Source: http://www.fighters.com/07/26/free-agents-new-faces-and-some-old-to-look-for-in-wwe
Logan The Pink Pounder Clark Steve The Snake Claveau Rich No Love Clementi
Source: http://www.fighters.com/07/26/free-agents-new-faces-and-some-old-to-look-for-in-wwe
Logan The Pink Pounder Clark Steve The Snake Claveau Rich No Love Clementi
Source: http://www.fighters.com/08/03/who%e2%80%99s-on-the-hot-seat-ufc-on-fox-vera-vs-shogun
Source: http://www.mmatorch.com/artman2/publish/quicknews/article_14002.shtml
Bellator announces Eddie Alvarez vs. Patricky “Pitbull” Freire for October is a post from: MMA Interplay UFC News
What you see on television during a UFC broadcast is pretty cool, but what goes on backstage, away from the lights and the cameras, is so real and fascinating that it's practically another beast entirely.� I've been credentialed for 17 UFCs, and though the last one I went to was UFC 55 (back in 2005), the access to the area behind the curtain - where the fighters are either mentally preparing themselves for combat or dealing with its after effects, and where the emotion is a thousand times more true and raw - was totally and completely money.� I say all this because leading off today's news roundup is UFC president Dana White's latest video blog, which is the opening salvo in hyping UFC on FOX 4, but contains some sweet behind-the-scenes stuff on UFC 149.�
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So, @danawhite�said whoever wins most impressively Saturday at #UFConFox gets a shot at @JonnyBones... I'm preemptively forfeiting my shot.�
You know, we laugh, but if this were PRIDE in Japan, Lauzon could very well end up having to fight Jon Jones.
That's all for now.
Gather around, friends, because it's time for another detailed look at the UFC on FOX 4 card.� In this post, the microscope is used on the main card, which features four light-heavyweights hoping for another chance to get smashed by UFC champ Jon Jones, a pair of often-scrappy lightweights, and the return of a welterweight veteran of "The Ultimate Fighter" whose digestive issues are so restrictive, he can pretty much eat only air or else his esophagus explodes.� Are you excited for Saturday night's absolutely free UFC event?� I know I am!� I can afford free!
Source: http://www.mmanews.com/home.php
If you're one of the many, many MMA fans who have complained about the scoring of an MMA fight, you may have some recourse soon. The Association of Boxing Commissions, the national group all state commissions belong to, have made suggestions to changes in the scoring system.
While they don't advocate moving away from the 10-point must system, where the fighter who wins the round earns 10 points, they do offer clarification to what wins a round.
1. Effective defense is removed as a criteria.
This makes sense. There are few situations in sports where defense scores points without becoming the offense first. A safety in football is the only of the big four American sports. The inherent job of defense is to prevent the opponent from scoring points. Good defense should set up a good offense in MMA.
2. Striking and grappling are now given equal weight in scoring. From the ABC's suggestions:
The old scoring system rewarded striking (as a primary consideration) more than grappling. Mixed Martial Arts is based on two skill sets - striking and grappling. The committee felt that grappling should not be a secondary factor in determining the outcome of a match. Grappling has a definitive skill set and athleticism and offensive capabilities which when used correctly can effectively end a fight. As such grappling skills should be rewarded and given equal weight to striking.
Grapplers everywhere will dance with joy if this change is passed. Jeff Curran's loss to Takeya Mizugaki and Miguel Torres' loss to Demetrious Johnson might have turned out differently with this provision in place.
3. Replace "damage" with "effective." We can assume the committee meant effectiveness, because who wants to replace a noun with an adjective? In short, the committee wanted a term that didn't make them feel so icky.
1. The legal considerations surrounding the term "Damage" as a descriptor were given considerable weight and as such the committee felt that using the word "Damage" may contribute to the potential for liability in the event of any litigation that commissions may find themselves involved in.
2. The sport of MMA is still relatively new and has not received sanctioning in various jurisdictions.� The committee felt that "Damage" as a descriptor may play a factor in helping to determine future sanctioning if the term was taken out of context with many opposed to MMA as a sport.
This would also prevent the ineffective argument from fighters at post-fight press conferences who point to cuts and bruises on their opponent as proof of winning.
The ABC votes on the committee's recommendations next week. Do you like the recommendations? Should they add any more? Tell us in the comments, on Facebook or Twitter.
