Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

MMAWeekly.com debuts new featherweight rankings

August 8, 2007

In what could be its biggest vote of confidence to date, the featherweight division is now a part of MMAWeekly.com’s World Rankings.

In MMAWeekly.com’s newest set of rankings, which can be found here, Akitoshi Tamura debuts as the number one ranked 145 lbs. fighter in the world.

What about Urijah Faber, you ask?

The WEC featherweight champion is ranked number five.

Kid Yamamoto?

He’s included in the with the lightweight fighters (160 lbs. limit) and is ranked number nine.

Special thanks to my “Inside the Cage Radio” co-host Matt Cava of UFCTakedown.com for pointing the rankings out to me.

Women’s MMA rankings can’t be too far behind.

Random Rant: To Buy or not to Buy?

August 8, 2007

I have a major question of journalistic ethics that I thought I might run by everyone.

Both the IFL and Pro Elite are publicly traded companies. While both have shown heavy losses this year their stocks have bottomed out and can be acquired at a very low price. Not that I have the money for it, but I’ve been kicking around the idea of maybe buying a few shares of each for shits and giggles.

There’s one problem though. And that is that I cover both promotions for a living. It’s the type of conundrum that journalists covering other genres have to deal with.

For example, a CNBC on-air employee usually has to disclose their holdings. Also, many news organizations request that their political correspondents abstain from voting (although this practice has been dying a slow death for years).

So my question is, should someone who covers MMA have to disclose whether they own stock in a company they are covering? If I were to buy stock in the IFL or Pro Elite, I can promise you I wouldn’t let if effect my objectivity.

However, those are only words and unless you really know me, I wouldn’t expect anyone to put stock (pun half-intended) into those comments. I just read today that the Wall Street Journal is claiming that if Rupert Murdoch becomes their new owner they won’t let it affect their coverage.

Riiight!

My point is, I understand if nobody would want to take my word for it because in the same situations, I usually don’t take anyone’s word for it.

And while I wouldn’t let it affect my objectivity, it still appears as a conflict of interest on the surface and I know anytime I’d write something good about either company that it would open a can of worms.

So perhaps MMA reporters shouldn’t invest in MMA-related stocks at all?

I wanted to get your thoughts. Here are the options (leave your responses in the comments area):

A) Dude, there are millions of other stocks to buy. Pick something else and leave the two MMA stocks alone because MMA journalists shouldn’t have a financial stake in a company.

B) Buy some stock if you want, but just disclose that you own stock in a company when you report on it.

C) Why are you even bringing this up? What you do on your own time is your own business.

Random Rants: Bubba’s Hatley loses Muay Thai debut; Hong Man’s appeal upheld

August 6, 2007

There have been a lot of searches linking people to FiveOuncesOfPain.com today with people using Brent Hatley as the search phrase.

Brent is the producer of the Bubba the Love Sponge Show on Sirius Satellite Radio. I’m a huge fan of all the Howard Stern channels and of the Stern show, the Ferrall show, and Bubba’s show. Whenever I’m working, their shows are usually what I’m listening to.

While I’ve never met Brent, I am a huge fan of his and I find that I surprisingly have a lot in common with the guy. Yes, I’ve never met the guy but I listen every day and after awhile you start to feel like you know the people a little bit.

Hatley, a former Marine, trains at the Gracie franchise in Tampa, Florida under the guidance of Rob Kahn. He trains both Muay Thai and Jiu-Jitsu and has lost a ton of weight since he began training. After only several months of training, Hatley made his amateur Muay Thai debut this past Saturday.

According to the show, Brent lost his match via TKO at 0:39 second of round one. It’s ashame he lost his first match because he talked about training just about every day on the show. As someone who has also done amateur MMA and Muay Thai and lost his debut, I know how much the feeling sucks. Hopefully Brent sticks with it and gets back in the ring ASAP. Losing a fight can leave a crappy taste in your mouth for a long time and sometimes the only way to get over it is by fighting as soon as possible.

