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Why Is Small Business Health Insurance Worth It? By Manbeer
If you’re looking for a guide to how to get health insurance and what kind of health insurance is best for your small business, then this is the article for you.
If you’re looking for a guide to how to get health insurance and what kind of health insurance is best for your small business, then this is the article for you. Your business qualifies for small business health insurance if you have anywhere between two and fifty employees in it. If you are self employed then you’ll want to look into getting self employed health insurance.
There are many benefits to getting small business health insurance. A small business health insurance plan will help spread the financial risk around to everyone and not just yourself. As this is the case, this generally will bring lower premiums and more extensive coverage. Along with this, the health insurance provides medical care for you and all other employees as well.
With a small business health insurance people often get group insurance. This too has its advantages on several different aspects. All contributions from the employers are 100% tax deductible, and
Manchester United is still the classiest team in the EPL and
will get pushed all the way by Liverpool and Chelsea, but Sir Alex Ferguson's
men – led by the brilliance of Cristiano Ronaldo and the resilience of a
hardened backline – should win a second straight league crown.
Aston Villa's brave tilt at a top-four place will run out of
steam in the closing weeks, allowing Arsenal to salvage something from a
troubled campaign. At the bottom, West Brom will drop back down to the
Championship with little more than a whimper, while Stoke's appalling away form
will prove to be too much of a hurdle to overcome.
Blackburn Rovers will do just enough to claw clear of
danger. However, West Ham will lose its Premier League status while staring at
a gloomy financial future.
In its first two seasons, Toronto FC has enjoyed spectacular
success in attracting sellout crowds, matched only by the team's ineptitude on
the field. However, the Canadian club is determined to reverse its playing
fortunes in 2009 and took a big step last Friday by acquiring Dwayne De Rosario
from the Houston Dynamo.
DeRo has been one of Major League Soccer's outstanding
players for several seasons and the Canada international looks to be a
perfect match for TFC.
Toronto's
magnificent fans deserve a winning team and the club appears committed to
improving the soccer product next season. De Rosario is on a $400,000-a-year
contract, so he does not count as a designated player, leaving team management
free to sign a marquee superstar if it wishes.
But just how much impact can De Rosario have, especially
with Toronto
playing in the tough Eastern Conference?
Share your thoughts below on how TFC will fare next season.
Barcelona's bid for an MLS
expansion franchise will be monitored closely in Europe.
If the project gets the go-ahead and is a success, then more big clubs are
likely to follow.
That scenario would raise some key issues for the league,
which currently plans to expand to 18 teams by 2011 and then consolidate.
While one European spin-off team could certainly be of
benefit, would any more be unhealthy for MLS? Is there any way MLS could
possibly be able to say no if a huge club like Manchester United or AC Milan
came knocking, even if further expansion did not fit in with the league's current
policy?
Which international clubs would you like to see in MLS? And
where would be the best North American city for them?
Share your thoughts below.
]]> Juande Ramos? Really? Juande Ramos' appointment as Real Madrid head coach, replacing the ousted Bernd Schuster, will be greeted with some bewilderment around Europe. After all, Ramos was last seen making a hasty retreat from North London after making a total mess of the Tottenham Hotspur job.
His reward? One of the biggest positions in world soccer, even though the Madrid giant is suffering tough times following a miserable start to the season.
But the fact remains that Ramos' reputation in his homeland, where he led Sevilla's march up the Liga table, still is intact and really has not been tarnished by his troubled time in the English Premier League.
He has been offered a six-month contract and is seen as a safe pair of hands to get the club through the rest of this season. If he performs well, a longer term deal could beckon. If not, no harm done.
Ramos' first task will be to instill some confidence into a squad that has stumbled from one poor performance to another. The level of play being produced by Barcelona would indicate that the Spanish league title is already out of reach. Most Real fans would settle for an injection of pride and passion into their sorry team.
So is Ramos the man to resurrect Real? Or will his methods be as ineffective at the Santiago Bernabeu as they were at White Hart Lane?
Share your thoughts on this attempted solution to the Real Madrid crisis below.
