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Feb 7, 2006
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Parisyan Suspended Nine Months

The Nevada State Athletic Commission on Tuesday suspended welterweight contender Karo Parisyan for nine months, fined him $32,000 and ruled his split decision victory against Dong Hyun Kim a no decision in wake of a positive test for three banned painkillers at UFC 94 “St. Pierre vs. Penn 2” in January.

The penalties -- he will also be forced to submit to random testing during his suspension -- were levied against Parisyan at an NSAC hearing in Las Vegas. The 26-year-old judoka, who has a well-chronicled history of panic attacks, was flagged for suspected use of Hydrocodone, Hydromorphone and Oxymorphone.

Parisyan (18-5, 1 ND) eked out a split decision against the previously unbeaten Kim in one of the featured bouts at UFC 94. Had it stood, the win would have marked his first in more than a year. Despite the result of the match being overturned, Parisyan was not forced to forfeit the $40,000 win bonus he received. The NSAC instead elected to impose a 40-percent fine on the entire $80,000 purse he was awarded but warned future violators that their win bonuses would be subject to forfeiture.

Parisyan, who was not represented by legal counsel at the hearing, pleaded for leniency before the commission after he admitted his guilt.

“This is my only form of income,” Parisyan said. “If I don’t fight, I’m nothing. I’m very, very sorry. It was completely unintentional. This is embarrassing for me.”

According to Parisyan, he was put on a prescription painkiller because of a torn hamstring he suffered while training for a title fight against Matt Hughes in 2005. The injury forced him out of the UFC 56 match and has never been repaired, as evidenced by the deformed muscle visible on the back of his leg. Parisyan claims it has continued to cause him pain in the three years since.

However, prior to the Kim fight at UFC 94, Parisyan ingested two pain pills -- later identified as Percocet -- he received from a friend, who had assured him they were the same as what he had been prescribed. Evidently, they were not. His levels of Hydromorphone and Oxymorphone -- the two drugs for which he has no prescriptions -- were described as “very high.”

“I trust the guy,” Parisyan said. “He’s a friend of mine. He’s got a chronic disease. He gave me the pills and told me they were the same exact thing. That’s why I took them.”

What’s more, Parisyan failed to disclose his use of painkillers, prescribed or otherwise, on a pre-fight questionnaire. Only after the fight did he inform an NSAC inspector.

“All I was concerned about was the fight,” Parisyan said. “I hadn’t fought in a year. My mind was calm [after the fight]. When I saw the urine test, I thought, ‘Oh, my God.’ [The inspector] told me as long it wasn’t an anabolic drug that would have given me advantage or a drug like cocaine or something, I should be fine. I had my doctor fax in the prescription, and a week later, everything blew up.”

Commissioner John Bailey reacted sternly to Parisyan, both for his use of pain pills that had not been prescribed and his failure to disclose use on the questionnaire.

“[The commission has] to know what’s going on with you,” Bailey said. “You just decided to not be truthful on a pre-fight questionnaire. We can’t have fighters drifting in and out of reality.”

Still widely recognized as one of the world’s top 10 170-pound fighters, Parisyan has lost to only three men -- reigning UFC welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre, top welterweight contender Thiago Alves and “The Ultimate Fighter” season one winner Diego Sanchez -- in the past eight years.
 
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Brett Rogers vs. Ron Humphries completes Strikeforce's April 11 TV card

A heavyweight bout between former EliteXC heavyweight Brett Rogers (8-0) and Strikeforce newcomer Ron Humphries (5-0) has been signed and will take the last remaining main-card slot on Showtime's broadcast of "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz."

The April 11 event takes place at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, Calif. In the main event, Frank Shamrock meets Nick Diaz at a catch-weight if 179 pounds.

FiveOuncesofPain.com first reported the bout, which sources close to the fight have since confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

Prior to the signing, Strikeforce had just four bouts for its five-fight main card. As MMAjunkie.com reported last week, Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker expected the slot to go to a middleweight fight between Joe Riggs and Phil Baroni or a heavyweight bout with Rogers.

The organization ultimately decided on Rogers, one of the 40-plus EliteXC fighters Strikeforce acquired in February from ProElite, and newcomer Humphries.