Source: http://mmalice.com/dream/saadulaev-vs-tokoro-at-dream-new-year-2011-video_d7f45aea9.html
It's time to go inside the venue. �Anthony, Sambo Steve and Tyga head to a hallway upstairs that will serve as the locker room for them and half the fighters on the card (the locker room for the other half is a hallway downstairs).� I shake Anthony's hand and wish him luck.� As I leave to go to my spot at cageside, his coaches are taking turns reminding him he's ready.
Since Anthony's opponent has sold a fair number of tickets, their bout is moved to later in the card.� In the meantime, other fighters do their thing.� A heavyweight smothers another on the ground and earns a decision.� A wiry submission wizard ties his foe in knots.� A fighter lands a crushing left that earns him a TKO victory.� A woman with purple hair gets out-boxed and loses a decision.� A bantamweight named Julio Arce, a precision instrument honed to a keen edge and sporting an 11-0 amateur record, has his first pro bout, and he's almost surgical in the way he scores a knockout in just under two minutes.� Anthony's got a ways to go before he reaches that level of experience, but when he enters the cage to take on Michael, he's moving one step closer.
Michael and Anthony are now standing across from each other, the classic stand-off, minus the sixguns but complete with cold stares and bad intentions.� Michael is taller with a build like an action figure, and upon his face is a look determination that threatens to wilt those not prepared for it.� With a gesture and a shout, the referee signals for them to begin.
From the outset it's clear Michael's got the edge in striking ? his reach enables him to tag Anthony from a distance, his footwork enables him to maintain range, and his confidence has him firing off salvos at will, forcing Anthony to cover himself with his forearms and absorb the barrage.� What Anthony does have, though, is tenacity, and it comes out in his dogged takedown attempts.� The first few yield no fruit, Michael is able to protect his hips and sprawl out of trouble.� But eventually the New Yorker is successful in putting his opponent on his butt, and in the waning seconds of the first round, Anthony gets Michael down against the cage, rises up and knees him in the chest (think: Anderson Silva vs. Chael Sonnen at UFC 148).� Though the�crowd is certainly partisan and cheering loudly for Michael, it's hard to say who the judges will favor for Round 1; Anthony makes it a little easier for them all in the next frame.�
There's more wrestling, and at one point Michael lowers his hands in anticipation of another takedown attempt and gets cracked in the jaw.� Anthony can't seem to keep Michael down when he puts him there, but by virtue of his success in getting the fight horizontal ? and the number of Matt Hughes-style slams he executes ? he's scoring points.
By the third round, Michael has things figured out, and he's able to avoid Anthony's grasping arms and stay on top.� Anthony's stuck underneath for the duration.� From cageside, Sambo Steve and Tyga shout frantically for their ward to get up, but he's spent, and when the clock runs out it's clear that block of time belonged to Michael.
(In an unexpected funny moment, when Anthony is struggling to get up from below Michael, he blindly swings his arms back and accidently punches the referee in the face.� The ref, Gasper Oliver, laughs about it afterwards.)
The time after the bout ends and before the judges' scorecards are read is always one of activity and emotion.� While doctors rush the cage and examine the combatants, searching for outward signs of trauma and concussion, the coaches are again by their respective warrior's side, alternating between congratulating and managing expectations.� And unless what transpired was anything but a brutal beatdown, there's always questions running through everyone's heads.� Who did enough to win?� Who took which rounds?� It's an impromptu math that overtakes those standing in the cage, and it even draws in those on the other side of the fence.�
At the signal, Oliver grabs the wrists of the two fighters and pulls them to the center.� The announcer, an older gentleman with the kind of big white hair that would paint him as a stock villain in any number of Harry Potter flicks, reads the official scores, his voice going into the microphone in his hand and echoing throughout the union hall.� It's a split decision.� Anthony has won.
The rest of the card breezes by.� Anthony, Sambo Steve and Tyga join me at cageside for the bouts ? their jobs are done, so it's time to relax and take in the sights.��A female Strikeforce veteran in the co-main event�goes down in the second round, the victim of a knockout cross.� A Bellator veteran in the main event gets the job done via relentless jiu-jitsu, but he has to work for it, his opponent fighting him hard every inch of the way.�
And then this installment of Matrix Fights is over, and all that's left is to collect the gear and go home.� Upstairs, the losing half of the main event is emotional over his defeat, and the female Strikeforce vet is shedding tears, too.� But Anthony is happy.� We make our way to the parking lot and join in the exodus.