The United States'
long-held dominance of women's soccer has come under serious threat in recent
years, with Germany and Brazil putting
on the heat. But increasingly it seems that the biggest danger in future years is
likely to come from the unlikely source of North Korea.
The reclusive communist nation has little history in men's
soccer – apart from a shock 1-0 victory over Italy in the 1966 World Cup –
yet its women are prospering at all levels.
After winning the Under-17 Women's World Cup last month, the
North Koreans have another chance to send a message about their growing
strength in Sunday's U-20 Women's World Cup final.
The United States
has been strong throughout the event, with star striker Sydney Leroux scoring
her fifth goal in the 1-0 semifinal victory against Germany. However, will it have
enough left in the tank to see off the emerging North Koreans and prevent a
further power shift in the youth levels of women's soccer?
Share your thoughts on the tournament so far and the U.S.'s chances
of victory below.
Roy Keane was always his harshest critic as a player and
adopted the same approach in management.
His decision to step down as Sunderland
boss on Thursday was sudden, but not especially surprising given the Irishman's
highly-competitive nature.
For a while, after leading the club out of the Championship
and back into the promised land of the Premiership, Keane emerged as a
legitimate contender to replace Sir Alex Ferguson when he finally decides to
quit Manchester United.
That possibility ended emphatically on Thursday. So which,
if any, of Ferguson's
former players can now step into the breach at Old Trafford when the time
comes?
Still in the running ... maybe:
Steve Bruce. Took Birmingham
out of the Premier League but has seen his career bounce back with Wigan and
would be high on the list of candidates if Ferguson departed soon.
Mark Hughes. Arguably the most successful of Ferguson's former players
now in management. But by accepting the top job at local rivals Manchester City may have ruled him out of ever
leading United.
Paul Ince. Entered this season as one of the brightest young
managerial prospects in the game, yet has struggled with Blackburn
and has his job under threat.
Out of the frame:
Bryan Robson. A great United captain, a poor top-level
manager. Dramatically kept West Brom up in
2005 but otherwise unsuccessful.
Roy Keane. Appears to have convinced himself he is not
suited to management after quitting Sunderland.
Steve McClaren. Former Fergie assistant manager enjoyed some
success with Middlesbrough before making a total mess of the England job.
So who should be the man to follow one of the greatest
managers in soccer history? Is any of the former United players up to the task?
Or would it take a big personality, like a Jose Mourinho, to make a success of
the role?
Another round of bidding for the European Championship, another
spate of double- and triple-teaming from smaller nations ill-equipped to stage
one of soccer's showpiece events.
When is UEFA going to learn its lesson?
Euro 2008 was a wonderful tournament, featuring incredibly
high-quality matches and a worthy victor in an outstanding Spain team. But
what a shame that more fans could not see the event in person. Six of the eight
stadiums in Austria and Switzerland only
held the bare minimum 30,000-seat capacity, forcing thousands of supporters
desperate to see their teams to watch on television.
Given their limitations, Austria
and Switzerland did a pretty
good job, yet already the cracks are showing in the organization of Euro 2012
in Poland and Ukraine.
That event was denied to Italy mainly due to the
match-fixing scandal that rocked Serie A two years ago. But thanks to a series
of troubles surrounding the readiness of stadiums and the necessary hotel
infrastructure to host a successful event, Poland
and Ukraine
are already doing a fine job of breeding concern and mild panic at UEFA.
Now, with thoughts already shifting to Euro 2016, we are
likely to again be consumed by a series of hastily constructed alliances. Scotland-Wales-Northern
Ireland is one. Sweden-Norway, Hungary-Romania and Russia-Finland are also
expected to table bids.
Staging the Euros appears to be turning into a consolation
prize for nations that will never be capable of holding a World Cup, but it
shouldn't be that way. Not every time at least.
In 2016, the Euros will expand to 24 teams and will be further
established as the second-best soccer competition on the planet. If a joint bid
wins the rights for 2016, then 20 years will have passed since Euro 1996 in England with only one sole host – Portugal
in 2004.