Because of the nature of the show, I’m sure he’s taking a lot of crap from people. However, give the man credit for having the stones to step in and take a fight.

In another MMA-related story, I’m sure by now you’ve all heard about the news pertaining to Phil Baroni, Sean Sherk, and Hermes Franca and their dealings with the California State Athletic Commission this morning.

Well, Hong Man-Choi also had a hearing today as well.

Hong Man, who won in a kickboxing rules match this weekend in Japan, was denied a medical license because of a tumor near his pituitary gland that causes him to continue to grow. He was supposed to have fought Brock Lesnar at Dynamite USA!! on June 2 but couldn’t fight without a license. Antonio Silva was also scrapped from the card for the same reason but has since undergone surgery to have the tumor removed.

For some reason, Hong Man doesn’t want the surgery. He should just have it and then put the tumor up on eBay. He’d make millions.

His case was today and according to the California State Athletic Commission, his denial of a medical license was upheld.  Until he has the tumor is removed he’s not going to get licensed in California and it will be difficult for him to get licensed anywhere else in a regulated state in the U.S.

Chael Sonnen on this week’s edition of BodogFIGHT…

August 6, 2007

According to a recent press release from BodogFIGHT, Chael Sonnen will be fighting on this week’s edition:

With an impressive first round knockout in the inaugural season of Bodog Fight, Team Quest’s Chael Sonnen won enough fan votes to earn the “favorite fighter” award, and an extra fifty grand.

Now, the 29-year-old mixed martial arts athlete from Oregon returns to Costa Rica looking to prove his dominant performance was no fluke.

Sonnen (18-8-1) takes on 24-year-old Tim “The Wrecking Machine” McKenzie (12-3) of Arizona in an all new episode of Bodog Fight: Paradise Lost this Tuesday, August 7th at 11 p.m. / 10 p.m. Central on ION television and in Canada on The Fight Network.

Also featured on this episode is a light heavyweight matchup between Ohio’s Mike Patt (13-1) and Canada’s Todd Gouwenberg (5-2).


Todd Gouwenberg

It’s amazing Gouwenberg can even climb into the ring considering the arduous journey the Surrey, British Columbia native has taken to get to this point.

Tossed out of school at age 16 for threatening the principal with a baseball bat, Gouwenberg moved out of his parents house and never looked back. But despite landing a job in construction, he found it hard to make ends meet.

“It was tough,” he says. “My monthly income was about one-hundred dollars less than my bills at the time so I didn’t eat much, but I got through it.”

Looking for a place to vent his pent up frustration Gouwenberg took up kickboxing. His first instructor was former world champion, Dennis Crawford.

“One time, Dennis took me out for dinner,” recalls the hard-hitting Canuck. “He said, ‘I’ll be honest with you Todd, you’re a tough guy and you try real hard, but I don’t see any natural ability. You should consider quitting the sport.’ I told him I had no intention of quitting, and that his words only made me want to improve even more.”

Gouwenberg began preparing for his first real fight in 1993 at the age of 18, training with another world champion kickboxer, Mel Murray.

“I remember Dennis had lined up this fight in Tacoma, Washington, and I really didn’t know, or care, who my opponent was. I took Mel with me and as we were walking into the arena we bumped into this fighter who appeared to know Mel. He asked what we were doing there and Mel replied, ‘My guy Todd is here to fight one of the locals.’ The fighter, a guy named Matt Hume, replied, ‘I think he’s actually fighting me!’. At that point, Mel pulled me aside and asked me if I wanted to go through with this. He said, ‘Look Todd, I know this guy well, and he’s something like 12-0. He’s a good fighter…. real tough.’ I just said, ‘Look, I came here to fight.’”

“I came out throwing and did pretty well in the first round, but I wasn’t checking his low kicks. I was so green, I thought to myself ‘those kicks don’t hurt that much.’ But I got back to my corner and Mel told me if I didn’t start defending them they would start to add up on me.”