Rogers returns to action for the first time in nearly a year. He went 3-0 in EliteXC, which included a 61-second knockout of Jon Murphy in a historic bout. The May 31 fight was the first MMA contest ever to air on major U.S. network television. However, Rogers has been on the sidelines ever since the May 31 CBS-televised event.

Rogers is currently 8-0 with eight first-round stoppages (all due to strikes).

He now meets Humphries, who also owns first-round stoppages in all of his career fights. Since turning pro in 2003, Humphries is 5-0 with five knockouts. Two of the wins came in 2003, and after a four-year layoff, he returned to go 3-0, which included a December victory over MMA rookie Nick Thomas at an ISCF show in Wisconsin.

The full "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz" card now includes:

MAIN CARD

* Nick Diaz vs. Frank Shamrock
* Champ Josh Thomson vs. Gilbert Melendez (for Strikeforce lightweight title)
* Benji Radach vs. Scott Smith
* Hitomi Akano vs. Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos
* Ron Humphries vs. Brett Rogers

PRELIMINARY CARD

* Yohan Banks vs. Marcus Royster
* Buck Meredith vs. Luke Rockhold
* Eric Lawson vs. Richard Montoya
* Raul Castillo vs. Brandon Michaels
* Zak Bucia vs. James Terry
* Shingo Kohara vs. Jeremy Tavares
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Brett Rogers vs. Ron Humphries completes Strikeforce's April 11 TV card

A heavyweight bout between former EliteXC heavyweight Brett Rogers (8-0) and Strikeforce newcomer Ron Humphries (5-0) has been signed and will take the last remaining main-card slot on Showtime's broadcast of "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz."

The April 11 event takes place at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, Calif. In the main event, Frank Shamrock meets Nick Diaz at a catch-weight if 179 pounds.

FiveOuncesofPain.com first reported the bout, which sources close to the fight have since confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

Prior to the signing, Strikeforce had just four bouts for its five-fight main card. As MMAjunkie.com reported last week, Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker expected the slot to go to a middleweight fight between Joe Riggs and Phil Baroni or a heavyweight bout with Rogers.

The organization ultimately decided on Rogers, one of the 40-plus EliteXC fighters Strikeforce acquired in February from ProElite, and newcomer Humphries.

Rogers returns to action for the first time in nearly a year. He went 3-0 in EliteXC, which included a 61-second knockout of Jon Murphy in a historic bout. The May 31 fight was the first MMA contest ever to air on major U.S. network television. However, Rogers has been on the sidelines ever since the May 31 CBS-televised event.

Rogers is currently 8-0 with eight first-round stoppages (all due to strikes).

He now meets Humphries, who also owns first-round stoppages in all of his career fights. Since turning pro in 2003, Humphries is 5-0 with five knockouts. Two of the wins came in 2003, and after a four-year layoff, he returned to go 3-0, which included a December victory over MMA rookie Nick Thomas at an ISCF show in Wisconsin.

The full "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz" card now includes:

MAIN CARD

* Nick Diaz vs. Frank Shamrock
* Champ Josh Thomson vs. Gilbert Melendez (for Strikeforce lightweight title)
* Benji Radach vs. Scott Smith
* Hitomi Akano vs. Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos
* Ron Humphries vs. Brett Rogers

PRELIMINARY CARD

* Yohan Banks vs. Marcus Royster
* Buck Meredith vs. Luke Rockhold
* Eric Lawson vs. Richard Montoya
* Raul Castillo vs. Brandon Michaels
* Zak Bucia vs. James Terry
* Shingo Kohara vs. Jeremy Tavares
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Raul Castillo vs. Brandon Michaels completes April 11 Strikeforce prelims

A middleweight bout between Raul Castillo (5-0) and Brandon Michaels (2-2) has been booked for Strikeforce's April 11 event at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, Calif., Strikeforce officials confirmed with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

The bout completes the organization's preliminary card for the event, which airs on Showtime and features a main event between Frank Shamrock and Nick Diaz.

A total of six bouts have been booked for the night's unaired preliminary card.

