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Saturday, February 28, 2009

UFC Signs Yoshihiro Akiyama From Japan


The Ultimate Fighting Championship’s signing of Yoshihiro Akiyama represents a significant business first – the first time a true native top-level drawing card from Japan has signed with a foreign mixed martial arts organization.
There have been plenty of Japanese fighters in UFC over the years, including Caol Uno, a legitimate lightweight contender in the early days of the division (who is set to return to UFC in June); Yushin Okami, a top middleweight contender; and even Kazuhiko Nakamura came in after the PRIDE purchase in 2007.
But Uno, while somewhat of a name fighter in Japan today, was not any kind of crossover star. Okami was an unknown fighter except to hardcore fans. Nakamura was known as a PRIDE regular. But he was a mid-carder, and it was joked that when PRIDE came to the U.S. for the first time before it folded, the American fans thought Nakamura was a bigger deal than anyone in Japan did. He only lasted a few fights with UFC before being sent packing.
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Japanese MMA, hugely popular during the early part of the decade – the Bob Sapp vs. Akebono freak-show match on New Year’s Eve drew a Super Bowl-like rating, and an outdoor show with Mirko Cro Cop vs. Japan’s first MMA hero, Kazushi Sakuraba, drew 71,000 fans – is suffering now due to a lack of stars and mainstream interest.
UFC has talked with most major Japanese fighters, but talks always came down to economics. Because they were more valuable to the Japanese promotions than they would be to UFC, the money offers were better, plus there were more sponsorship dollars available for fighting on a shows broadcast on network television in Japan.
Those with knowledge of Akiyama’s decision say he was unhappy about his role as a villain in Japan, due to his role in his country’s version of the “Greasegate” controversy that came out of last month’s Georges St. Pierre-B.J. Penn match. Instead of embracing his status, he wanted to start fresh in a new setting.
UFC president Dana White has long talked about wanting to promote in Japan, but there are a multitude of challenges, including the UFC’s television clearance on a station only a small percentage of the public gets and the difficulty foreign promoters have experienced trying to get a foothold in the Japanese marketplace.
And while Akiyama is, with the exception of only Kid Yamamoto, the biggest television ratings draw of Japanese MMA fighters, he is also hated in the country.
Akiyama has a strange dichotomy, because as much as he’s hated in Japan, he’s loved in South Korea, as the country’s current martial arts hero.
At this point there are no plans to run live events in South Korea, but UFC does have television in that country and Akiyama on its roster greatly bolsters its standing.
But putting marketing aside, there is another reality to Akiyama. After Akiyama was knocked out cold on December 31, 2007, by Kazuo Misaki, he has not been the same fighter. He is slower to react, which is the kiss of death against top competition. Fighting Entertainment Group, the promotion behind K-1 in Japan, was well aware of this, putting him against two non-fighters in his only matches this past year. Unless his reflexes suddenly snap back to pre-knockout levels, UFC is paying big money for a fighter who may very well be shot. And unlike in Japan, UFC is not going to put fighters who couldn’t even win in minor-league shows against him because he’s a draw.
When it comes to the big stage, the Japanese MMA world is difficult for an American to understand. Although there are championships, they are not really all that important. During the heyday of PRIDE and in K-1 today, nobody in Japan talks or cares about people’s win-loss records. Fighting with honor was considered far more important than winning.
Some people liked to say it was mostly about putting on entertaining fights, but that’s not really correct either. It was about creating unique celebrity stars who can bring everyone, from older people to especially younger women, to the sport with their story and role.
In 2004, Akiyama was recruited by the FEG and handpicked to be the next superstar of the sport. With his looks and physique, the idea was he would appeal to the female fan base that creates the kind of idols who end up on television and magazine covers, expanding their popularity long past the hardcore followers of a sport.
His Korean ancestry was considered a plus for an ethnic appeal to that community in Japan. And he was already known as an athlete, from judo, a popular sport in the country. He won the Asian championship in 2002 for Japan, and placed fourth in the 2003 world championships.
