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Feb 7, 2006
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UFC 87: fight card

What: UFC 87
When: Aug 9, ‘08
Where: Target Center in Minneapolis, MN
Watch: Pay Per View

Here’s the latest on UFC 87: Seek & Destroy:

Georges St. Pierre vs. Jon Fitch for the UFC welterweight title

Brock Lesnar vs. Heath Herring

Kenny Florian vs. Roger Huerta
Cheick Kongo vs. Dan Evensen
Demian Maia vs. Jason MacDonald

Tamdan McCrory vs. Luke Cummo
 
Feb 7, 2006
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CBS won’t be a reality for Reality Kings

Aficionados of adult feature entertainment will be saddened to learn that popular Internet pornography production company Reality Kings will not be allowed as a sponsor of Kimbo Slice for EliteXC’s first-ever CBS telecast on May 31.

Reality Kings is a company that operates many highly-trafficked pornographic web sites and has been very visible as a sponsor for Slice’s previous fights. Many people had been wondering whether or not the company would play a visible role during the CBS telecast for Slice’s fight next Saturday vs. James Thompson. However, EliteXC Live Events President Gary Shaw made it clear in a response to a question by CBSSports.com’s Denny Burkholder during a conference call that took place on Thursday that Reality Kings will not be seen on CBS.

“One of Kimbo’s sponsors is Reality Kings, and Reality Kings operates a number of pornographic Web sites,” asked Burkholder. “Was there ever any discussion of banning Reality Kings from sponsoring Kimbo on the CBS show due to being on primetime network TV?”

“Yes, Reality Kings will not be on his clothing,” Shaw disclosed.

According to Shaw, the decision to prevent Reality Kings from being a visible sponsor was a joint one between CBS and EliteXC.

“We understand what’s socially responsible, and CBS has a very high standard for standards and practices,” he said. “And every logo we put on or whatever we do goes through CBS in their standards and practices.”

Fighters involved with next Saturday’s CBS debut have been signing sponsorship deals for record amounts. FiveOuncesOfPain.com has spoken to several fighters who have confirmed that “EliteXC: Primetime” will represent their career-high in sponsorships for a fight. And while things have been great for many of the fighters involved with the card, there have been some limitations placed on sponsorships.

Several managers contacted by Five Ounces Of Pain have informed us that while fighters can wear hats during their cage-walk entrance, they must wear an EliteXC hat while in the cage during their post-fight interview. The respective corner of a fighter also cannot drape a banner on the inside of the cage. Banners can only be displayed on the outside of the cage and can only advertise the fight camp that the fighter is representing. This site was also the first to report that EliteXC has banned Affliction-labeled clothing.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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NATE MARQUARDT'S UFC 85 FIGHT JOURNAL PT. 3

This has been the hardest week of my preparation for this fight (with Thales Leites), yet. Last Saturday, we drove back from our friend's place in Albuquerque where we stay (who happens to make fun of me for writing these journal entries). It's about a six-hour drive. I could fly, but driving is cheaper considering my wife comes with me and we bring our dog.



Sunday everyone started showing up here in Denver. Rashad Evans, Georges St. Pierre, Dave Louiseau and coaches Jon Chambers and Phil Nurse. Rashad stayed at our house and we put the other guys up at a hotel near the gym.



This week, we sparred four days in a row, two sessions of conditioning, two sessions of mitts, one wrestling practice and two MMA practices. I wouldn't normally advise anyone to spar four days in a row because every day that you spar consecutively you get a little dumber, but I wanted to make the most of my training with these guys in town this week. Friday was an easy day of grappling and more conditioning.



I can't wait to watch my teammates, Keith and Shane, do their thing. I know they will both do great! Also, it will be really good for me to be in that atmosphere this close to my fight. I will be able to visualize myself in there and it will get me pumped up and even more excited to fight.



I have one more hard week of training before I slow down to peak. I am and will be ready on June 7!



----------------------------



Nate Marquardt faces Thales Leites at UFC 85 on June 7 at the O2 Arena in London. You can check out his personal websites at NateMarquardt.com and myspace.com/natemarquardt. He has his own academy in Denver called High Altitude Martial Arts and also trains at T’s KO Fight Club in Denver and at Jackson’s MMA in Albuquerque, N.M. Marquardt is sponsored by Tapout and is currently ranked as the No. 5 middleweight fighter in the world by MMAWeekly.com
 
Feb 7, 2006
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MMA HOTBED, ASU REINSTATES WRESTLING PROGRAM

Less than two week ago, Arizona State University discontinued its men’s wrestling program, along with two other varsity sports, men’s tennis and men’s swimming.



At the time, according to ASU’s Vice President of University Athletics, Lisa Love, “These three sports were selected with the following criteria: financial impact, potential competitive success, conference/regional support and gender equity. Our revenue trajectory has been positive, however, our ongoing financial challenges have been well documented by the media. The decision to discontinue sport programs is a last resort, yet necessary."