Castillo, a Gladiator Challenge veteran, goes for his sixth consecutive win. His past five fights have all ended via stoppage, including a first-round TKO of Andrew Montanez at "Strikeforce: Triple Threat" in December 2006. His opponent, Michaels, makes his Strikeforce debut at the show.

Aside from a final main-card slot, the full card for "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz" is complete. As MMAjunkie.com reported last week, two options for the slot were Joe Riggs vs. Phil Baroni or Brett Rogers vs. an opponent to be determined. The Riggs vs. Baroni fight is now unlikely to happen, and Rogers is expected to get an opponent in the next few days.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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UFC officially adds Spencer Fisher vs. Caol Uno to UFC 99 in June

As MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) first reported in February, former UFC lightweight title challenger Caol Uno (25-11-4 MMA, 3-3-1 UFC) will return to the organization for the first time in almost six years at "UFC 99: Franklin vs. Silva."

The UFC officially announced today that Uno will face Spencer Fisher (22-4 MMA, 7-3 UFC) at the June 13 event.

UFC 99 takes place at the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany. Tickets for the event are currently on sale.

Uno, a Shooto veteran who turned pro in 1996, first fought for the UFC 155-pound title (then dubbed the bantamweight title) in 2001, but he suffered a majority-decision loss to Jens Pulver. After going 3-1 in his next four fights, Uno then fought B.J. Penn in the finale of a four-man lightweight tournament that would crown the winner the organization's new lightweight champion (Pulver had been stripped of the belt after a contract dispute). Uno and Penn fought to a disappointing draw at UFC 41, and the UFC disbanded the division for the next three years.

Uno fought once more for the UFC before he headed overseas to compete for K-1 HERO'S, which has since become DREAM. Uno is 10-5-1 since he left the UFC more than five years ago.

Fisher will be looking to build on the momentum of two-straight wins in the UFC. The 32-year-oold submitted Shannon Gugerty at UFC 90 in October 2008, and earned a decision win over Jeremy Stephens at the TUF 7 Finale in June 2008.

With the addition, the card now includes:

MAIN CARD (televised)

* Rich Franklin vs. Wanderlei Silva
* Ben Saunders vs. Mike Swick
* Marcus Davis vs. Dan Hardy
* Spencer Fisher vs. Caol Uno
* Heath Herring vs. Cain Velasquez*

PRELIMINARY CARD (un-televised)

* Dale Hartt vs. Denis Siver
* Denis Stojnic vs. Stefan Struve
* Justin Buchholz vs. Terry Etim*
* Mustapha al Turk vs. Todd Duffee*
* Roli Delgado vs. Paul Kelly*
* John Hathaway vs. Rick Story*

* - not yet announced by organization
 
Feb 7, 2006
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DEAN LISTER INVITED TO ADCC; LOOKING FOR FEDOR

After requesting a release from the UFC earlier this year, middleweight Dean Lister will look to go back to his roots. The California native has been invited to compete in this year's Abu Dhabi grappling tournament as confirmed to MMAWeekly.com by the fighter's management team at Haymaker's Empire.

Lister is a former Abu Dhabi champion, winning the Absolute Divisional championship in 2003 and then returning to the tournament to win super fights in 2003 and 2005.

While it has not been decided which weight class Lister will compete in, the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt and former U.S. Sambo champion is considering a move to the weight class that will be occupied by top MMA heavyweight Fedor Emelianenko, who is expected in the tournament this year.

Lister commented to MMAWeekly.com that he sees Fedor as "a great challenge and would jump at the opportunity to compete against him."

The former Abu Dhabi and King of the Cage champion will also stay in consideration for a super fight if any of this year's competitors are unable to compete.

While nothing has been signed, Lister is also still fielding several offers to continue his MMA career. "The Boogeyman" has stated that he's simply focused on training and improving for MMA, while working on his goal of winning the Abu Dhabi tournament this year.

Currently Lister is in Japan helping his friend, Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal, prepare for his upcoming bout in Sengoku, before returning home to focus on his next step in the MMA or grappling world.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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THIAGO TAVARES VS. MELVIN GUILLARD AT UFC 101

With UFC 101 still several months away the promotion has already started to put together some of the match-ups on the card. On Monday, MMAWeekly.com confirmed that a lightweight bout between Thiago Tavares and Melvin Guillard would be added to the show.