He had his unique and memorable ring entrance, holding hands with members of his team and coming out to “Time To Say Goodbye,” sung by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman.
He debuted on the biggest night of the year for MMA, on December 31, 2004, as part of the Japanese New Year’s Eve fighting tradition.
Everything was set up perfectly to make him an instant star. He was put in a match billed as judo vs. boxing, giving up more than 60 pounds to a former world heavyweight boxing champion, Francois Botha. He was representing not just Japan, but a Japanese native sport, against a foreigner, and he was physically a much smaller man. Plus, putting someone world-class in judo who had been given the best MMA coaching available against a pure boxer with no other weapons, under MMA rules, typically creates more of a mismatch than a difference in size. As expected, Akiyama immediately took Botha off his feet, and armbarred him in 1:54.
After a loss to kickboxer Jerome LeBanner, who was 80 pounds heavier, in his second match, Akiyama was built up against opponents with little chance to be competitive with him. His lone impressive win, on October 9, 2006, winning the Hero’s middleweight tournament, was beating Melvin Manhoef. Manhoef, perhaps the best middleweight striker in MMA, also had no ground game and was taken down and armbarred in 1:58. The win put him over the top, beating such a physically impressive foreigner who Japanese fans had seen put one opponent after another to sleep with his fists.
With the tournament win and a 10-1 pro record, this led to the match that was to make him the new face of Japanese MMA, with the legendary but physically shot Sakuraba, on December 31, 2006.
The match itself drew a 25.0 rating, meaning one in every four homes in Japan was watching on television.
The problems started as Sakuraba went for an ankle pick, and Akiyama slipped away. Sakuraba immediately went to the ref and protested that Akiyama had grease or Vaseline on his legs. The ref ignored it. Akiyama took advantage of Sakuraba’s hesitation, punching him in the face. The telling blow came later, a spinning Akiyama backfist that stunned Sakuraba. Sakuraba ducked for a single leg and slipped right off. By the end, Akiyama threw 105 punches on the ground, and blood was coming out of Sakuraba’s ear. At 5:37, the referee stopped it.
Sakuraba’s face had swollen to the point it was nearly unrecognizable, but he was never knocked out. Instead of hugging Akiyama after losing, he went to the ref and screamed about Akiyama being greased up. The ref checked Akiyama’s back and said he found nothing. Sakuraba screamed that it was the legs what were greased. The ref, who was later heavily admonished for how he handled the situation, didn’t check.
However, since the Japanese network filmed the event with a 30-camera shoot, a few days later it came out that the camera in Akiyama’s locker room showed him in the dressing room applying Oil of Olay body lotion.
The public turned on Akiyama; in their view, he attempted to cheat to get a win over a living legend. The result of the match was overturned and ruled a no-contest. Akiyama, in his best Alex Rodriguez moment, said he was suffering from dry skin and didn’t realize the magnitude of what he was doing.
Akiyama had his entire purse withheld and was forced to publicly apologize. K-1 received 10,000 outraged fan letters who wanted Akiyama banned for life. K-1 publicly announced he was suspended, but privately felt that due to public outrage, they would never use him again.
Akiyama was directly told his career was over, and he asked if he could apologize to the crowd on the next show. FEG head Sadaharu Tanigawa told him that he couldn’t, and told him he would never be allowed in a ring again.
“Never” ended up being just over 10 months, as FEG sooon ran a show in Seoul, South Korea. With massive popularity and using his Korean name, he knocked out current UFC fighter Denis Kang in the main event.
MMA’s popularity waned in 2007 in Japan, and the public and sponsors furor died down over the Sakuraba match. With TV desperate for ratings, he was brought back on December 31, 2007, for a match with Misaki.
It was an amazing spectacle. As “Time to Say Goodbye” started playing, 19,000 fans at the Saitama Super Arena were booing at the top of their lungs, something that just doesn’t happen with the normally polite and reserved Japanese audience. With Akiyama down and starting to get up, Misaki kicked him brutally in the face, and knocked him out cold. The explosion was like one rarely heard in a Japanese sporting event. But as it turned out, the videotape showed Akiyama was down at the time of the kick, making it an illegal blow, and for the second straight New Year’s Eve, Akiyama’s match was overturned and called a no-contest.
But after that knockout, the question is whether UFC has spent a lot of money purchasing damaged goods. yahoo/mma.com

boxing meets MMA?