Sadly, it is unlikely to change any time soon. UEFA
president Michel Platini is a political animal and knows the value in keeping
his support base among the smaller European nations happy.
So where would you like to see Euro 2016 held? Could
Scotland-Wales-Northern Ireland work? Or another joint bid? Or would it be
better in a single nation like France,
Spain or Turkey with the
necessary infrastructure in place?
Once again it seems that the
Argentinean media has been far more keen for Guillermo Barros Schelotto to
return to his homeland than the player himself.
As soon as the Major League Soccer
season was over, the 2008 league MVP was being linked with a switch back to
former club Boca Juniors in the South American media. The same thing happened
12 months earlier, with reports that Schelotto was deeply unsettled with the
Columbus Crew and was looking for an exit route.
That, of course, was before he
produced one of the finest seasons in MLS history and turned the Crew from rank
outsiders into the best team in the league.
Now, predictably, and despite
repeated Argentinean rumors to the contrary, Schelotto will return to Columbus for another
season.
If he can reproduce the form of
his spectacular 2008 campaign, then the Crew will be hot favorites to retain
the trophy. However, he will be approaching his 36th birthday at the start of
next season. Can he still be the dominant force in the league?
No arguments with the winner of the Ballon d'Or award to
celebrate the European Footballer of the Year – Cristiano Ronaldo.
Ronaldo's remarkable achievements over the past year made
him a deserved victor and the first Manchester United player to be given the
accolade since George Best in 1968.
As I wrote in a recent column, I gave a marginal edge to Barcelona's Lionel Messi,
but either man would have been a worthy recipient of the Ballon d'Or. Tuesday's
news came after a strange week for Ronaldo, in which he was sent off for a
bizarre handball in United's 1-0 derby victory over local rivals Manchester City.
So what now for Ronaldo?
• Can he lead United to a third straight EPL title?
• Can he help the team regain the Champions League crown won earlier this year?
• Can he lift Portugal from its poor start to 2010 World Cup qualifying to claim its place in the tournament?
• And finally, how much longer will he remain at United?
For the record, my opinions on the above questions are: 1)
yes 2) no 3) yes and 4) until next summer. Don't believe Real Madrid when it
says it is no longer interested.
Just a few months after Euro 2008, it is not just the
Spanish national team that is flying high at the top of European soccer. Spain's
leading club teams are also exerting their dominance in European competition,
cutting a swathe of destruction through the group stages of the Champions
League and UEFA Cup.
With one matchday still remaining in Champions League group
action, all four La Liga clubs have qualified for the last 16. Barcelona leads the way with 13 points and looks
in devastating form, while Villarreal's dropped points include a pair of 0-0
draws with Manchester United. Likewise, Atletico Madrid
is unbeaten, having won three games and drawn twice with Liverpool,
while Real Madrid's only defeats came against Juventus.
Combined, the four Spanish teams have accumulated 42 points,
with the English Premier League's representatives amassing 39 and Serie A's
quartet 31.
In UEFA Cup action on Thursday, it was another impressive
night for the Spaniards as Deportivo La Coruna breezed past Feyenoord 3-0 and Valencia hammered Rosenborg 4-0 in Norway. Spain's
third UEFA Cup team, Sevilla, had a bye week but, like Deportivo and Valenica,
is strongly poised to qualify for the last 32.
So is the recent Spanish club success a byproduct of the
overall level of confidence coursing through Spanish soccer? Do the
performances this season indicate that La Liga is edging ahead of the EPL in
terms of quality? Or is it a temporary situation?
The race for the two new MLS expansion franchises due to
begin operations in 2011 intensified this week as representatives from hopeful
consortiums met with league owners in Los
Angeles.
Miami's
bid, backed by Spanish giants FC Barcelona, appears to be a lock for one spot,
although there is strong competition from other quarters.
Montreal dropped out of the
running, leaving St Louis, Vancouver,
Atlanta, Portland,
Ottawa and Miami
in contention.
St Louis
would be a logical option, having fought a long campaign for inclusion.