The bout was confirmed by sources close to the fight who indicated the fight has been agreed to on the date of Aug 8 with bout agreements to follow shortly.

Thiago Tavares steps into UFC 101 with a record inside the Octagon of 4-3 with his last fight being a victory over former "Ultimate Fighter" competitor, Manny Gamburyan, at UFC 94 in January.

The American Top Team fighter will look to find footing in a very crowded lightweight division as he takes on the very heavy handed Guillard in what will likely be a preliminary fight on the card.

Melvin Guillard will return in August and at that point will have been out of action for over a year with his last fight coming in July 2008 in a win over German fighter, Dennis Siver.

The former "Ultimate Fighter" season 2 competitor was slated to face Brazilian, Ronnys Torres, at the upcoming UFC Fight Night show in April, but an injury befell his opponent and Guillard was removed from the card all together.

Now the Louisiana native returns to fight another very tough Brazilian product in Thiago Tavares.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Inside the Bellator Contract

With Bellator Fighting Championships making their debut in early April, MMAPayout.com thought now would be an ideal time to take a look at the standard Bellator contract. While most of the contract is the same old legalese native to any promotional agreement there were a few areas that were of note. The key areas of interest were the compensation, control of ancillary rights as well as the terms of the contract. All three of these areas had their own little spin on things that seem to be unique to Bellator.

Tourney Compensation -
Lose in the First Round of Bellator Tournament - $10,000
Win in the First Round of Bellator Tournament - $25,000 ($10K base, $15K Bonus)

Lose in the Semi-Finals - $25,000
Win In Semi-Finals - $50,000 ($25K base, $25K Bonus)

Lose in Finals - $40,000
Win in Finals - $100,000 ($40K base, $60K Bonus)

If a fighter is used as a substitute in the tournament he will receive a base pay of whatever round he lost at, but his bonus payment for a win will correspond with whatever round he is being inserted at. For example if someone lost in the first round, and was inserted into the Semi’s and won they would receive $10k as base for the semi’s and for winning would get a bonus of $25 for total compensation for that round of $35k

Non-Tourney Compensation-

If a fighter wins a tournament, and subsequently fights in a non-tournament bout, he will receive $7k in base and $7k to win for his initial bout. With each subsequent win the base and win bonus would both increase by $1k. If they lose, their base and bonus would remain the same for the next bout. As you go further down the tournament standings the pay winnows down as well.

Tournament Winner - $7K base and $7K bonus with these numbers increasing by $1K and $1K with each subsequent win.
Tournament Runner Up - $6K base and $6K bonus with these numbers increasing by $1K and $1K with each subsequent win.
Lose in the Semi’s - $3K base and $3K bonus with these increasing by $1K and $1K with each subsequent win.
Lose in Opening Round - $2500 base and $2500 bonus with these increasing by $500 and $500 with each subsequent win.

Analysis: The whole thought process behind this strategy is cost certainty. If you’ve ever delved much into salary cap-ology, then you are familiar with the term. Bellator are looking to have strict control over payroll that can be planned around, this is key especially in their start-up phase. They will be funding the show out of equity and whatever programming fee they will be getting from ESPN. They hope to gradually move over into the PPV area at some point judging from their investor prospectus, that is where the real money is to be made but until then they are going to have to run a tight ship fiscally. Cost containment through this tightly structured compensation model will bolster Bellator’s hopes of viability.

Ancillary rights -
This area contains the usual boilerplate stuff associated with most any fight company. This area is generally one-sided in favor of the company, with nothing in the way of royalties for the fighter in regards to things like DVD’s, etc. The company doesn’t explicitly delineate a separate licensed merchandising agreement at this time (doesn’t seem that Bellator has these plans at a viable stage at this point) but does require the the fighter negotiate in good faith when such efforts are undertaken by Bellator in the future.