It didn’t take long for wrestling supporters to act. Now, just 10 day later, Arizona State wrestling boosters have raised the necessary $8 million in donations to revive the program.



Known as a recent hotbed for producing mixed martial arts fighters, former Arizona State wrestlers C.B. Dollaway, Mark Munoz, Ryan Bader, and Aaron Simpson have combined for a total of 16 victories in MMA, with zero defeats.



The program was fully reinstated on Friday according to AZCentral.com.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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TOQUINHO EXCITED ABOUT DEBUT AT UFC 84

From humble beginnings to Jiu-Jitsu phenom, Rousimar Palhares has positioned himself as one of the best prospects out of Brazilian Top Team today.

“I was born into a simple and humble family from the countryside of Brazil. I’ve been working since I was seven years old to help with my family,” revealed Palhares. “Our family was really poor; sometimes we didn’t have enough food for the whole family.”

Palhares has been given the nickname of “Toquinho,” which roughly translates to ‘shorty.’ Moniker aside, this Brazilian standout is not short on talent. The 185-pound fighter claimed the Fury Fighting Championship middleweight title after defeating Flavio Mura, Pan-Am Jiu-Jitsu champion Fabio Negao, and Chute Boxe’s Daniel Acacio in impressive tournament action.

“I am very grateful and lucky to have the opportunity to train with Brazilian Top Team. I have made a lot of friends here; they have helped me with everything that I need. I have the opportunity to train with great fighters and I learn something new every day.”

Palhares earned his Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt under former UFC champion Murilo Bustamante and Bebeo Duarte. Experts in martial arts touted Toquinho as one of the most naturally gifted grapplers today. His jiu-jitsu has transitioned well into MMA and his past opponents succumbed to his aggressive style and ground prowess.

Having spent his entire career competing in Brazil, Palhares will venture out of his native country to make his Octagon debut at UFC 84 on Saturday. After considering offers from organizations in Japan and the U.S., he and his management team chose to sign with the largest MMA promotion in North America.

“It is my dream to be in the UFC. I have the chance to test my techniques and skills. I can fight with the best fighters. I want to be a UFC champion,” said Palhares. “I look up to all of the best fighters in the world; it doesn’t matter where they come from. My dream is to be on top beside them.”

He arrived in the U.S. last Wednesday, a week and a half prior to his bout, to acclimate himself to his new surroundings and complete his training.

“I am finishing my training for this fight now and everything has been very good. I trained very hard and didn’t sustain any injuries. I am a little bit excited because I am realizing my dream; to fight in the UFC,” revealed Palhares. “I am confident in my game and everything that I have been training in with my team.”

Going into this fight, he will benefit from having a former Octagon champion in his corner. Bustamante claimed the promotion’s 185-pound title when he finished Dave Menne with strikes at UFC 35. The Brazilian Top Team leader successfully defended his belt once, submitting Matt Lindland in his subsequent outing. Bustamante would later vacate his title and sign with the now defunct Pride Fighting Championships.

“He is of great help,” complimented Palhares. “Murilo is trying to teach me not only how to fight, but also how this business works.”

Standing across from him at UFC 84 will be Ivan Salaverry. The Team Punishment fighter is a seasoned veteran who holds notable wins over Joe Riggs and Andrei Semenov and has had twice as many fights as his Brazilian counterpart. Salaverry is coming off of a loss to Terry Martin from almost a year ago.

“He is a great fighter with much more experience than me. I respect him a lot and I know that it will be a difficult fight, just the way I like it,” commented Palhares about his opponent. “(I do not see any weaknesses in him), I think he does everything well. He is a complete fighter.

“I am ready to fight anywhere, standing or on the ground. At Brazilian Top Team, we train to be able to handle all the situations that can happen during the fights. My training makes me very comfortable for any fight,” he added.

With Anderson Silva currently dominating the 185-pound division, the UFC is continually looking for new talent that can contend for the middleweight title. Palhares will fulfill one of his career dreams when he makes his Octagon debut at UFC 84. "Toquinho" hopes to make a big impression and maybe one day challenge for the title.

“I have been working very hard to make my dream come true. I hope I am able to give a good fight in the UFC. I want to thank everybody that has kept their fingers crossed for me. I just want to do my best for the fans.”
 
Feb 7, 2006
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HEATH HERRING TO FACE BROCK LESNAR AT UFC 87

MMAWeekly.com has confirmed that Heath Herring has agreed to fight Brock Lesnar at UFC 87 on Aug. 9 when the Ultimate Fighting Championship makes its debut in Minneapolis, Minn.

Lesnar was originally slated to face UFC Hall of Famer Mark Coleman in the main event of UFC 87. Coleman, however, suffered a torn medial collateral ligament in training, which will sideline him for at least six weeks. He was forced to withdraw from the bout with Lesnar due to the injury.

Herring has been on a roller coaster ride since his UFC debut in January of 2007. The former Pride heavyweight title contender has gone 2-2 in the Octagon, most recently defeating Cheick Kongo at UFC 82 in Columbus, Ohio.