However, the Vancouver bid, backed by NBA star
Steve Nash, is also impressive and gained momentum with Montreal's departure from the contest.
Several dynamics are at work and are of interest to MLS. The
chance to team up with a club like Barcelona
will surely be too good an offer to resist. Yet bringing in Portland
and Vancouver would set up an intriguing Pacific Northwest rivalry, as Seattle Sounders FC joins
the league in 2009.
Even Ottawa,
long considered by far the outsider in the bidding process, has put itself in
the mix, coming up with a highly impressive presentation on Friday.
So where would be the best two options for the league as it
looks to continue its recent progress?
Share your thoughts on the ideal locations for MLS expansion
below.
While Guillermo Barros Schelotto was collecting his fully
deserved Major League Soccer MVP award on Thursday, the other two finalists
were preparing to head overseas this offseason. Within a few hours of each
other, Landon Donovan and Cuauhtemoc Blanco agreed to loan deals to take them
away from the United States for a couple of months.
Donovan will join German giants Bayern Munich in January and
is penciled in to return to the Los Angeles Galaxy in mid-March. The move mirrors
teammate David Beckham's loan to AC Milan, but unlike Beckham, it is highly
likely that the Donovan deal is a precursor to a permanent transfer either to
Bayern or another European club.
Blanco has gone to Santos Laguna for the Apertura playoffs
in Mexico,
giving Mexican fans another chance to see one of their country's all-time
greats.
By forcing through his Milan
switch, Beckham appears to have set a precedent -- and the floodgates are
opening. But is it good for the league? Sure, these players are maintaining
their fitness levels and getting match practice during the drawn-out offseason.
Yet doesn't it impinge upon the credibility of the league when three of its
biggest stars are heading for the hills as soon as the campaign is over?
Share your thoughts on Beckham, Donovan and Blanco below.
Bob Bradley's shuffled squad put together a solid
performance to rack up another win and bring an end to the tedious third round of
CONCACAF qualifying for the 2010 World Cup.
The most interesting aspect of the 2-0 victory against Guatemala on
Wednesday was the attacking combination of Kenny Cooper and Jozy Altidore,
which looks like a decent option going forwards. Also, Freddy Adu scored his
first ever senior national team goal with a nice free kick as Bradley's men
clinched their fifth win in six games.
But looking ahead to the Hexagonal competition next year,
where up to four out of the six remaining CONCACAF teams will book a ticket to South Africa, what have we really learned from
this U.S.
side?
Sure, along with Mexico,
the U.S.
is the dominant force in its own region. Apart from Mexico,
it is hard to see Honduras, Trinidad and Tobago, El
Salvador or Costa Rica mounting a serious
threat to finish ahead of Bradley's squad in the six-team table.
Yet have there been any real signs that the Americans are
capable of challenging for a strong World Cup finish, such as a quarterfinal
place?
If the World Cup was to be held now, the U.S. would
struggle to get out of the group stages. However, there are still 18 months
left -- 18 months for the likes of Adu, Altidore and Michael Bradley to
develop.
Share your thoughts on where the U.S. currently stands in the world
pecking order below.
One of the greatest, yet most frustrating, careers we have
seen in world soccer looks set to come to an end after Ronaldo admitted he is
close to retirement.
The Brazilian superstar belongs in elite company as one of
the finest players of the last decade thanks to his exploits for Brazil, Cruzeiro, PSV Eindhoven, Barcelona, Inter Milan,
Real Madrid and AC Milan.
However, we can only speculate how great he could have been
if not for the cruel luck he suffered with injuries. Could he have challenged
the likes of Pele and Diego Maradona as one of the best players ever, if not
for repeated knee problems that blighted his career?
Some critics ripped into Ronaldo in recent years for
struggling to control his weight and accused him of indiscipline and a lack of
motivation. Those claims may have some merit, but if this is the end, I will
prefer to remember him for his spectacular efforts in the 2002 World Cup in Japan and South Korea.