One area of the ancillary agreement that is raising the ire of fighter advocates and mangers is a clause that has Bellator reserving the right to register as a trademark the fighter’s name, stage name, or identity for the purposes of Bellator carrying out their promotional duties. This sort of arrangement hearkens almost to the type of deals prevalent in the WWE, where the company holds trademarks over the performers stagenames and likenesses. As jaded as MMA reps are at this point by the contractual grabbiness of Zuffa contracts, this clause is seen in some quarters as being beyond the pale, which takes some doing. While some of the higher profile fighters like and Eddie Alvarez likely have the pull to bargain this clause out of their final deal, it leaves the majority of Bellator’s fighters with a bad deal in respect to the trademark issue. If they hold to this clause steadfastly, they may run into problems in the future recruiting new talent into the organization, provided they continue as a going venture.

Term of the Contract-
The standard term is 36 months or eight bouts, whichever comes first. The contract also has a clause that states that if a fighter is declared champion of his division, wins a tournament or is a tournament runner-up, the contract automatically extends by 18 months or three fights. This is almost a self-fulfilling talent retention process, with the the talent being locked in for longer terms as they achieve within the organization. While not strictly analogous to the UFC’s champion clause, it serves some of the same intents, ie binding the fighter to organization over and above the original term of the contract. The way the contracts read, the contract exclusively binds the fighter to Bellator during that time, Alvarez may be an exception owing to his other contractual ties to manager Monte Cox.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Caol Uno confirms his return to the UFC

Caol Uno confirmed his UFC comeback in a blog post on Monday.

"My participation at UFC 99 in Germany is now official," Uno wrote. "I am excited as well as worried about my fight. I feel that I'm a challenger and also have some unfinished business in the Octagon. I have mixed feelings now. I will train hard and show all I have in my fight. Thank you for supporting me."

Uno will take on Spencer Fisher at UFC 99 "The Comeback" on June 13 in Cologne, Germany.
 
Feb 7, 2006
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Penn's mother urges NSAC to punish St. Pierre "to fullest extent of authority"

LAS VEGAS - The weeks that have followed the controversial UFC 94 bout between Georges St. Pierre and B.J. Penn have been filled with many unusual and interesting circumstances.

At Tuesday's Nevada State Athletic Commission review of the bout, yet another unique story was brought to "Greasegate."

Lorraine Shin, the mother of UFC lightweight champion B.J. Penn, addressed the commission and charged them with failing to properly protect her son in the course of the Jan. 31 contest.

The contents of Shin's address to the NSAC are included below:


"My name is Lorraine Shin, and I am the mother of Jay Dee Penn, also known as B.J. Penn. I have been involved in the MMA arena as a producer for years.

"I have and continue to support my four sons who have earned their black belt status in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. I have also had the opportunity of attending many Brazilian jiu-jitsu tournaments as well as MMA fight events in Hawaii, Guam, Japan, England and the U.S. Mainland. I am no stranger to the MMA fight world.

"During the past 12 years my sons operate and are instructors in the Penn Fitness and Training Center in Hawaii, which I have been very instrumental in its daily operations. My son, Jay Dee Penn, has also produced MMA events under the name of Rumble on the Rock in Hawaii and Guam, and later merged with EliteXC. As the financial adviser for the family, it was imperative for me to understand the rules and regulations governing MMA events.

"On Jan. 31, 2009, I was present at the UFC 94 event held at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas. The fighters in the main event were B.J. Penn vs. Georges St. Pierre for the welterweight title.

"I was sitting in the front row, near the entrance to the octagon cage, and clearly understood the seriousness of this fight that had been successfully marketed on prime time television.

"During the rounds that followed, I was shocked to see that B.J. appeared to be helpless, as well as defenseless in his attempts to grasp and hold Georges St. Pierre while on the ground. I silently kept screaming and asking myself, 'What is wrong? Why can't B.J. defend himself?'

"I was horrified with fear. My son was going to be seriously hurt because he could not defend himself.

"The match ended in the fourth round, and B.J. Penn lost by TKO when his corner stopped the fight. After the fight was over, I was led immediately to B.J.'s locker room. And knowing that B.J. was seriously hurt, when I reached the locker I heard loud voices yelling that GSP and his cornermen were caught by the Nevada (State) Athletic Commission for applying Vaseline on his body during the rounds and in violation of the rules.

"Although still in shock and fearful for my son, it then made sense to me why B.J. couldn't defend himself. Georges St. Pierre used a greasy substance on his body, therefore giving St. Pierre an unfair advantage over my son, B.J. Penn.