Rahman's babbling shows boxers simply have no respect for MMA
By S. Cofield
Golfers have to be insulted when they hear baseball players talk about making a run at the Senior Champions Tour when their careers on the diamond are finished. Rick Rhoden may be the best celebrity golfer in the world but he's a far cry from legitimately competing with legends of golf. Makes sense, right? Why then, do we keep hearing about 30 and 40-something boxers wanting to "try mixed martial arts." Hasim Rahman, who is just 10-5-2 in the lousy heavyweight division (really 10-7-1, should've lost both fights to James Toney), now says at age 36, he's ready for a shot at MMA. Good luck bro.
That is just as ridiculous as Anderson Silva, who isn't washed up at all in MMA, saying he can walk into a boxing ring and compete with the world's best boxers. Silva is toying with the idea but may be changing his mind since he's wowed very few during his work at Freddie Roach's Wild Card Gym.
Both sports require years of training. The transition from one to the other at a high level can't be made in six months or with the "I'm going to try it" mentality. Yet Rahman's agent Sandra Gelke says "The Rock" is ready for a cage rumble:
Gelke said that the 36-year-old Rahman is “quite serious about fighting in MMA” and they are currently in negotiations with several promotions, hoping to line up a debut fight sometime in the next 2-3 months.
Two months, huh? Is Rahman thinking correctly about fighting on the lowel levels of MMA or is he going to start calling out elite heavyweights? My guess is that the $2,000 paydays that many MMA newcomers earn, isn't going to interest a guy accustomed to making millions per fight.
The agent also says Rahman's motivation is Kimbo Slice:
“He thought it would be an interesting thing. He’s seen Kimbo Slice fight on TV, and he’s like, ‘I’d like to fight some of these guys.'"
The Kimbo knockout loss to a guy like Seth Petruzelli, who is probably in the No. 30-40 range worldwide at light heavyweight, should have been a warning to boxers, instead it's motivation for a guy like Rahman. Bizarre.
Next we're going to hear about 65-year-old Jimmy Snuka being ready for a boxing or MMA run.
MMA fans should also hope Tim Sylvia chooses not go ahead with his silly plan to box against 47-year-old Ray Mercer. That is a lose-lose proposition. Sylvia, wins and it's a who cares situation because Mercer is a 900-years-old. If he loses, it's a complete embarassment for MMA

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Monday, February 9, 2009

Strikeforce a legit contender after EXC deal ?



A deal negotiated over several months was finalized Thursday with contract signings that immediately makes the San Jose, Calif.-based Strikeforce promotion the leading competitor to the industry leading Ultimate Fighting Championship.

Strikeforce promoter and co-owner Scott Coker confirmed separate deals were signed Thursday to both buy certain assets from Pro Elite, Inc., which ran the now-defunct Elite XC promotion, as well as television deals with both CBS and Showtime.

The first show under this deal will be April 11 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, headlined by Frank Shamrock, 36, a legend from the early days of mixed martial arts in the U.S. and Japan.

Coker said the company is talking about several different opponents for Shamrock, a former UFC middleweight (now light heavyweight) champion, who lost his Strikeforce middleweight title to Cung Le on March 29, suffering a broken arm in the process.

Shamrock has proven to be one of the best non-UFC draws in the mixed martial arts business, headlining the two largest paid attendance shows ever in North America, both in his hometown of San Jose, as well as drawing two of the three largest ratings for MMA on the Showtime network, for matches with Renzo Gracie and Phil Baroni.

Coker said he did not purchase the contracts for all of the estimated 80 fighters under Elite XC deals, but that all the key names came with the deal, including Kimbo Slice, who still holds the record for the most-watched MMA match ever in North America in a CBS match last year.

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Also confirmed as part of the deal were the country’s most popular female fighter, Gina Carano, lightweight stars Nick Diaz and Eddie Alvarez as well as Elite XC middleweight champion Robbie Lawler, and welterweight champion Jake Shields.