Lesnar had a less than stellar Octagon debut, losing to former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir via kneebar at UFC 81 in Las Vegas earlier this year.

With the withdrawal of Coleman, the UFC acted swiftly, signing a new main event bout with welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre, fresh off winning the title at UFC 82, making the first defense of his second reign as champion when he faces No. 1 contender Jon Fitch.

Roger Huerta and Kenny Florian will also square off at UFC 87. The bout, according to the promotion’s president, Dana White, will likely decide the next contender to the UFC lightweight title being contested on Saturday night at UFC 84 between current champion B.J. Penn and former champion Sean Sherk.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Silva, Palhares, Reljic and Gouveia secure $75K UFC 84 bonuses

Wanderlei Silva, Rousimar Palhares, Goran Reljic and Wilson Gouveia all secured $75,000 "fight night" bonuses stemming from Saturday's UFC 84 event, MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) has confirmed.

The 11-fight event took place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. The bonus winners were revealed in a post-fight press conference.

Silva earned the Knockout of the Night bonus, Palhares earned the Submission of the Night bonus, and Reljic and Gouveia each picked up Fight of the Night honors.

Silva rebounded from a three-fight losing streak in spectacular fashion, battering opponent Keithe Jardine with a series of blows that prompted a TKO stoppage just 36 seconds in the first round.

UFC newcomer Palhares dominated his fight with Ivan Salaverry and went to work early for the submission. He secured the rear-naked choke and transitioned into an arm-bar to force the stoppage at 2:36 of the first round.

Reljic and Gouveia split Fight of the Night honors for their televised performance. Reljic posted his eighth straight victory -- and snapped Gouveia's four-fight win streak in the UFC -- with a TKO at 3:15 of the second round.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Mac Danzig vs. Clay Guida at UFC 87

"The Ultimate Fighter 6" winner Mac Danzig (18-4-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) will look to continue his ascent in the UFC's lightweight division when he meets Clay Guida (23-9 MMA, 3-3 UFC) at UFC 87.

A source close to Guida told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) that the fighters recently agreed to the August bout.

UFC 87, which now features a main event between UFC welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre and top contender Jon Fitch, takes place Aug. 9 at the Target Center in Minneapolis.

Danzig, a former King of the Cage champ who dominated the sixth season of "TUF," defeated Tommy Speer at the show's live finale. He then dropped from welterweight to lightweight at UFC 83 and defeated Canadian Mark Bocek via third-round submission. It was his 10th submission victory -- and 14th stoppage -- in 18 career victories.

As for the perpetually tested Guida, he gets another tough fight in the UFC. Although 3-3 in the organizatiom, the losses have come to notables Din Thomas, Tyson Griffin and Roger Huerta. He most recently defeated Samy Schiavo at UFC Fight Night 13 with a first-round TKO. Guida, a former Strikeforce champ, will look to put together his first back-to-back wins in the UFC.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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CRUNKILTON OUT; CERRONE GETS NEW WEC 34 FOE

Richard Crunkilton is out of his planned World Extreme Cagefighting 34 bout against Donald Cerrone. Crunkilton suffered an injury that will keep him out of the June 1 fight at the Arco Arena in Sacramento, Calif.

MMAWeekly.com has learned from sources close to the organization that local California fighter Danny Castillo will be tapped to replace Crunkilton. Castillo is undefeated as a professional fighter, winning all four of his bouts. He most recently competed at Palace Fighting Championships 7 in March of this year.

Cerrone is also undefeated as a professional fighter, winning seven bouts, and having one “no contest” on his record. He tested positive for a diuretic – a banned substance – following his WEC debut against Kenneth Alexander in Las Vegas. He had initially defeated Alexander, but was subsequently suspended for eight months, fined $2,400, and had his win changed to a no contest, due to the positive drug test result.

Following his suspension, Cerrone told MMAWeekly.com, “I just want to get past this and move on... get back to training and come back stronger and better.”

In more recent comments, he said, “I’m actually glad the commission suspended me because it means they’re looking out for us, trying to keep it safe. I mean, I’m not happy that I got suspended, of course, but I’m glad they’re looking out for us.

“It’s allowed me time to work on my game. I’ve been training really hard at (Greg) Jackson’s and I’m working with Duane Ludwig, as well.”

WEC 34 is headline by the promotion’s featherweight champion, Urijah Faber, defending his belt against former UFC lightweight champion Jens Pulver. Newly crowned bantamweight champion Miguel Torres will also make the first defense of his belt on the card when he faces Yoshiro Maeda.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Tito Ortiz offered UFC contract prior to UFC 84

FiveOuncesOfPain.com was informed by Rear Naked Radio, a weekly MMA show heard every Saturday from 7-9 p.m. CT on Live 105.3 FM in Dallas, that former UFC light heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz was offered a contract by the UFC in the days leading up to last night’s fight against Lyoto Machida.

While listening to the initial portion of an audio clip forwarded by Rear Naked Radio, Ortiz begins to talk about possible options outside of the UFC.