"While in the locker room, I couldn't understand why the fight was not stopped by the UFC's referee or the Nevada State Athletic Commission for the unfair advantage by St. Pierre and his cornerman after they realized the foul. How could this happen? Why was it allowed?

"There are probably several reasons, but the responsibility falls on the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

"The Nevada State Athletic Commission failed in their duties by not immediately notifying the Penn corner of the unfair use of greasing and Vaseline applied on St. Pierre, by not allowing the Vaseline to be removed properly off of St. Pierre, and by not taking the necessary procedures to protect my son from being seriously injured or killed.

"A rushed, quick wipe of St. Pierre's body did not properly remove the grease from the head, neck, chest, shoulders and back. It is the commissioners' responsibility to always protect the fighter from the unfair practices by others under the rules that govern MMA events in Nevada."


Shin was briefly interrupted by NSAC Chairman Bill Brady, who assured her that the commission was aware of the issue at hand.

"I apologize for interrupting you," Brady said. "We're aware of what your feelings are on this. That's what we're having this hearing for, is to take all of this under advisement."

Polite in the address, Brady allowed Shin to continue when she assured she was almost finished with her statement. The remainder of the statement is included below:


"It is officially documented that St. Pierre's team did in fact apply Vaseline to St. Pierre's body. It is documented that St. Pierre did have an unfair advantage against Penn because of greasing. The Nevada State Athletic Commission needs to do the right thing and find Georges St. Pierre and all others responsible for these unfair practices and punish them to the fullest extent of their authority.

"St. Pierre is the responsible person for the actions of his cornerman and others involved. This can not be ignored by the Nevada (State) Athletic Commission."


Brady tried to keep the mood light with his casual response following the address.

"B.J., your mother loves you," Brady said before addressing Shin. "We appreciate your statements, and we understand your feelings."

Shin was quick to add one final remark while addressing the commission.

"It's not just for my son," Shin said. "It's to do the right thing. You need to do the right thing."

Shin's statement was followed by the morning's final speaker, Steve Pacitti. A lawyer representing St. Pierre, Pacitti's statement was short and direct.

"The simple fact is that there was nothing done that was explained that would violate the existing rules of the commission," Pacitti said. "If there was an advantage, it was merely Georges size' and skill on that night."

After the conclusion of the meeting, Brady addressed Penn directly just before speaking with MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

"Apologize to your mother that I had to cut her short," Brady said to Penn. "I have a great deal of respect for her.

"We'll see where this goes. You come back soon, alright. Las Vegas wants you here, and so does the commission."
 
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CIESNOLEVICZ OUT; MAGALHAES FACES MARSHALL AT UFC 97

A change has been made to the upcoming UFC show in Montreal as Mike Ciesnolevicz has been forced out of his bout against Eliot Marshall due to an undisclosed injury. Former "Ultimate Fighter" season 8 finalist and Marshall's former teammate on the reality show, Vinny Magalhaes, has been tapped as a replacement.

The fight was confirmed to MMAWeekly.com on Tuesday by sources close to the fight who indicated bout agreements should be signed shortly.

Marshall and Magalhaes have history together beyond the reality show in which they both fought under coach Frank Mir's supervision.

The dueling Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belts actually have competed against each other in the grappling world previously, but this will be the first time Marshall and Magalhaes have faced each other in MMA.

Marshall has been training alongside teammates at Greg Jackson's gym in New Mexico, while also spending time at home in Colorado working with fighters like Nate Marquardt and Shane Carwin.

Since his loss to Ryan Bader in the TUF 8 finale show, Magalhaes has been relatively quiet just waiting for his time to fight again, and it will come sooner rather than later.

The bout between Marshall and Magalhaes will be a part of the untelevised portion of the pay-per-view broadcast headlined by Anderson Silva against Thales Leites in a middleweight title fight.
 
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NSAC to take tougher stance on future positive drug tests

LAS VEGAS - UFC welterweight Karo Parisyan left the Nevada State Athletic Commission's Tuesday meeting visibly shaken by the group's firm disciplinary message.

The NSAC issued Parisyan a nine-month suspension and $32,000 fine due to his failed UFC 94 drug test.