Elite XC’s heavyweight champion, Antonio Silva, would not be part of the deal because he is facing revocation of his fighting license for competing in a match in Japan on Jan. 4 while on suspension for failing a steroid test on July 26. In that match he won the vacant championship against the late Justin Eilers.

The promotion will use the Strikeforce name, and Coker said a decision regarding the status of the various championships recognized by Strikeforce and Elite XC would be forthcoming in about a week.

Coker said the deal would include 12 live events per year on Showtime, which would be split similar to the Elite XC contract. Roughly half will be live prime-time events featuring name fighters and held in major arenas, and the others will be developmental shows held in smaller arenas and on Native American reservations and airing later.

The CBS deal calls for up to four shows per year, airing on Saturday nights in prime time. Elite XC ran three events on CBS last year, two of which were considered ratings successes.

Strikeforce also has a television deal in place with NBC, airing a 30-minute show of taped matches from their video library in a late Saturday night/Sunday morning time slot that airs in most markets between 2 and 4 a.m.


The only official match for the debut show will pit Scott Smith, who had two shots at Lawler’s championship last year, against former IFL middleweight champion Benji Radach. Coker is also hopeful of putting together a match with Strikeforce lightweight champion Josh Thomson against K.J. Noons, who held the Elite XC version of the title before being stripped of it in October in a contract dispute with Elite XC management.

Strikeforce plans to line up match-ups this year from stars created on television and then go to the pay-per-view venue when ready.

“We’ll also be in the pay-per-view business, but not right away,” said Coker. “We’re looking at building Strikeforce fighters and Pro Elite fighters to make compelling matches. We’ll put those matches on pay-per-view when we’re ready.”

As far as the one potential superfight Elite XC left on the table – Carano against Brazilian Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos – Coker said Carano wants to do that match right away, but he wouldn’t commit to how soon.

Coker said Strikeforce would remain a private company owned by himself and Silicon Valley Sports and Entertainment, which runs the HP Pavilion in San Jose, as well as the NHL’s San Jose Sharks.

Strikeforce’s roster of fighters includes Le, Shamrock, Thomson, Gilbert Melendez, Joe Riggs, Bobby Southworth and Kazuo Misaki. It also recognizes Renato “Babalu” Sobral as light heavyweight champion and Alistair Overeem as heavyweight champion.

While promoting its key events in San Jose, it has run successful shows in other markets including Seattle, Denver, and Los Angeles. With the new deal, it will expand to running shows across the U.S.

Strikeforce still holds the record for the highest paid attendance for an MMA event in the U.S. – a Shamrock vs. Cesar Gracie match which drew 17,465 paying fans and 18,265 total on March 10, 2006. The UFC’s largest paying crowd for a U.S. show was 17,358, although there were more than 19,000 in the arena, for the March 3, 2007 fight between Randy Couture and Tim Sylvia in Columbus, Ohio.

Most of the fighters who had signed with Elite XC had been in a deep freeze since the company closed up shop in October. By not actually declaring bankruptcy, and attempting to sell what was left of the company, stalled negotiations meant most had not been able to fight for months.

A deal between Pro Elite, Inc. and Strikeforce was on the table ready to be signed in December, but it fell apart at the last minute.

Agents representing the key fighters were ready to serve Elite XC with legal papers, attempting to get the fighters declared free agents because they had to sit out months without being paid. In recent days, the agents had been informed that a deal was about to be completed with Strikeforce, and had held off on the legal process.

“It’s the best possible situation,” said Ken Pavia, who represents a number of fighters who had been under Elite XC contracts.

Yahoomma.com
D. Meltzer

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Joe Lauzon / Jeremy Stephens UFC Fight Night 17




Joe Lauzon proved a capable headliner his second time out, as he submitted Jeremy Stephens with a slick armbar at 4:43 into the second round of their lightweight main event bout at UFC Fight Night ...
Lauzon, Velasquez dominate at UFN
L. Hunt
Sherdog.com
Archive Joe Lauzon proved a capable headliner his second time out. Lauzon submitted Jeremy Stephens with a slick armbar at 4:43 into the second round of their lightweight main event bout at UFC Fight Night 17 on Saturday at the USF Sun Dome in Tampa, Fla.



