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Category — Affliction

Who wants to see Fedor vs. Josh Barnett now?

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Do you still want to see Fedor Emelianenko fight Josh Barnett? There are rumours of setting up the bout in the DREAM promotion in Japan early next year (possibly February). Personally, I think its time has passed. The luster is off the diamond, the bloom is off the rose. I was psyched to see the two top-ranked heavyweights in the world battle it out back in August, before bad drug tests and bad business sense caused Affliction to collapse.

Now, Fedor has just made his Strikeforce debut and should stick around to fight in that promotion. Yes, Strikeforce has a co-promotion deal with DREAM, but Fedor fighting anywhere else is a huge mistake. It’s time to capitalize on the biggest event in Strikeforce’s history, one that saw Fedor knock out challenger Brett Rogers, and to maintain and build upon that momentum Fedor needs to fight as soon as his hand heals (four- to-six weeks, by his estimate). Why waste that mainstream media exposure by having their biggest asset go off to Japan to fight? That makes no sense. Then again, neither does letting Alistair Overeem sit on his heavyweight belt while he goes off the fight in other promotions.

November 17, 2009   No Comments

UFC 103 foes Franklin and Belfort measure up against Wanderlei Silva

Two video clips, each trying to sell us on a different fighter – Rich Franklin and Vitor Belfort – based on what? How they handled Wanderlei Silva? That seems to be the approach for promoting this UFC 103 catchweight match-up.

But does it make sense to promote Belfort based on a fight that took place 11 years ago? Yeah, a lot of UFC fans might be unfamiliar with the Brazilian with the blazing hands because he hasn’t fought in the UFC since 2005 and his last octagon win was over Randy Couture for the light heavyweight crown at UFC 46 in 2004. And yes, Belfort’s demolishing of Silva was epic, the kind of glory days story aging athletes retell every time they have the opportunity.

Except Belfort’s only 32 years old and is far from the middle-aged oaf looking back on his years scoring touchdowns and screwing cheerleaders as captain of the high school football team. He may have made his UFC debut at UFC 12 where he won the heavyweight tournament, but he’s still in his prime with a record of 18-8 (7-4 in the UFC). He’s also on a four-fight winning streak, including back-to-back Affliction triumphs over Terry Martin and Matt Lindland.

Meanwhile, Rich Franklin is talking about his decision win over Silva at UFC 99, a decision that many – myself included – feel should have gone the other way.

Using Wanderlei Silva as a benchmark or measuring stick might work on the noobs, but come on. Both these fighters have incredible fighting records, incredible battles. Why not highlight some of them? Because Wanderlei Silva is a known quantity, even if he doesn’t best represent the kinds of fighters Belfort and Silva are.

September 9, 2009   No Comments

Carwin vs. Lesnar confirmed, Velasquez pulls Rothwell

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Okay, that Shane Carwin vs. Brock Lesnar at UFC 106 rumour appears to be true. AOL Fanhouse and MMA Junkie are reporting that Carwin’s original opponent, heavyweight Cain Velasquez, will now be facing Ben Rothwell at UFC 104, with light heavyweight champ Lyoto Machida squaring off against Mauricio “Shogun” Rua in the headliner.

Velasquez (6-0 MMA, 4-0 UFC) last earned a unanimous-decision win over Cheick Kongo at UFC 99. The one-sided affair saw Kongo beaten and broken and embarrassed despite testing Cain’s chin several times in the early going.

Rothwell (30-6 MMA, 0-0 UFC), who was slated to fight Chase Gormley at the canceled Affliction: Trilogy event, has won 14 of his past 15 bouts, including two wins over UFC light heavyweight Krzysztof Soszynski. It’ll be interesting to see how he handles the pressure, the spotlight, the media and fan frenzy in his octagon debut.

August 20, 2009   No Comments

Nog, Nog… Who’s there?

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Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (aka “Minotauro,” aka “Big Nog“) let slip during today’s UFC 102 media conference call that his twin brother, Antonio Rogerio Nogueira (aka “Minotoro,” aka “Little Nog“), is joining the ranks of the UFC light heavyweight division and will make his octagon debut this fall.

Little Nog is a PRIDE FC, Sengoku and Affliction veteran with an impressive record of 17-3 and has notched wins over the likes of Kazushi Sakuraba, Dan Henderson and Alistair Overeem.

Smart move by the UFC, making the light heavyweight division a little more stacked. If Lyoto Machida wants to keep his belt the UFC’s not going to make it easy for him, and that means good fights for us fans.