Written off before the tournament, Ronaldo spearheaded
Brazil's charge to the title, scoring eight goals including two in the final,
all just a couple of years after major knee surgery that had threatened his
career.
Share your thoughts on what Ronaldo's legacy will be below.
St. Louis is locked in a
fight to be awarded one of the next two expansion franchises for 2011, with the
Miami bid (backed by Barcelona)
and Montreal
also among the frontrunners.
Having Cardinals slugger Pujols, the National League MVP, as
a high-profile investor can only help the chances of the consortium put
together by local businessman Jeff Cooper.
Increasingly, groups hoping to land a spot in the league are
seeing the value in having newsworthy names from other fields involved. Seattle has Drew Carey and Houston has Oscar De La Hoya. Barcelona's teaming with Miami turned that city's bid from an outsider
into one of the favorites.
Yahoo! Sports understands the actual financial investment
made by Pujols is minor, but his involvement could be a key factor for a bid
that until now lacked star power.
Major League Soccer's conference finals offer some
unfamiliar faces, with the four remaining teams having a combined total of
three trips to the MLS Cup final.
The power would appear to be in the East, where the Columbus
Crew and Chicago Fire square off in what promises to be an interesting and
high-quality battle. But Real
Salt Lake
and the New York Bulls cannot be discounted as potential champions. They meet
in Utah on
Saturday.
Chicago Fire at Columbus Crew
The most intriguing subplot in this contest involves Brian
McBride and his return to the club where he made his mark in MLS. However, once
again it is likely to be Cuauhtemoc Blanco who has the biggest impact on the
Fire as they bid for a spot in the Nov. 23 MLS Cup final.
Columbus has put together an outstanding season under Sigi
Schmid, but even with the skills of Guillermo Barros Schelotto, the Crew could
struggle to break down the fortress-like Chicago defense. Expect Blanco's
big-game mentality to prove to be the difference in a tense and tactical
encounter.
Prediction: Chicago edge Columbus 1-0 with a late
winner.
New York Red Bulls at Real Salt
Lake
Rio Tinto Stadium is the finest venue in MLS and is a
fitting setting for the Western Conference final. But despite the homefield advantage,
Real Salt
Lake faces a tough task against a
confident and in-form New York
club.
The Red Bulls were superb in defeating two-time defending
champion Houston Dynamo in the semifinals, as Juan Pablo Angel and Dane
Richards hit form at just the right time. Expect New York to come out on top in an open and
entertaining game.
Prediction: Red Bulls win 3-1.
]]>
you’ll save on payroll taxes as well. Small businesses will be eligible for group insurance just as long as you have two or more full time employees working.
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Most health plans are going to require employees to pay at least half of the premium cost for covered employees. Some employees will offer to pay 100% of the cost, white now there is a new health plan giving employees the option to pay as little as 25% of the cost. Just know that typically most types of coverage will cost employees a minimum of $1,600-$2,500 per year per employee. By clicking on the link below you can begin getting quotes for your small business health insurance.
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We strive to provide only quality articles, so if there
is a specific topic related to life insurance that you
would like us to cover, please contact us at any time.
And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our
the ultimate website.
We can't confirm it 100-percent but it does sound more and more like Rich Franklin and Dan Henderson are battling next weekend at UFC 93 for the The Ultimate Fighter 9 coaching spot. Franklin said he hasn't spoken directly with UFC president Dana White about the topic but it appears that's the plan. He still sounded less than thrilled during today's UFC 93 teleconference to be in the mix for another coaching gig on the reality show:
"Going back and doing it again, I'm not as excited about it. I've gotten to the point where I could care less about staying in Vegas for that extended period of time. It's time away from my family and time away from the things I like doing and can do to make money. And the show doesn't pay real well"
Click below to listen to Franklin's comments on TUF9:
That said, Franklin stated he'll do whatever the UFC tells him to do because they've been good to him. With the all the revenue that fighters can make away the cage now, should they be forced to go on the reality show in sort of a jury duty role? Or does this sound like sour grapes from Franklin, who will probably benefit monetarily on the backend of another season on the show?