He was right. Hume landed more kicks in the second round, sending Gouwenberg to the canvas several times.

“I sat on the stool after that round and my knee started to swell. Turned out I had torn my ACL and had to be carried out of there. I learned my lesson. They call it kickboxing for a reason, and this guy chopped me down like a big tree, all credit to him.”

Although Gouwenberg may have learned his lesson, before he could prove it in the ring, he suffered a small setback.

He was shot multiple times following a traffic dispute.

“I guess these three guys in another car felt I was trying to steal their parking space. We starting yelling at each other, then I jumped out and started fighting them. I was getting the better of one of them, when his friend pulled out a gun and shot me twice in the back. I tried to get out of there, but was shot again in the leg and then in the hip. Next thing I remember I was on the way to the hospital, bleeding all over, wondering if I was going to live or die.”

Gouwenberg survived, with all four bullets passing right through his body. It would be several years, however, before he’d return to the ring.

At 28 years of age, the 6′1″ 205-pound light heavyweight got a job at local gym and started training mixed martial arts. Now 32, Gouwenberg has amassed a pro MMA record of 5-2 as he prepares to face his next opponent, 31-year-old Mike Patt. Patt is a submission specialist who trains with former champion Rich “Ace” Franklin in Beaver Creek, Ohio. Patt beat Kaream Ellington in the inaugural season of Bodog Fight, and Martin Malkhasyan in Bodog Fight: USA vs. Russia pay-per-view last December.

“Mike’s experienced and he’s great on the ground,” says Gouwenberg. “I’d prefer to stand up with him so I’ve been working hard on my takedown defense, but I’m really ready for anything.”

After hearing his story, few would doubt that.

IFL to be broadcast in Asia on Star TV

August 6, 2007

The IFL released this to the press late last night…

NEW YORK, August 6, 2007 – The International Fight League (OTC.BB: IFLI), the world’s number one team-based professional mixed martial arts league, and Alfred Haber Distribution (AHDI) today announced the addition of Star TV as the IFL’s first television partner in Asia. Star will carry IFL programming on it’s Star Sports platform, available in over 50 countries to a viewership of over 300 million.

“The sport of Mixed Martial Arts has a storied history in Asia, and we are very eager for such a large fan base to be able to see the IFL on a regular basis,” said Gareb Shamus, IFL co-founder and CEO.  “The combination of our rising stars with our legendary coaches, many of whom are already household names in Asia, will make for very exciting programming for this important, emerging fan base.”

Star TV adds to an IFL TV platform that also includes most of the Middle East and parts of northern Africa on MBC, the leading free-to-air Pan-Arab news and entertainment channel in the region and CanWest Global in Canada, who is distributing the shows on their Global X-Treme Sports Channel.  Those are in addition to the IFL’s United States deals with “IFL Battleground,” hosted by Tiffany Fallon and Bas Rutten on MyNetwork TV (Mondays at 8 p.m. eastern and pacific/7 p.m. central)  and “Fight Night” (Fridays at 11 p.m. on FSN).  IFL programming is also seen worldwide on Armed Forces Network.

WEC weigh-in results and quotes

August 5, 2007

The WEC is scheduled to hold their second show on Versus tomorrow night (Sunday) at 9 p.m. ET. Weigh-ins were today.

The WEC just issued a press release with some quotes and results of the weigh-ins…

Results from Saturday’s World Extreme Cagefighting weigh-in:

With two title belts on the line, the weigh-in for Sunday’s World Extreme Cagefighting card in Las Vegas provided some last-minute buzz.

Carlos Condit, defending his welterweight title against Brock Larson, said that he expects his challenger to give him a good contest when the two lock horns in the main event.

“(He’s) a tough dude,” Condit said. “I plan on knocking Brock Larson’s ass out.”