August 18, 2009   1 Comment

Barnett back in action, sort of

Out to make a little cash following his Affliction steroid scandal, Josh Barnett tag-teamed with Naoya Ogawa against Bob Sapp and Yoshihiro Takiyama in an Inoki Genome Federation Japanese pro wrestling competition on Sunday. Watching this, all I can say is that it’s probably not a bad thing that Barnett didn’t fight Fedor Emelianenko.

Props to The Savage Science for the heads-up.

August 13, 2009   No Comments

UFC draws first blood in MMA war

Okay, so what now? That’s what everybody’s asking now that the dust has settled. Affliction is gone and Fedor Emelianenko, the most-prized fighter on the planet not already in the UFC, has signed a three-fight deal with Strikeforce.

It was a deal with the devil that the promotion had to make, that the UFC practically put a gun to their head and forced them to make. Strikeforce needs a big name, the biggest, so they can have something to market, to bring in ratings and lock down that elusive primetime CBS deal they’ve been chasing. Gina Carano was the first piece of the puzzle.

Tito Ortiz was supposed to be the second. The former UFC light heavyweight champ was all-but-signed to a four-fight Strikeforce contract when UFC president Dana White buried the hatchet and re-signed him. Ortiz would’ve given Strikeforce another marquee name, a franchise player to throw into the marketing mix. When he disappeared off the table they then had no choice but to go after Fedor even though the UFC was also interested. Hell, most of us thought the UFC was a done deal and that Strikeforce had no real shot. How wrong we were.

And now Strikeforce is crossing its fingers that Fedor doesn’t turn into their Kimbo Slice, someone who collapses after one punch. God forbid if Fedor loses his first fight with Strikeforce.

So they sign Fedor, steal him out from underneath the UFC. And suddenly, a bridesmaid outfit like Strikeforce is looking to walk down the aisle. That’s not going to make Dana White very happy. Oh, he’ll talk a good game about how competition is healthy, how it’s good for the sport, but really he wants to crush them. To him, mixed martial arts is like the NBA or NFL. And there’s only one NBA or NFL. If you’re the best, you play for the best, the UFC, or you don’t play at all. In effect, war has been declared.

Now, Strikeforce is not raising the white flag, or shoring up their defenses, or sitting around with their thumbs up their asses praying that their Fedor gambit is enough to put them over the top. Because it isn’t. You can’t build an entire organization around one franchise player. And they know it.

Except they have a problem: they have a pretty thin roster of heavyweights for Fedor to fight – current champ Alistair Overeem, Brett Rogers (who knocked out past-his-best-before-date former UFC heavyweight champ Andrei Arlovski in 22 seconds but is relatively untested otherwise), Fabricio Werdum (who choked out Emelianenko’s younger brother, Aleksander, three years ago but just got knocked out by UFC up-and-comer Junior Dos Santos) and that’s about it.

That must’ve played a part in Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker’s decision to sign a partnership with the Japanese DREAM fight promotion. As he revealed on The Carmichael Dave Radio Show on Monday, the number two MMA promotion in America is forming an alliance with the number one promotion in Japan.

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It’s a deal that opens up potential foes for Fedor. It could also see the former PRIDE FC champion fighting in Japan, where he’s worshipped like a god. And because his contract isn’t exclusive, as it would’ve been with the UFC (save for combat sambo competitions), it leaves the door open for him to fight in Japan’s annual New Year’s Eve blockbuster show, because it just doesn’t feel like the holidays until the Russian beats the crap out of some pituitary case at the super-hulk sideshow while we sip champagne and count down to midnight.

Besides more opponents for Fedor, it provides Strikeforce with access to an entire pool of top-ranked fighters: Joachim Hansen (DREAM lightweight champion), Shinya Aoki, Marius Zaromskis (welterweight champion), Bibiano Fernandes, Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza, Jason “Mayhem” Miller, Joe Warren, Hiroyuki Takaya and Hideo Tokoro. And the two promotions already share the services of former DREAM middleweight champion and current top Strikeforce light heavyweight contender Gegard Mousasi, who also happens to be under contract with Fedor’s management, M-1 Global.

Suddenly, Strikeforce (or Strikeforce/M-1 Global/DREAM) cards become must-see events, and could have the ancillary effect of pushing non-UFC fighters further up the world rankings. Dana White will have a harder time convincing people that the best fighters in the world are in the UFC (he’s already lost the best, Fedor).

But as Michael Rome over at Bloody Elbow asks, What did Strikeforce really get when they signed Fedor? He’s not well-known outside of MMA circles (although the past two weeks of media attention will certainly improve his name recognition), he’s been slagged by fans for not fighting the best despite a 30-1 record, and his pay-per-view drawing power is sub-par; as Rome points out, Fedor’s best PPV was against Arlovski and it would be considered a complete disaster for even the worst UFC show.

