Alekey Oleinik at Bellator

The heavyweight semifinals at Bellator got started with a bang at The Rave in Milwaukee on Thursday night. Neil Grove must be a busy man, because he wasted no time in TKOing Alekey Oleinik. With that win, Grove earned a spot in the finals of the Bellator heavyweight tournament. Grove wobbled Oleinik early with a body kick, sending him to the canvas at The Rave in Milwaukee, and then followed up with punch after punch, winning in just 45 seconds.

Rafael Marquez Israel Vasquez Chris John Manny Pacquiao

Mid-Range Right UppercutMid-Range Right Uppercut

Learn the technique of the mid-range right uppercut and successfully bisect the guard of any opponent, often with devastating results!Learn the technique of the mid-range right uppercut and successfully bisect the guard of any opponent, often with devastating results!

Floyd Mayweather Paul Williams Bernard Hopkins Shane Mosley