Outside of Philly we stop at a Wawa for some post-fight grub, scarfing down sandwiches and gulping down drinks.� Anthony gobbles up a quesadilla and an apple turnover ? his victory meal ? and on the ride home we trade stories, the talk trailing off us exhaustion overtakes those of us who didn't fight.� It's past midnight when we get back to New York City, and one by one, Anthony drops us off.� Soon it's just�me and him in the car.
Still buzzing from having fought and won, Anthony shows no signs of being tired, and talks of his family, of food, of the buttermilk pie he makes and its superiority to the one his wife makes.� We pass by a billiards hall.� A�fistfight has spilled out into the street, two shirtless men swinging their arms wildly as a dozen or so others hoot and holler around them.� Anthony drives slowly through the melee, stops the car a half a block up the road, leans out his window, and watches.�
I'm incredulous that he'd have any interest.� After all, only a few hours before he'd fought in a cage, then watched some high-level MMA from cageside.� How could he want more fighting?� But maybe that's the point.� It was a long day's journey just so he could have his second venture into the realm of sanctioned combat, and for Anthony ? just like for any fighter ? it's a constant trek.� He'll have other bouts, other trips to Upstate New York and maybe Pennsylvania again and probably even New Jersey.� Like all who train and slip on the gloves and step into the cage, it's up to him to decide when it truly ends.
He drops me off a few minutes later, and after I congratulate him on his win once more, Anthony continues on.� His journey isn't quite over.
Jim Genia�goes to fights�in person so you don't have to.� Follow him here.
Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/long-day-journey-fight-part-2-154949966--mma.html
UFC light-heavyweight champ Jon Jones was sentenced today for the Driving While Intoxicated charge he incurred in a May 19 incident in Binghamton, N.Y.� The sentence handed down by the judge included a $1,000 fine and suspension of his driver's license for a period of six months.� Jones will face no jail time.� The MMA superstar, who will be taking on Dan Henderson at UFC 151 in September, had previously pleaded guilty.
Take it away, MMAFighting:
In his only official public statement released in July, Jones expressed remorse and regret over the incident.� "Mr. Jones wishes to express the following to his fans, friends, and, most of all, his family: By pleading guilty on May 29, Mr. Jones accepted responsibility for his actions.� This process has been a learning experience for this young man.� He is remorseful for his conduct, but thankful for the opportunity to accept responsibility and to grow as a person.� This experience has motivated Mr. Jones to achieve his maximum potential both professionally and personally."
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With the DWI on his record, Jones officially joins the ranks of a very elite UFC club ? a club whose members have all made poor decisions and suffered severe legal ramifications for them.� Other members include:
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As a reigning champ at the time of his legal troubles, I guess this sort of makes Jones the leader of the club.� Am I right?
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/mmaconvert/~3/trruMNkFjfE/
Source: http://www.5thRound.com/124248/trio-of-fights-confirmed-for-ufc-153-aldo-vs-koch/
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Payout/~3/6NApM6R2Qhw/
Source: http://www.fighters.com/08/01/jon-jones-avoids-time-behind-bars-in-dui-case
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Source: http://www.mmatorch.com/artman2/publish/UFC_2/article_13955.shtml
Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2012/07/28/invicta-fc-2-real-time-results/
Ryo Piranha Chonan Dan The Sandman Christison Logan The Pink Pounder Clark
Source: http://ninjashoes.net/forum/showthread.php?78889-Creatine&goto=newpost
A weekend without the UFC, Strikeforce or Bellator can often mean a weekend without happiness.� Okay, not really.� But if that actually is the case with you, please, get help.� Or get a hobby or something.� Anyway, there were no offerings from the aforementioned titans of mixed martial arts; however, last night the Invicta Fighting Championships had its second installment, and in terms of high-level MMA action, it pretty much rocked.� Therein lies where this morning's news is coming from.
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Jim Genia tweets the darndest things.
ONE FC: Pride Of A Nation – Promo Video is a post from: MMA Interplay UFC News
Source: http://www.mmainterplay.com/one-fc/one-fc-pride-of-a-nation-promo-video-58942/