And how will the UFC wage war? By scheduling monster PPVs around Strikeforce events (call it counter-programming, MMA-style), and by offering fighters contracts that they really can’t refuse. Never mind Fedor – if he actually wins his three fights in Strikeforce to become champion, and that’s a big fucking “if,” then we’ll talk about whether White would try to poach him. What about Brett Rogers (Brock Lesnar’s going to run out of opponents eventually), Jake Shields or Nick Diaz? Their contracts will expire and the UFC will come knocking. What about Gina Carano? The UFC might not have a women’s division now, but when I spoke with White last year he was already considering the possibility. Carano’s about as marketable an MMA fighter as there is. And the UFC has a far bigger war chest than Strikeforce (if Donald Trump and Mark Cuban, two of the richest, craziest businessmen in the world, couldn’t make a go of Affliction, what chance does Strikeforce have if the UFC really sets its sights on putting them out of buiness?).

Put another way, Dana White will take a page from Conan (the barbarian, not the talkshow goofball) and rape and pillage Strikeforce if only to hear the lamentations of Scott Coker.

So what can Coker do? As Dave Meltzer over at Yahoo! Sports points out, signing Fedor was a good opening volley. They already have a deal with Showtime, which wants to focus on PPV events, which runs counter to Strikeforce’s agenda thus far. That may have to change. Strikeforce is also working on a deal to air fights in network primetime on CBS, which is under the same corporate umbrella (Viacom) as Showtime. MMA was a ratings hit for CBS when it aired Elite XC fights, thanks in large part to the marketability of larger-than-life characters like Kimbo Slice and Gina Carano.

Strikeforce still has Carano (for now) and now they’ve got the number one fighter in the world. The question is whether they can capitalize on him. MMA diehards will watch, but what about the casual viewers, or the mildly interested non-fan? Of course, Fedor’s only half the equation, which is why the DREAM deal is so important – Fedor needs strong opponents who can also be packaged and sold to the public. He also needs to not lose. I can’t emphasize that enough. He must not lose.

His first fight will likely be a gimme of some sort, certainly an easier road than the UFC and Lesnar presented. It won’t be a title shot against Overeem. Strikeforce will want to let the hype on that one marinade a little bit. But it will air on Showtime in October. Expect his second fight to test his primetime potential if the CBS deal can be worked out. If that happens, he’ll be the most-visible MMA fighter in history. That raises the stature of the sport and Strikeforce and will piss Dana White off even more (especially since he’s been trying to get a network TV deal for quite a while). For the third fight they bring in Overeem, assuming neither he nor Fedor have lost, which is a very big assumption and makes the whole thing an even bigger gamble for Strikeforce. The moment Fedor loses Dana White gets to declare whoever the UFC heavyweight champ is at the time – likely still Lesnar – as the best fighter in the world.

If you’re still confused about why Fedor signed with Strikeforce it’s pretty simple. Sure, the UFC deal was probably more personally lucrative (somewhere between $2-$60million per fight once a share of PPV revenues were tallied plus the promotional boost fighting in the biggest fight promotion in the world provides). But the UFC wouldn’t allow for M-1 Global to co-promote events. The sole sticking point.

Or so I thought until I remembered all the smack talking White has done in regards to the fighter, which ceased during the last few weeks only to begin anew once Fedor signed with Strikeforce, to wit: “Fedor is a fucking joke. He turns down a huge deal and the opportunity to face the best in the world to fight nobodies for no money. I feel sorry for the real fight fans. I wanted to make the deal, but it takes two and it is very obvious Fedor doesn’t want to fight the best, and doesn’t give a fuck about the fans.”

Fedor certainly hasn’t forgotten. “Numerous times have I read Mister White’s statements on Internet concerning myself. In my opinion, allowing yourself to say those things is not a sign of a gentleman or a grown man at all!” he wrote in an open letter to White last year. I have to believe that simply not liking your new boss is a good enough reason to turn down a job, especially when money really isn’t an issue (i.e. Fedor is already loaded).

So Strikeforce makes their play, takes their gamble, rolls the dice, puts most if not all of their eggs in Fedor’s basket (not unlike the now defunct Affliction). And let’s say it works. Consider this: If the Fedor fight on CBS is a success, how many fighters, how many UFC heavyweights, might be interested in a piece of that when their contracts end? All you need is the first domino to fall. Randy Couture still wants a crack at the Russian (and it’s not like he’ll ever seriously contend for either the light heavyweight or heavyweight belt again). What about a quasi-semi-sorta-but-not-quite-retired Chuck Liddell? Or old Pride enemy Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira? Or Frank Mir? Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic? Or Cheick Kongo? Or anyone else already vanquished by or not interested in fighting Lesnar? Hell, even Lesnar could jump ship for a chance to feed his ego and prove he really is the best heavyweight in the world while drinking whatever damn beer he wants. Suddenly, Strikeforce is where all the baddest heavyweights go. Followed by the light heavies, the middleweights, welterweights and so on. Dominos, man, dominos…

But first, Fedor Emelianenko has to win.