Stephens (14-4), who had replaced trainer Hermes Franca after the Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt tore the anterior crucial ligament in his right knee less than two weeks out, was deemed a much larger threat to Lauzon on his feet, although he never really got the opportunity to show it.



Lauzon, 24, stifled the hard-hitting Stephens with two unconventional leglock drops to the canvas, then controlled the striker with superior positioning at practically every turn of the mostly grounded contest.



The Bridgewater, Mass., native went for two key armbar attempts from mount in the first and second rounds. On the first try, Stephens negotiated free and rained down heavy leather, but Lauzon weathered the onslaught.



Lauzon's second stab didn't fail though. After absorbing a Stephens' elbow that opened a gash along his hairline, Lauzon reversed and wasted little time mounting his foe's chest and pitching off the side with the appendage again. This time, Lauzon rolled with Stephens to keep the hold intact for the finish.



The performance proved much more impressive than Lauzon's ill-fated bout with No. 1 lightweight contender Kenny Florian 10 months ago.



"I knew we were getting close to the end of the round … so I was trying, trying, trying," said Lauzon, who moves up to 18-4 with five Octagon victories in tow. "When I fought Kenny, I was a little bit star-struck by the whole thing. It felt way better being in the main event this time. [The experience] helped me a ton."



Velasquez continues to progress


As expected, Cain Velasquez was victorious over promotional newcomer Denis Stojnic with a TKO stoppage from strikes 2:34 into the second round, though the finish was underwhelming in light of the heavyweight's hype going into his fifth career fight.



Viewers got a taste of things to come as Velasquez pinned the tough, but slow-to-respond Dutchman against the fence early and unloaded with punches and knees from the Thai plum. Though Stojnic's chin showed a sturdy resolve, his return fire was too far and in-between to ever put Velasquez in jeopardy.



Stojnic (5-2) found his back against the wall quickly again in the second round, and began to swing for the fences. Velasquez, 26, used the opening to ride Stojnic to the mat and easily wiggled free from a guillotine choke attempt, then softened Stojnic with punches in side control until the Dutchman turtled to find relief. When referee Jorge Ortiz saw no fight in Stojnic, he called it quits, much to Velasquez and the crowd's dismay.



"I could have finished him a lot better. I didn't, so I just have to try and relax out here. That's why I need more ring time," said Velasquez, who trains with the American Kickboxing Academy.



Neer dominates Danzig


Josh Neer, on the other hand, was a man on a mission from the opening bell, waging a relentless campaign until he submitted Mac Danzig with a tight triangle choke at 3:36 into the second round.



The Des Moines, Iowa lightweight caught Danzig (18-6-1) with a right in the bout's first minute, but "The Ultimate Fighter 6" winner battled back nicely and found his timing with combinations, cutting Neer over his left eye in the ensuing melee.



Neer would not be denied, however. The fearless 25 year old snagged the armbar and tried to transition to an oma plata before Danzig slipped out to his feet.



Grounding Danzig again in the second set, Neer rained down elbows with bad intentions, but Danzig eventually maneuvered to top position. From his back, Neer latched on the fight-ending choke and never looked back.



"I felt like I got headbutted in the first round and that's why I was kind of mad because the ref didn't call it," said Neer. "I felt like I got headbutted and that's why my eye split open."



Neer (25-7-1), who rebounded publicly from a New Year's Eve run-in with authorities for driving while intoxicated and fleeing the scene of a hit-and-run, is now victorious in four of his last five outings.



A stiff right hook from Anthony Johnson signaled the beginning of the end for American Top Team's Luigi Fioravanti, who stumbled to the canvas with his aggressor in hot pursuit. Johnson coaxed out the stoppage with follow-up shots on a turtled Fioravanti at 4:39 in the first round of their welterweight tilt.



Johnson and Fioravanti traded outside leg kicks and the occasional punch for the first four minutes, but the former Marine couldn't seem to negotiate Johnson's favorable height and reach advantage.



Though another reputable victory for the uber-athletic 24-year-old, Johnson, a junior collegiate wrestling champion, was not satisfied with his efforts.