“Either I go to Affliction; either I got to possibly something with De La Hoya; or start something on my own; HDNet; I mean there are so many opportunities for me,” said Ortiz. “Lorenzo (Ferttita) came up to me, actually, a day before the weigh-in and he’s like ‘UFC is the place you need to stay. You need to be here. We need you here.” And he was giving me the old fluff deal…”

Ortiz’s girlfriend, Jenna Jameson, then interjected and revealed that Ortiz had even received a contract offer. Rear Naked Radio followed up the revelation by asking Ortiz directly whether that was in fact the case.

“Yeah, they tried to,” Ortiz confirmed. “They try to just like, I don’t want to say bully… (But) they were trying to get my mind off of it. Then not inviting me to the press conference, and I’m just like, these guys don’t have no interest in me. For Dana (White) to sit there and say these companies are going to drop out quick; that they’ll pay their fighters and they’ll be done, we’ll see. We’ll see in this next year what really happens.”

Special thanks to Rear Naked Radio for making the audio available to us.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Dana White not ruling out Georges St. Pierre vs. B.J. Penn II

Kevin Iole of Yahoo! is indicating that UFC president Dana White isn’t ruling out lightweight champion B.J. Penn’s proposal to move back up to welterweight in order to engage Georges St. Pierre in a rematch:

White has long discouraged Penn from jumping divisions and urged him to clean out the lightweights before thinking of a return to welterweight.

And while White wouldn’t mind seeing Penn make one last defense against the winner of the planned Aug. 9 bout between Kenny Florian and Roger Huerta, he conceded at Saturday’s postfight news conference it may be time for Penn-St. Pierre II.

“I think there’s one more interesting fight for him (at lightweight), but it isn’t something I wouldn’t talk to him about,” White said of a potential fight with St. Pierre.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Andrei Meets The Press....

MMAPayout.com received a report that free agent heavyweight superstar Andrei Arlovski will be holding a media day/work out session this coming Tuesday the 27th in Los Angeles. Wild Card Gym in Hollywood will be the site of the presser/workout as Andrei works with famed boxing trainer Freddie Roach and strength and conditioning coach Alex Ariza for the assembled members of the media.

It is likely that this media day will announce Andrei's future plans, heavily rumored to be a contract to fight for Affliction. Speculation has been rampant that Arlovski will sign with the Affliction promotion to face Ben Rothwell on their July 19th card at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Faber Readies Himself for Lil’ Evil

Come June 1, Urijah Faber (Pictures) tangles with Jens Pulver (Pictures) on the biggest stage of his career. In his hometown. Putting his World Extreme Cagefighting belt on the line. And he's taking on a legend, to boot.

But for Faber, when the fight starts and he collides with his most accomplished foe yet, "The California Kid" is the only one who'll really know what he'll be doing on a second-to-second basis.

And that's just how he likes it.

As fans at Sacramento's Arco Arena are served up the first nationally televised 145-pound super fight, Faber knows he's in against a dangerous guy in "Lil' Evil." Pulver, unbeaten at 145, spent much of his career tackling the elite of the 155-pound division.

"He's got some dangerous striking. I just kinda take it as it goes," Faber said. "You never know what to expect from a guy until you're standing right in front of him. Basically, it's who's going to impose their will. Applying your game has a lot to do with it. I don't want a clean one to the jaw. But other than that, it's business as usual."

Business has been good lately for Faber, who made four WEC title defenses in 2007, riding the rising wave of the sport's newfound mainstream success while helping build the WEC as its star attraction. He capped off the year with a second-round submission of Jeff Curran (Pictures), whose 40-fight ledger is dotted with a who's who of opponents, many of them much bigger than Faber.

And he beat Curran after near disaster in the first round. Mounted early in the bout, Faber rode out the round and battled his way out of a rear-naked choke that seemed inevitable from Curran, a jiu-jitsu black belt and respected submissions whiz, except to those who've seen Faber turn the tide on previous occasions.

In the second, Faber roughed up Curran with in-close striking, then closed the deal with a guillotine choke. It was over nearly as quickly as the momentum had shifted.

It's that kind of all-in mentality that makes Faber fun to watch, and, at times, seem like an unstoppable force, given his penchant for both escaping bad positions and punishing opponents with cruel accuracy when given the slightest opening. The software in his brain makes on-the-fly adjustments -- witness the leg trip Curran executed on him in the opening moments to take him down, leading into the lengthy choke battle where Faber stalemated him. In the second round, Curran tried the exact same takedown, from the same angle as the first, but Faber easily stymied it and ended the fight moments later.

Against Pulver, Faber faces a challenger with a wicked left hand, upper-body strength to match his own, and a guy who's traveled enough hard roads to make him a veteran's veteran.

"You know, I always train for five rounds. I'm not really changing it up too much," he said when asked how long the Pulver bout might go. "I think it's possible it could go a lot further, but it's also possible it could end quickly. I'm (sparring) with lefties and getting a feel for that."

Pulver and Faber have had a relatively subdued prefight buildup, somewhat tame compared to his animus for Curran, who made no bones about questioning Faber's credentials.