]]> Time for New York to cut through hysterics and make MMA legal Tomorrow, the legislature of New York will again consider allowing mixed martial arts in the Empire State. In MMA's last attempt to win the approval of New York's Committee on Tourism, Arts and Sport Development, the bill failed before it even got out of committee. That was due in part to the raging ignorance of the members of the committee, who claimed not to know much about the sport but also maintained that it was brutal.
Now that the UFC has spent time and money lobbying and "educating" the state government, ignorance can no longer be feigned. The state of New York could benefit from staging not only UFC fights in New York City and Buffalo -- which would bring the state more than $13 milion for both shows -- but also smaller shows in Albany, Syracuse and other cities around the state. Right now, NYC is projecting that budget shortfalls will reach $8 billion by 2011, and the state has $15 billion deficit. Why would any responsible legislator not allow for the possibility of a sport that is not only a potential cash cow, but also is regulated in most of the other states in the country. MMA events happen in California, Nevada, Illinois, Florida and New Jersey with regularity, and no harm has come to these places as a result.
It's time for New York to stop pussyfooting around and listening to the hysterical calls of a vocal, uneducated minority. Pass this bill, reap the benefits and then spend a little time on things like education and the flailing economy.
You can't teach an old dog new tricks. Why not? Especially if the dog already has the tricks in his arsenal. It's amazing how quickly media-types, bloggers and fans are to write off some of the stars of mixed martial arts. It defies logic since we've seen many of the stars fight well into their late 30s. Now it is clear that former light heavyweight Chuck Liddell can't survive solely as a one-dimensional fighter. He's not putting his punches together, there's no threat of the takedown and his leg kicks have all but disappeared from his game. He's lost 3-of-4 fights, two by brutal knockout. But Liddell, 39, isn't a lost cause. At least he doesn't believe so.
"The Iceman" took the most important step to break out of this funk by mixing up his training regimen. Liddell is working with American Top Team in South Florida in an effort, as his career-long trainer John Hackleman says, to round out his skills. Liddell stopped by the ATT facility in Coconut Creek, Fla. on two occasions according to Sharon Robb of the Sun-Sentinel:
"He was down here during our seminar for a few days training, left and then came back about a week later for a few more days," said ATT general manager Richie Guerriero. "His trainer likes our team and trusts Liborio, so the door is open for Chuck to come back down to help train for his next fight."
Boxers change trainers often. Shane Mosley did so when his fighting style got in a rut with his father Jack, as trainer. He eventually went back to his Dad. Oscar De La Hoya lost his last fight but he did use both Nacho Beristain and Angelo Dundee for their knowledge. Different voices can sometimes awaken a fighter. If Liddell were Tank Abbott and only had one facet to his game, you could say the new training plan is a waste. But this is a guy who has very good kickboxing, excellent takedown defense and good wrestling. Why not use it all? The days of being just a knockout artist or a ground and pound fighter are done. The young guys like Thiago Alves, Georges St. Pierre and Rashad Evans can do a little of everything.
Robb also mentions in her story that Liddell appears to be earmarked for a fight against either Shogun Rua (if he wins this month at UFC 93) or the Rich Franklin/Dan Henderson winner. Both seem like odd scenarios. Is Rua a lock to walkover Mark Coleman? He had his arm broken the first time they met in Pride back in 2006.
And can he be ready for a Mar. 7 fight after UFC 93 on Jan. 17? The Franklin/Henderson scenario is even more puzzling. Shouldn't the winner of that fight be out of commission for a while as one of the potential coaches of the next Ultimate Fighter?
Will this new training work or is it one last desperate attempt by Liddell, a shot fighter grasping at straws?
There's been a lot of beating around the bush about the U.S. coach for The Ultimate Fighter 9 - U.K. v. U.S. It only makes sense that the Dan Henderson and Rich Franklin UFC 93 battle is for the spot on the reality show with an eventual fight against British prospect Michael Bisping coming at the end of the season. Henderson was tight-lipped about the plan when Cage Writer spoke with him back at UFC 90 and rumors were that Franklin had no interest in the role.