But future offenders may find themselves with an even stiffer punishment if the NSAC holds true to the motion passed at the hearing in Las Vegas.

Parisyan was appearing before the commission to receive a ruling from the commission after the 26-year-old tested positive for the prescription painkillers hydrocodone, hydromorphone and oxymorphone, all of which are banned substances

The $32,000 fine handed down by the NSAC marked a 40 percent levy against Parisyan's $80,000 UFC 94 fight purse. "The Heat" received $40,000 to show and a $40,000 win bonus for his split-decision victory over Dong Hyun Kim.

But future competitors who are forced to go before the commission will face even stiffer possibilities, as a motion that was made by Commissioner John Bailey -- and unanimously approved -- calls for a fighter's "win bonus" to be immediately forfeited should they fail the post-fight drug screen.

A fine would then be assessed on the fighter's show money.

"In the future, should any contestant, boxing and/or mixed martial artist, be given as a part of their compensation a bonus, and if they find themselves in front of [the commission] on a disciplinary matter involving the ingestion of a prohibited substance, that the win portion of their compensation will be immediately forfeited -- if they're found guilty -- will be immediately forfeited to the state," Bailey said in his motion. "And then we will assess punishment, monetary punishment, on the remaining guaranteed portion of their compensation."

Bailey said the logic behind the motion was simple.

"The contestant ought not to benefit, by utilizing and ingesting painkillers, to the extent of the $40,000 in the win column," Bailey said.

Had the commission followed the new benchmark on Tuesday, Parisyan could have been forced to forfeit his $40,000 win bonus and then be penalized 25 to 30 percent of his show money, a typical amount in past cases. The added fine would have brought Parisyan's total penalty to between $50,000 and $52,000.

Following the meeting, NSAC Executive Director Keith Kizer told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) it is sometimes necessary to impose a substantial punishment in order for competing athletes to take notice.

"Hopefully Karo is the last athlete we ever have to see test positive," Kizer said. "But we continue to have guys test positive, and something needs to be done."

Kizer said the new benchmark can be implemented immediately, as the new amount is well within the guidelines of the commission's rights.

"There isn't any need for a new policy or rule," Kizer said. "This is simply a new recommendation that falls well within established guidelines. The commission has always had the right to take up to 100 percent of the purse."

Parisyan's suspension is retroactive to his Jan. 31 bout, making "The Heat" eligible to return on Nov. 1.
 
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Brett Rogers wanted, but Strikeforce still searching for final main-card fight

With less than a month until Strikeforce's debut on Showtime with the April 11 "Strikeforce: Shamrock vs. Diaz" card, the organization's search for its fifth and final-main card bout continues.

While a heavyweight fight between former EliteXC fighter Brett Rogers (8-0) and Ron Humphries (5-0) was originally expected to take the slot, Strikeforce executive Mike Afromowitz today told MMAjunkie.com it simply remains an option.

"It's possible," Afromowitz said. "But it's definite. There's not just one person making the decision."

On Wednesday FiveOuncesofPain.com first reported that the Rogers vs. Humphries fight had been signed. Sources close to the fighters then confirmed the news with MMAjunkie.com. However, later in the day, Afromowitz said that wasn't the case.

"You know how the guys get," Afromowitz told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) on Wednesday. "[The fight signing] gets close, and everyone gets excited and starts talking and saying it's done. But it's not signed."

Strikeforce acquired Rogers, who's undefeated with first-round stoppages in every one of his career fights, when the organization purchased select assets from ProElite, the parent company of the now-defunct EliteXC organization, earlier this year. Rogers was one of the organization's top stars and defeated Jon Murphy in the first-ever MMA fight televised on major U.S. network television.

However, Rogers hasn't fought since that May 31 EliteXC event on CBS.

Afromowitz said event organizers want to get Rogers on the April 11 card. However, he couldn't elaborate on what exactly is holding up the fight with Humphries from being signed.

Regardless, Rogers remains a priority.

"We'd like to have Brett (on the card); that's for sure," Afromowitz said. "We could scrap the fight (with Humphries) all together, or we could find a different opponent. We just have to find the right fit."