"He's somebody that's been in the sport a long time. I just kinda call it like I see it," Faber explained of the lack of verbal sparring between he and Pulver. "I'm not a guy to talk trash. Unless I really have something to say, I won't say it. Jens definitely has my respect. He's a great fighter."

A walk-on at U.C. Davis, Faber set the all-time career record for wins there, then turned pro in 2003. There are wrestlers with better collegiate pedigrees, jiu-jitsu guys with credentials he'll never have and plenty of strikers who'll score more knockouts on the feet. But few fighters in the game today put it all together as well as Faber, who intrinsically understands the subtle transitions between takedowns, positioning, scrambling and letting the blows fly, particularly when he has an opponent on his back.

He has an intrinsic knack for overwhelming people, and may be as physically imposing as any 145-pounder in the game.

Faber's application of these skills can be dizzying at times, at least to the casual eye, and even to the more knowledgeable fight enthusiast. He flows from one position to another, exploding out of potentially compromising ones, forever plying his advantages and exploiting them with ruthless efficiency. Sometimes he backtracks and changes techniques in mid-move.

It is as though he is a pianist ripping through the music at triple speed, hitting each note correctly, but flaunting the conventional wisdom of how the piece should be played.

And in MMA, setting a breakneck pace is the quickest way to break the opponent's will.

That approach has made Faber, with a gaudy 20-1 ledger, one of the game's new stars. His style is a rare combination of fan-friendly and highly skilled, enough to make new viewers come back for more while also satisfying purists.

Yet it's easy to overlook Faber's technical proficiencies for the fact that he seems to end fights with such vicious finishing panache. Take the eye-socket-busting elbow he dropped on Joe Pearson (Pictures) at last year's WEC title defense -- it traveled about a foot.

Or the three chokehold wins that followed against Chance Farrar (Pictures), Dominick Cruz and Curran, finishing moves that ended matches with slam-bang abruptness. For a former wrestler, he's doing pretty good with the submissions and also spent time in Hawaii recently training with UFC lightweight boss B.J. Penn (Pictures). His developing standup game may be underrated as well for the simple fact that nobody's been able to keep him on his feet for long. You may want to, but Faber is there, in your face, flitting and feinting, forcing the issue, and suddenly, he's got you on the mat -- water to a shark.

Pulver may have the goods to turn the trick, but even then, Faber may still have some surprises, according to training partner Charlie Valencia (Pictures).

Valencia, who fights on the June 1 undercard against Cruz, also fought Faber in May 2006, losing via first-round TKO. Since then, he's dropped to 135 and been battling the bantams in the WEC.

"Urijah's physically strong, but I think his mental strength is where he beats a lot of people," said Valencia. "He's very mentally strong. There's not any position he hasn't been in and he's not aware of what to do. A lot of people think his strength is his wrestling. People who don‘t train with him think he's a straight-up wrestler, but he does everything well."

Faber's standup is probably the least-utilized aspect of his game. Typically he'll throw a strike or two before closing the distance and getting the fight to the ground. But while not known for standup prowess, he commits to it like he does everything else -- hard.

Valencia said that the champion's game has been improving dramatically in that area as well.

"His standup has improved tremendously since last time I came up here. I don't understand how people can get like that," Valencia added. "He's a phenomenal athlete."

But Faber's strengths may have met their equal here. Pulver spent years fighting bigger men, is exceptionally strong at 145 and honed his skills in the hardcore environment of Team Miletich, a place where semi-weekly beatings are doled out among pros that read like a who's-who of MMA. You may puke, cry, swear you'll never come back, but if you can hang there, you can fight anywhere.

Pulver also dabbled in pro boxing in 2004, going 4-0 with three knockouts. He's fought in Japan and beat B.J. Penn by decision in 2002 when he was a 3-1 underdog despite being champion (Pulver lost via submission in the long-awaited Penn rematch last year). Pulver made quick work of Cub Swanson (Pictures) -- a 10-1 contender at the time -- in his WEC debut in December, winning via choke in 35 seconds.

He has been bounced around and written off on many occasions, yet always comes back. And with the emergence of the 145 division as a viable entity, it's as though Pulver finally has solid footing after the long road he's traveled. With his powerful striking and solid grappling, he could be the exact type of guy to out-Faber Faber.

UFC lightweight Cole Miller (Pictures) figures it's a pick-em fight.

"Clearly Urijah's strength is his ability to fight his best consistently. The guy finds himself in bad situations in every fight and always gets out and comes out on top to get the win. Jens' strength is that he himself is undefeated at 145, but has fought many times at 155 and higher against some of the top competition in the deepest division in the world -- lightweight. He won't have a problem competing with Urijah Faber at featherweight," Miller said. "However, I do not know who will win. I think that you can never count the champion out, and simply because he's the defending champ, I give Faber a 51 percent chance to Pulver's 49 percent. However, if Urijah didn't wield the belt, I'd say it was 50-50."

That little extra something.