"I'm happy I got a win, but I could have done so much better," said Johnson, who improves to 7-2. "I came out sloppy, but I'll get better."



Miller, Pellegrino come up big in prelims


Three-time NCAA national champion wrestler Jake Rosholt had a tough go against IFL middleweight ace Dan Miller.



After getting blasted with a knee to start their tilt, Rosholt quickly found himself in danger as Miller (11-1, 1 NC) locked on a modified guillotine on the heels of a takedown attempt. Just 63 seconds into the battle of future stars, Rosholt (5-1), was handed his first career defeat as he submitted to the slick technique.



Miller is now 3-0 in the Octagon.



Kurt Pellegrino rallied after dropping the first frame on Sherdog.com's scorecard to submit Robert Emerson at 3:14 of the second stanza.



Having tasted Emerson's jab a few times in the first period, Pellegrino (13-4) struck from a different range in the second round, and was successful early with a well-executed punching combination. The fighters exchanged strikes on the feet and scrambled for position on the floor, where Pellegrino found an opening to secure a tapout-inducing rear-naked choke.



The loss for Emerson (8-7, 1 NC) was his first in four bouts for the promotion.



Matt Hughes-trained lightweight Matt Veach (11-0) kept his undefeated record intact with a technical knockout of Matt Grice to end a furious first round of action.



Grice, 9-2, dominated at the beginning of the bout with a flurry of punches and some vicious ground-and-pound. Showing an iron chin, Veach weathered the storm and connected with a crisp right hook that sent his opponent reeling to the canvas. Veach followed his fallen foe to the floor, where he put a stamp on his victory with follow-up punches until referee Troy Waugh saved Grice at 4:35 of Round 1.



American Top Team's Gleison Tibau made quick work of seasoned veteran Rich Clementi with an easy first-round tapout via guillotine choke.



Setting the tone early with a straight left that stunned Clementi (32-14-1), Tibau dominated the Team Voodoo lightweight on the floor before securing a fight-ending guillotine at 4:35 of the first. Tibau (16-6) ended a two-fight losing streak with the impressive win.



Nick Catone made good on his Octagon debut with a second-round submission of Derek Downey.



Catone (6-0) greeted Downey with an elbow in the opening frame that raised an alien-like bulge on the head of the Utah-based middleweight. Downey (10-4) pushed on despite his lumps, but was forced to call it quits after a keylock extended his arm at 1:15 of Round 2.



In the evening's opening bout, welterweight prospect Matt Riddle (2-0) outpointed ATT product Steve Bruno (12-5) en route to a win by unanimous decision. All three judges scored the contest 29-28 for the Arizona Combat Sports fighter.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Barrack Obama In Uniform if he joined the UFC Or WWE ?

Would he win any Matches ??

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Lyoto Machida Trips and KTFO Thiago Silva UFC 94 video free here

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Lyoto Machida Trips and KTFO Thiago Silva UFC 94


This knock out was right before the end of the round ! Lyoto Machida is still undefeated

Georges St. Pierre Ground and Pounds B.J. Penn UFC 94 video

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Georges St. Pierre Ground and Pounds B.J. Penn UFC 94


St. Pierre Pounds Penn in ufc 94 !