While the two were cordial enough at the weigh in and obligatory stare-down for photographers, Larson wasn’t short of confidence either.

“I trained to go the distance,” Larson said. “Lots of cardio, there’s a chance it’s going five five-minute rounds.”

While weigh-ins typically are a mix of bottled-up tension and relief when fighters make weight, this afternoon’s event at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino wasn’t without a little dust-up. Lightweights Sherron “Rob Roy” Leggett and Jamie “The Worm” Varner had to be separated after Varner charged Leggett as he waited on the other side of the stage for the staredown, as Varner got off the scale. The two joined foreheads, pushing together, and later got in one another’s faces again before cooler heads prevailed.

WEC welterweight title

Carlos Condit – 170 lbs.

Brock Larson – 168.5 lbs.

Vacant WEC middleweight title

Paulo Filho – 184.5 lbs.

Joe Doerksen – 185 lbs.

Featherweights

Jeff Curran – 145 lbs.

Stephen Ledbetter – 146 lbs.

Lightweights

Sherron Leggett – 156 lbs.

Jamie Varner – 156 lbs.

Middleweights

Fernando Gonzalez – 185 lbs.

Hiromitsu Miura – 184.5 lbs.

Middleweights

Logan Clark – 185 lbs.

Eric Schambari – 183.5 lbs.

Bantamweights

Justin Robbins – 135 lbs.

Antonio Banuelos – 136 lbs.

Light Heavyweights

Steve Cantwell – 205 lbs.

Justin McElfresh – 206.5 lbs. (McElfresh was given one hour to lose a half-pound)

Welterweights

Blas Avena – 169.5 lbs.

Tiki Ghosn – 172 lbs. (Ghosn cut one pound to get to 171 after first trip to scale)

Bob Arum needs to retire… now!

August 4, 2007

Bob Arum is at it again.

Normally I don’t quote Arum because he’s a total moron but I couldn’t just let recent comments he made go.

Arum was a guest with Steve “Mr. Sunshine” Cofield on FoxSportsRadio 1460 in Vegas and attempted to rip UFC president Dana White a new… well, you know what.

“I’m not a pharmacologist so I’m not qualified for the UFC,” Arum began to say in his opening statement. “There’s more steroids and drugs in the UFC than the Tour de France. They’d better clean up their act. Because I don’t care if I am 110, it’s disgraceful to be involved in a so-called sport where every other athlete is using prohibited drugs.”

But he was far from done.

“And if he (Dana White doesn’t like it) then let him test the guys before they go into the match, not after, where 50-60% of the guys flunk a drug test,” Arum continued.

50-60%? Gee Bob, I’m not a lawyer but I think you just made a libelous statement. Do you have any facts to back that statement up?

In all, his pathetic diatribe lasted for about five minutes.

Arum also reiterated his racist stereotype that the UFC is comprised primarily of “white guys from the midwest.” How is it that he gets away with saying such racist bullshit?

Oh yeah, he also said he hoped White himself wasn’t on steroids.

I highly recommend you check out the entire audio on Steve’s excellent new blog by clicking here.

Steve’s had me on his shows several times and is one of the biggest MMA supporters you’ll find right now in mainstream sports talk radio. He also has an uncanny ability of getting people to spill the beans. On the morning of UFC 73, White ripped Jenna Jameson publicly for the first time while on Steve’s Fox Sports Radio show.

I highly recommend you check out his blog as there’s a lot of good stuff there.

Assuerio Silva and Chris Wilson set to debut at next Bodog Fight taping from Aug. 24-25

July 31, 2007

The Bodog Fight promotion will be holding their next series of tapings for their show on ION television in the U.S. and The Fight Network in Canada on August 24 and 25 in Vancouver, B.C.

FiveOuncesOfPain.com has obtained a bout sheet for the tapings and Bodog Fight welterweight champion Nick Thompson is scheduled to fight in a non-title bout. Former IFL fighter Chris Wilson and former UFC fighter Assuerio Silva are both scheduled to debut for the promotion.