Champions find it, dig it out in a crisis.

On June 1, whoever leaves with the WEC featherweight belt may be the guy who does just that.
 
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For Munoz, WEC Debut is Just the Beginning

When he enters the cage June 1 on the WEC undercard, Mark Munoz (Pictures) will be yet another obscure mixed martial artist hoping to change his status with a breakout performance. Facing 13-3 Chuck Grigsby, Munoz will be eyeing a 6-foot-6 foe -- who went 8-1 last year alone -- with vast advantages in standup striking. On paper, it seems a bit of a mismatch in terms of experience.

"He has a lot of power punches," Munoz said. "That's why I've placed a lot of focus on being a boxer, moving like a boxer and slipping inside, getting my clinches and takedowns. I know he's lost to wrestlers. That's a plus."

A big plus.

For if the opinions of better-known fighters count for anything, Munoz, unbeaten in three bouts, might give fans something to remember given the prowess he's already shown working out with some of the best in the game. An NCAA 197-pound champion in 2001 for Oklahoma State, Munoz holds the wrestler's advantage that could be an effective trump card.

"He's really quick and he knows what hard work's about," said former UFC champ Tito Ortiz (Pictures), who hosted Munoz at Big Bear earlier this month as the two trained together along with several other fighters in recent weeks. Part of the rotating cast at Ortiz's high-altitude camp has included Ricco Rodriguez (Pictures), Scott Smith, Dean Lister (Pictures), Joe Riggs (Pictures) and others.

"He's got a very open mind. He's a very dominating wrestler, he learns really quick at jiu-jitsu, and his standup game's gotten a lot better," Ortiz added. "He has a chance to be a world champion in one and a half or two years. It comes down to hard work and dedication. He's done so well at the college level. There's not many guys that can call themselves a national champ."

Or listen to UFC light heavyweight James "Sandman" Irvin, fresh off his eight-second stoppage of Houston Alexander (Pictures). As teammates on the Capital City Fighting Alliance, they've spent plenty of time butting heads and pushing one another to the limit in training.

"In terms of just wrestling, he's technically the most frustrating guy I've rolled with," said Irvin, who has trained with Ortiz, Quinton Jackson (Pictures), Brandon Vera (Pictures) and Randy Couture (Pictures). "It's like your dad whipping your ass when you're 8 or 9 years old. He'll grab you and rag doll you. It's kinda discouraging, someone your same size and same age, and he just makes you feel helpless. As soon as we have more MMA tools it's a different fight, but he's so smothering and strong."

And there's the short take from Urijah Faber (Pictures) -- who defends his WEC featherweight title in the main event that night against Jens Pulver (Pictures) -- a Cap City teammate who pestered Munoz for years to enter MMA:

"He is a badass."

At first glance, Munoz, married and a father of four, seems almost too mellow to be an ex-college wrestler, much less a mixed martial artist. After finishing his college career seven years ago, he fell back on the reliable venues available -- coaching wrestling (he was an assistant at U.C. Davis, where he met Faber) and teaching clinics as a side gig.

After a standout high school career in Vallejo, Calif., where he was a two-time California Interscholastic Champ at 189 pounds, Munoz went to OSU. Run by legendary coach John Smith, the program has won 34 NCAA championships and produced a stream of All-Americans on an annual basis.

It's also where Munoz, eager to challenge himself at the next level, ran into what would be his toughest opponent in college -- making weight. Filling slots in a wrestling roster is a balancing act, and when Munoz learned early on he would have a spot in the lineup at 167 pounds, he took on the challenge. But at a steep price. His walking-around weight was 205, he was 18 years old, and his new weight class was 22 grueling pounds south of where he'd competed in high school.

"It was a different time in wrestling. They were taking advantage of every opportunity to have an edge on your opponent," Munoz recalled. "I cut to 167 my true freshman year. When John Smith asks you something, he says, ‘Jump,' and you pretty much say, ‘How high?'"

Munoz' trim-down regimen consisted of three sessions a day, which he describes as a "three-to-four pound practice," or "five-to-six pound practice," depending on what drills and the level of exertion required. He'd shed the weight, hit the books, eat minimally, if at all, weigh himself constantly, then return to workouts for more, despite constant hunger and privation. The will to get down to the weight carried him through that first early season, then the second, where he competed at 177 -- still too low to allow him to keep his strength as the year marched on and he kept filling out.

"Everything he told me to do, I did with all my heart," Munoz said. "My sophomore year, three wrestlers died. It was the whole weight-cutting and creatine thing. I beat a lot of ranked opponents those first two years. I was ranked top five in the nation and top four my sophomore year, but I didn't place at Nationals. You had to make weight all three days. I didn't have the strength to finish my matches. After Nationals, I didn't want to show my face. I didn't want anybody seeing me. I'm a disgrace to the Oklahoma State program. I couldn't place at Nationals and I can't even finish the deal. I couldn't walk up to John Smith and talk to him. I felt that I had let him down."