Is St. Pierre the new pound-for-pound king?
By D. Meltzer

LAS VEGAS – Welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre scored a one-sided win in what may have been the closest thing to a true “ultimate fight” in the history of a promotion with that name.
Between St. Pierre and lightweight champion B.J. Penn, you had two of the most gifted champions in company history – St. Pierre the world’s best welterweight and Penn the world’s best lightweight, with both at the peak of their careers.
And while St. Pierre was favored as the bigger man, it was still stunning how he dismantled someone who three years ago he struggled to beat in a controversial split-decision win.
St. Pierre (18-2) was ahead 40-34, 40-35 and 40-34 on the scorecards after turning it on at the end of the fourth round. At first it appeared the end of the round saved Penn. But as soon as the round was over, with Penn taking a bad enough beating that he was taken to the hospital after the match, both Nevada State Athletic Commission doctor William Berliner and Penn’s corner simultaneously decided to tell referee Herb Dean to stop the match.
Aside from the first round, where Penn stopped a few of St. Pierre’s takedowns, it was complete domination as St. Pierre ran his win streak to 14 straight rounds over his last five fights against highly ranked opponents.
St. Pierre came into the fight ranked No. 3 in the Yahoo! Sports pound-for-pound poll. He was behind middleweight champion Anderson Silva and Affliction heavyweight star Fedor Emelianenko, and one spot ahead of Penn.
But neither Silva nor Emelianenko has had to face a steady diet of fighters the caliber of what St. Pierre has faced since his 2007 loss to Matt Serra, let alone someone with the all-around skill set of Penn.
“My strategy was that he has small shoulders, which is good for hand speed, so I went to make him carry my weight and cause his shoulders to tire,” said St. Pierre, who earned $420,000 for the win before any extra bonuses kick in off the back end of the pay-per-view revenue. “I wanted to start out and make it a wrestling match.”
St. Pierre said he was about 187 pounds going into the cage, nearly 20 pounds heavier than Penn (13-5-1), who weighed in at 168 pounds and was likely right at that weight going into the cage. St. Pierre was simply too strong and well-conditioned for Penn in a fight the promoters predicted would be the biggest non-boxing event in North American pay-per-view history.
If the event does as expected, it would also be the first time in the history of sports that three pay-per-view events in successive months drew more than 900,000 buys, let alone all from the same promotion.
“It was the craziest thing ever,” said Dana White about the event, which sold out the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas with 14,885, paying a gate of $4.3 million. “The MGM Grand wanted more tickets. Other casinos wanted more tickets.”
St. Pierre got off first, winning standing exchanges in the fist round. But if Penn thought he was getting a psychological edge in the first round by stopping takedowns, it was gone early in Round 2. St. Pierre powered Penn down and connected with a relentless supply of punches and elbows. He continually passed Penn’s guard and then threw knees to the body. Penn was worn out by the end of the second round.
“You’ll notice I didn’t rush him right away going for the takedown (his style in his last few matches),” said St. Pierre. “The idea was to cause him to have to hop on one leg and get tired, and push off, having to carry my weight in the clinch. That was the idea in the first round.”
St. Pierre felt when the first round was over that he had already mentally broken Penn.
“I was fighting my fight and that made him uncomfortable, which caused him to get tired faster,” said St. Pierre. “It’s not that he wasn’t in shape.
“This was the biggest fight of my career,” said St. Pierre, ranking it ahead of the night where he captured the championship a second time, beating Matt Serra, in his home city of Montreal.
The fight was not without controversy. Between the first and second round, one of St. Pierre’s cornermen rubbed Vaseline on his back and shoulders, which was caught by ringside officials.
“It didn’t affect the outcome of the fight, but you don’t do it,” said White. “I don’t think Georges knew, but the guy who did it, he should never be allowed to corner another fighter again.”
St. Pierre’s next opponent will be Thiago Alves, who presents a different set of problems. Alves has mastered the art of cutting weight. Alves is far bigger than Penn and also tremendous at avoiding takedowns, plus he’s a more feared striker than Penn.
St. Pierre said it was too soon to give an accurate timetable on when he would want that match to take place, but did say he’d be happy with it being six months. St. Pierre said he was taking a few days vacation and would be back in the gym by the end of the week.
In Alves’ recent win over Josh Koscheck on Oct. 25 in Chicago, he went into the cage at an unheard-of 199 pounds after making 171, which would make St. Pierre the rare smaller welterweight if Alves could do it again.
The win also fueled talk of a potential St. Pierre vs. Anderson Silva match, where St. Pierre would move up to face the middleweight champion in an attempt to do what Penn failed to do in this fight – to become the first dual weight-class champion in the history of UFC.
White said he didn’t see doing that fight immediately, but if both fighters continue to win, he talked of it as a match he would like to put together, perhaps in 2010.
St. Pierre said he saw that fight as something he would be interested in as a test, but noted that he would need the extra time to train and add muscle weight to compete with the significantly larger middleweight king.
“I don’t fight for money or for fame, because when I started I didn’t have either,” he said. “I fight for the challenge.”