Oh, and he needs to learn to speak English, fluent English, the kind of English that can sell Nike shoes to the legless. Because Strikeforce is going to need him to do lots of interviews, sign endorsement deals, make commercials and not come across as a Gulag commandant.

August 4, 2009   No Comments

Affliction refugees find a home

The Mark Hominick vs. Deividas Taurosevicius bout from the cancelled Affliction: Trilogy card has been relocated to September 2’s WEC 43, Sherdog reports. The headliner for the event is an interim lightweight title fight between Donald Cerrone and Benson Henderson.

A UFC, WEC and Affliction veteran and London, ON., native, Hominick last fought in a July 2008 submission win over Savant Young. Hominick has suffered submission losses to Josh Grispi and Rani Yahya in his two WEC appearances. Taurosevicius last fought in a May 2008 unanimous-decision loss to Ryan Schultz. The loss snapped a six-fight win streak for the Lithuanian, including three wins in the now-defunct IFL.

August 4, 2009   No Comments

Fedor joins Strikeforce

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The deal is done. The future of Fedor Emelianenko has been locked down. As was widely rumoured over the weekend, the Russian badass has signed a contract with Strikeforce, ending all the “Fedor must fight in the UFC” drama that’s been going on since Affliction shuttered its promotional operations and left Fedor without a cage to fight in.

Strikeforce, the UFC’s biggest competitor, confirmed that Emelianenko (30-1) has agreed to a multi-fight deal in events co-headlined by M-1 Global (the sticking point that caused the UFC deal to fall apart last week). Strikeforce has previously co-promoted with organizations such as EliteXC and BodogFIGHT. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Nor was any information about when or who Fedor would fight first, although it’s expected to happen sometime this fall during a Showtime-broadcast event. Obviously, Fedor, a longtime PRIDE champion who’s widely regarded as the sport’s top heavyweight, becomes an immediate challenger to Strikeforce’s heavyweight champ, Alistair Overeem. The problem is Overeem hasn’t fought since winning the title in November 2007 and was recently scratched from an Aug. 15 title bout with Fabricio Werdum because of a hand injury. I don’t know how anxious Overeem is going to be to make his first title defence against Fedor, assuming he’s healthy.

As Emelianenko’s manager, M-1 Global co-owner and president Vadim Finkelchtein is seen as the devil who prevented a very lucrative UFC deal from going through. Now, it seems he’s found an even sweeter deal, one that will see Fedor and M-1 become a lynchpin of the Strikeforce promotion, with each of their success tied to the other.

Strikeforce, which launched in 2006, is one of the few financially successful promotions outside of the UFC, with a highlights show on NBC and live events on Showtime and HDNet. It’s also rumoured to be close to a deal with CBS, the former home of the now-defunct EliteXC promotion, to air fights live in network primetime.

August 3, 2009   No Comments

Barnett is exhausting me

I’m really amused. First, he was reading comic books. Now, Josh Barnett appears to be installing a new high-performance car exhaust. These are the pics he’s been Twittering with comments like “Time to get to work” and “Ok. Half way there. Now install the Corsa system.” If this is really what he’s doing today, so be it. If it’s not and it’s some sort of joke, it’s actually pretty hilarious.

barnettexhaust1Barnettexhaust

August 1, 2009   1 Comment

Adam Sandler, Josh Barnett and Arseface

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I should be getting ready for a night of fights, but since that’s not happening… umm… maybe I’ll go see Funny People. I hear it’s good. I like Seth Rogen, not so much Adam Sandler. I wonder how Josh Barnett is spending his day. Oh, look at this, a message on Barnett’s Twitter account: “Finished the comic series ‘Preacher‘ today. I can’t believe it took me this long to finish it but damn glad I did.” Yeah, Josh, Preacher is pretty fucking awesome, like The Outlaw Josey Wales but with angels and demons and drunk Irish vampires and a Kurt Cobain wannabe called Arseface. You know what else is awesome, Josh? A fight with Fedor Emelia-fucking-enko, that’s what.

Preacher-Ancient-HistoryPreacher - Cassidy


August 1, 2009   No Comments

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