Weight-cutting-related tragedies in college wrestling enacted revisions to weight classes and rules for making poundage limits, and 167 was replaced by the 174-pound division. Munoz was also competing at 184 in open tournaments. His pending junior year of 2000 didn't seem any more appealing, though.

Before he left for home that summer, Smith called him in with the news -- Munoz would compete at 174 to fill the logical slot available to him in the OSU lineup.

"I was competing as high as 184, and I was weighing 215. I said ‘I can't do it.' For two hours we argued back and forth," Munoz said. "I finally said, fine, you're right."

Munoz had a plan, though. The summer heading into his junior year, he hit the weights, took creatine and added twenty pounds. You can't say no to a wrestling legend, he figured, unless you make the weight cut utterly impossible.

"Coach didn't see me for two months," Munoz said. "I was training with an Olympic hopeful. He walks in and says, ‘Munoz, get on the scale!' I weighed 236. He says ‘You need to get down to 215 in two weeks.' I said ‘O.K. coach.'"

Like every wrestling coach, particularly those at the elite level, Smith's vision had to balance the needs of the team versus the ability of his athletes to fit into a lineup strategy. Strong spots are maximized, weak spots often filled by guys asked to cut pounds. But Munoz figured going all-in for a spot at a higher weight was worth suffering through another two seasons of drastic weight-cutting, followed by the inevitable late-season exhaustion that cost him so dearly at the NCAA tournament.

"He was recruiting a 197-pounder to come in," Munoz added. "I told him ‘Coach, that's my spot.' When the recruit came in, I was wrestling him and tearing him apart. I ended up getting the spot. I was wrestling great wrestlers. I took advantage every summer to stay and learn. I love learning and executing."

Smith started him at 197 his final two years, where Munoz placed third in the nation as a junior and won a national championship his senior year.

But life after college wrestling proved nearly as challenging as finding that 197-pound slot on the OSU roster. Like many collegiate grapplers, he fell back on coaching -- two years at OSU before joining the U.C. Davis staff -- and clinics. But with a growing family, it was a tough living.

Munoz, who graduated with a degree in health (concentration in health promotion), is currently taking courses at Sacramento State to get his master's in sports psychology. He hit the books hard in college, making Big 12 All-Academic squad for four seasons at OSU. But making a living in wrestling isn't easy.

"I scraped by for five years," he said. "Urijah's always been in my ear to fight. I saw a better opportunity to provide for my family. This is the lifestyle I want to live. When I was coaching, I got content with my athletes, but I got up to 250 pounds. It didn't feel right. I was insecure and wanted to work out. I need to compete. And I finally decided it was a no-brainer."

He turned pro last July with a first-round stoppage and has since won twice more. But the WEC is the big stage -- fighting in front of a hometown crowd of Sacramento on the dark portion of the televised card, he's relying on the old instincts to kick in once he steps into the cage at Arco Arena.

"I forced myself to learn boxing. I want to move like a boxer and a Muay Thai fighter and incorporate that into my wrestling," he said. "Getting acclimated to the whole MMA scene was new to me. I've been a part of Oklahoma State. That room was full of intensity and wrestling greats that have come into and out of that room. But it's different. MMA is different than wrestling (because) it encompasses so many other combat sports. It was a lot to get used to."

He remembers the process from years of wrestling. The placid feeling in the gut leading up to the walk-in. The sudden butterflies. Then, the beginning of the match, where training kicks in and the hours of preparation and conditioning -- mental as much as physical -- take over.

"I've been in a few fights during my life. I've gotten hit," said Munoz, who has trained extensively with Capital City Fighting Alliance teammates Irvin and Smith, both of whom are good strikers. "In a controlled environment, getting hit goes along with all the other disciplines. It took a lot of getting used to. Especially Irvin throwing punches at you. As hard as he hits, you just try to take him down as soon as possible. Every time I trained with Brandon (Vera) or Tito, or John Smith and Kenny Monday in wrestling, I just wrestle hard. When they do something to me, I make a mental note of how they've gotten me or got a takedown, then I ask them about it. I just pick their brain about stuff. I want to learn as much as I can and use every moment I have."

With his debut as a 205-pounder imminent, Munoz said he may drop to 185 if necessary, but given his wrestling pedigree he still feels confident he can make a run at the WEC's best 205-pounders.

"I feel I can take anybody down in the game. I know how to work the inside and punch, throw power punches, set up my clinches and takedowns," he said. "I've been working especially on ground and pound and submissions from on top. Even if I've gone for a sub and end up in my guard, I get back on top with sweeps. I feel like I'm ready for anybody. I can go fight whoever."

It's been a team effort. Wife Kristine's support, along with a strong faith in God, have helped keep him focused on his budding MMA career. Extended family helped support them before he entered MMA, and he wants to recoup that investment in a big way.

"My faith is basically having Him as my Lord and savior of my life. I put a lot of faith in that. There's a verse in the Bible that states, ‘If He's for us, who can be against us?' I put faith in that, and it keeps me humble. My mom has raised me up that way. It was basically a family type deal for me. I've grown to accept it. He's been with me from the start."