Afromowitz admitted there's some additional pressure to put together a solid fight card for April 11, which is headlined by Frank Shamrock vs. Nick Diaz (at a catch-weight of 179 pounds) and a title fight between Strikeforce world lightweight champion Josh Thomson and former champ Gilbert Melendez.

The April 11 card, which takes place at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, Calif., is the first of what will be approximately monthly Strikeforce broadcasts on Showtime, and both Strikeforce and Showtime executives want to produce a quality debut card. That's why a preliminary bout is unlikely to be promoted to the main card if the organization can't secure a fight for Rogers.

"We're looking for a good ... TV-caliber fight," Afromowitz said. "Not to take anything away from [preliminary card] because it's a great undercard, but those are guys still building up their names. It's our first Showtime card, and we want to come out with guns blazing."

If a deal can't be worked out for Rogers, Afromowitz said the organization is likely to look elsewhere for established, mainstream fighters.

"A few names have been thrown around, but there's nothing really worth discussing because we're still sorting through it all," he said. "We need a decision soon, though, and we'll have one soon."
 
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Sengoku Seventh Battle airs live on HDNet early Friday morning

HDNet will air a live broadcast of Sengoku Seventh Battle event, which takes place at the Yoyogi National Stadium in Tokyo, Japan, on early Friday morning.

The event features the opening round of World Victory Road's 16-slot featherweight grand prix, and up-and-coming wrestling stand-out Muhammed "King Mo" Lawal takes on Ryo Kawamura in the night's main event.

The broadcast airs early Friday morning at 3 a.m. EST (midnight PST), and a replay is set for later that day at 10 p.m. EST (7 p.m. PST).

You can also catcg a replay on Saturday at 4 p.m. EST.

The event airs exlusively in North America on HDNet, an all-high-definition cable station that broadcasts more live MMA events than any other broadcast outlet.
 
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Affliction Entertainment in talks to air third MMA event opposite UFC 100 on July 11

Apparently there is still some fight left in “The T-Shirt Guys” over at Affliction Entertainment.

Five Ounces of Pain is reporting that Affliction is taking a page out of the UFC counter programming handbook and contemplating a third mixed martial arts event this summer for Saturday, July 11 — the same day as the much anticipated UFC 100.

According to the report, Affliction would consider hosting the event on network or basic cable television to avoid the very difficult task of trying to lure away potential PPV buys from Zuffa.

And the UFC is no stranger to counter programming.

They hastily assembled UFC Fight Night 14 to draw interest away from the debut of Affliction: “Banned” on PPV last July with a main event between Anderson “The Spider” Silva and James “The Sandman” Irvin.

For Affliction’s second effort, “Day of Reckoning” on January 24, the UFC answered with a replay of UFC 91 “Lesnar vs. Couture.”

The UFC also went up against the EliteXC debut show on CBS last May with a tribute to perhaps the most popular mixed martial artist on the planet, Chuck Liddell, called “Ultimate Iceman.”

Even the new-look Strikeforce is getting a taste. On the same night and at the same time as their April 11 event, Spike TV will debut UFC 94: “St. Pierre vs. Penn 2,” which of course is now known simply as “Greasegate,” thanks to some questionable tactics by the corner of GSP.

It’s not unreasonable to think this third show could be the last from Affliction. The idea of going head-to-head with one of the biggest events in UFC history is more of an “F-you” than it is a step towards continued brand development.

While still in the planning stages, it will be interesting to see what Affliction has in store for its third event and what impact it might have on the fighters who decide to participate in the broadcast. Being an accomplice to this kind strategy could be detrimental to a fighter who may be considering a UFC career down the road.
 
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Miguel Torres considers greener pastures in UFC lightweight division

“The future is bright for 135. I want to fight here for another two or three years, and once I have solidified myself at 135, I plan on moving up in weight. I can’t fight forever. I can dominate 135 for the rest of my career and be comfortable, or I can test myself and be out of my comfort zone and try to make more money. I think fighting at a higher weight class, there will be bigger purses, bigger paydays and more high-profile fights. So, I am looking to do that in the future. To go to 145, I wouldn’t get a huge bump (in pay), but if I were to go to 155 and get a three-fight deal (in the UFC), I am sure I could get a huge increase in pay. And then (I can) always come down to 135 or 145.”