Here is the complete bout sheet as of July 31:

145 lbs & under

1. Sami Aziz (Sweden) vs. Hiroyuki Abe (Japan)

2. JR Sims (USA) vs. DJ Taiki (Japan)

155 lbs & under

3. Rodrigo Damm (Brazil) vs. Darren Elkins (USA)

4. Per Eklund (Sweden) vs. Rafael Dias (USA)

5. Ryan Bow (Japan) vs. Santino Defranco (USA)

6. Chris Ade (Canada) vs. Koji Oishi (Japan)

170 lbs & under

7. Nick Thompson (USA) vs. Mark Weir (UK)

8. Piotr Jakaczynski (Sweden) vs. Dan Hornbuckle (USA)

9. Chris Wilson (USA) vs. Ray Steinbeiss (USA)

10. Diego Gonzales (Sweden) vs. Steve Berger (USA)

185 lbs & under

11. Tim McKenzie (USA) vs. Yuichi Nakanishi (Japan)

12. Kyacey Uscola (USA) vs. TBA

13. Steve Byrnes (USA) vs. Alexander Shlemenko (Russia)

205 lbs & under

14. Antony Rea (France) vs. Steve Steinbeiss (USA)

15. Mikhael Zyats (Russia) vs. Buddy Roberts (USA)

Heavyweight

16. Assuerio Silva (Brazil) vs. Constantin Gluhov (Russia)

17. Andrew Pederson (Canada) vs. Scott Lincoln (USA)

18. Dan Evensen (USA) vs. Dominic Richards (Canada)

19. Kristof Midoux (France) vs. Brad Morris (Australia)

Women’s 125 lbs.

20. Megumi Fujii (Japan) vs. Lisa Ward (USA)

21. Carina Damm (Brazil) vs. Jessica Aguillar (USA)

22. Rosi Sexton (UK) vs. Julia Berezekova (Russia)

Women’s 135 lbs.

23. Kelly Kobold (USA) vs. Julie Kedzie (USA)

24. Tama Chan (Japan) vs. Molly Helsel (USA)

Check me out on Fight Network Radio…

July 30, 2007

I’ll be a guest on Fight Network Radio with Mauro Ranallo in a short while at 3 p.m. ET. You can listen to the show on Sirius Channel 186 or listen online at HardcoreSportsRadio.com.

Also, I wanted to apologize for the lack of updates today. Right now there really isn’t much going on. It actually worked out well because I resumed training today after a two-month layoff and it wasn’t pretty. I had to make not one, but two trips to the bathroom. To make matters worse, I am starting at a different school (MFS Philly still rocks, but it’s a long commute for me and my schedule keeps changing… the school I go to now is well-regarded as well and is an affiliate school, so everything is all good) so I looked like a total bitch on my first day. I’m sure you all wanted to know that.

UFCjunkie.com reveals final two fighters rumored for “The Ultimate Fighter 6″

July 27, 2007

UFCjunkie.com has revealed the final two fighters that are rumored to be a part of the cast for the sixth season of The Ultimate Fighter, which is currently being filmed in Las Vegas.

According to Junkie, the rumored cast is also believed to include Daniel Barrera and George Sotiropoulos. A total of 17 cast members are now rumored, with the assumption is a late replacement was needed for a fighter who was injured.

Here is the entire rumored cast for TUF 6:

  • Daniel Barrera
  • George Sotiropoulos
  • John Kolosci
  • Roman Mitichyan
  • Matt Arroyo
  • Blake Bowman
  • Richie Hightower
  • Mac Danzig
  • Tom Speer
  • Joe Scarola
  • Ben Saunders
  • Dorian Price
  • Jared Rollins
  • Billy Miles
  • Troy Mandaloniz
  • Jon Koppenhaver
  • Paul Georgieff