The old specter of weight cutting still lingers, though. Dark memories of sweat-puddled mats, doubled-up rubber suits, exercise bikes in the sauna and obsessive deprivation. It's a private hell, and often more of a battle for weight-cutters than the fights that follow. Currently walking around between 215 and 220 pounds, Munoz knows that trimming to 185 could be a possibility in his future. In a way, it might fuel him even more to succeed at light heavyweight.

"I don't want to think about cutting weight right now. I want to learn as much as I can, and when I'm grounded enough, then I'll make the cut," he said. "When my arsenal is where I want it to be, I'll cut. Right now, I want to go out there and fight my fight."
 
Jul 24, 2005
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Wanderlei Silva now linked to fight Rashad Evans, then title shot.

DreamFighters.com own "mmaPhD" is reporteing that the UFC management was very impressed with Wanderlei's performance at UFC 84, stating that "Wanderlei is back".

It has also been reported and rumored that Wanderlei Silva's next fight could be with Rashad Evans, and then a title shot with the winner of Forrest/Rampage.

Mr. W. Silva's camp was unable to be reached, however we will keep you fans updated as soon as the news and confirmation comes out.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Jason Day ‘Count’ down to ‘Dooms’ day Michael Bisping UFC 85 fight (Part III)

Well, it’s two weeks away from my fight with Michael Bisping at UFC 85: “Bedlam” on June 7 and I am cruising along.

My weight is perfect and my training is going smooth. The first week of sport-specific training always kicks the crap out of me. It is physically exhausting, but it definitely helps me to peak at the right time.

Victor Valimaki came down from Edmonton to help put a little more heat on me through my rounds. It always helps to bring in guys to get a different energy and a different skill set. Valimaki is a tank — his size and strength definitely pushed my limits both standing and on the ground.

I always appreciate other fighters stepping up to help me.

My diet and micro-alignment coach from BodyArtFitness.com, Tanya Lee, noticed a trend with me: I get sick a few weeks before my fights. Therefore, this time we stayed on top of my immune system and I have been healthy all the way through my training.

It is an extra boost to my confidence knowing that I have been healthy throughout my training camp.

I capped off the week by taking in UFC 84: “Ill Will” on Saturday night. I thought the fights were great. I had picked BJ Penn to win but I didn’t think it would end like that, Sherk is a tank and BJ took it to him and ended it in exciting fashion.

It was awesome to see Wanderlei back in form — he is definitely one of my favorite fighters and I am glad to see him come out with the victory in the fashion he is accustomed to.

I am look forward to one last week of grinding before I leave for London, England. It is hard to describe the feelings and emotions leading up to the fight. Nervousness, anticipation and most of all anxiousness all play a big role leading up.

It is a rollercoaster ride for sure. I love it and I can’t wait to get in the cage let it all out. I have never been so eager to fight in my life … it will be a WAR!

Jason Day is a top Canadian mixed martial artist who was successful in his Octagon debut against Alan Belcher at UFC 83: “Serra vs. St. Pierre 2″ on April 19. UFC President Dana White referred to his performance that night as “amazing” and has rewarded him with a high profile fight against The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 3 light heavyweight winner, Michael Bisping. Day is on a red hot five-fight win streak, which he will put on the line against “The Count” at UFC 85: “Bedlam” at the O2 Arena in London, England, on June 7. He’ll detail his preparation for the bout right here at MMAmania.com with frequent updates. He would like to thank his sponsors Hardcor Fightwear & Apparel and BodyArt Fitness. To check out more from Jason here at MMAmania.com click here.
 
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Alessio Sakara vs Rob Yundt Ultimate Fighter 7 Finale fight scheduled

Alessio Sakara (12-7) is back in business, getting the green light to return to the Octagon against Rob Yundt (6-1) at The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) 7 Finale at The Pearl Concert Theater at Palms Casino Resort Las Vegas, Nevada, on Saturday, June 21, 2008, at 9 p.m. ET on SpikeTV.

“Legionarius” has dropped two of his last three bouts, including his most recent contest against Chris Leben at UFC 82: “Pride of a Champion in March, which the Italian fighter lost via technical knockout (strikes) in round one. It was his middleweight debut after registering a very mediocre record at light heavyweight (3-3).

One has to imagine that this is a must-win situation for Sakara.

Yundt — an Alaska Fighting Championship veteran — had the unenviable task of taking a fight on short notice against Brazilian jiu-jitsu stud Ricardo Almeida at UFC 81: “Breaking Point” back in February. He lost that fight (the first of his career) via submission (guillotine choke) in round one.

He, too, needs a win to prove he’s capable of competing on the biggest mixed martial arts stage operating today.

TUF 7 Finale will feature the middleweight showdown between former 185-pound champion, Evan Tanner, and TUF 3 middleweight winner, Kendall Grove. In addition, Diego Sanchez will meet Luigi Fioravanti in a welterweight tilt and the finalists from this season of TUF will meet in the finals to determine the tournament winner.