At this stage, it looks like the Franklin-Henderson winner Jan. 17 in Dublin can look forward to a TV gig - and a diet down the line. The two men meet at light-heavyweight in Dublin. The winner gets a shot as coach of "The Ultimate Fighter" reality TV show. But it appears they will have to move down to middleweight to do it.
In a Monday convo, Franklin still wouldn't spill the beans:
"To the best of my knowledge, I believe that's the way things are going to work. What are the UFC's plans with myself if I do end up being the coach? My answer to that is I have no clue."
It seems far-fetched that Franklin has no idea because Henderson knows his fate:
"That's what it's looking like ... I win, I'm the coach. I have no idea beyond that."
So Henderson wins, he's in. If Franklin does, who the hell knows? Huh? Can this be true or is Franklin a rock solid vault? We could find out more today during the UFC 93 teleconference.
Almost all fighters talk trash, but B.J. Penn has always taken it up a notch. He threatens to lick the blood off his opponents -- and sometimes follows through -- promises pain, and offers to die to win the fight. Now, before his fight with welterweight champ Georges St. Pierre, he said he will slam GSP on his head, and that he is ready to die to beat the Canadian.
Does this sound familiar to any Star Trek fans* out there? "Today is a good day to die!" If this were the 24th century, Penn would be a Klingon warrior, willing to die for the greater glory of the empire. But it's not the 24th century, and he is fighting for a UFC Championship, not for the future of the universe. Ease up on the homicidal talk.
* I will not confirm or deny my Trekkie fan status.
]]> Silva could lose license after fighting in Japan EliteXC heavyweight champion Antonio "Big Foot" Silva (12-1), EliteXC's heavyweight champion defied his one-year suspension due to a positive steroid test and fought on Sunday's Sengoku card at Japan's Saitama Super Arena.
By violating his California suspension, which came after he defeated the late Justin Eilers via knockout on a July card in Stockton, Silva, as well as his cornermen, will be subject to a possible license revocation.
Bill Douglas, the interim head of the California State Athletic Commission, stated he was notifying all athletic commissions of both Silva and his cornermen’s actions, and setting a Feb. 10 date for a hearing. A license revocation would mean Silva, and his corner men, would be banned from fighting in all U.S. commission states until California granted him a new license, which would be no less than one year from the date of it being revoked. Such an action would force whatever form EliteXC that potentially resurfaces this year to strip Silva of the title.
Silva's manager, Alex Davis, was suspended by the California State Athletic Commission for the remainder of his license, which expires on July 23, and fined $2,500 for negotiating the fight. He has the right to appeal.
Silva was one of two EliteXC heavyweights who fought on the card. Top contender Dave "Pee Wee" Herman (13-1) was upset by a second round stoppage against former South Korean wrestling champion Choi Mu Bae (8-3), after being overwhelmed with a flurry of punches.
Former EliteXC welterweight champ K.J. Noons may be sidelined awaiting his next fighting gig but his life ain't all that bad. SportsByBrooks unearthed this photo with his main squeeze, who just so happens to be part of something called the Lingerie Football League. Melany Lorenzo has also appeared in Playboy.
It looks like things are still going strong since Noons has a photo of the fine Melany atop his MySpace page. The 24-year-old Venezuelan says she also trains in Muay Thai six days a week. Though she may want to calm down with the talk of Noons' underground poker games. A recent thread on the Underground Forum was asking for the MMA fighter with the "hottest girlfriend/wife", I'll take my chances with Noons and Lorenzo.
]]> Choi wins but is knocked out by own cornerman Choi Mu-Bae was a big winner at Sengoku 7 over Dave Herman only he didn't know it for a few seconds. Watching the fight, you initially thought Choi collapsed because of exhaustion but a closer look shows that his cornerman tackled him and actually knocked him out. Watch around 9:20 of the video, Choi is out cold.
His handlers can't even remove his mouthpiece! It's amazing how quickly Herman gassed. He had nothing in the tank a few minutes into the second round. Maybe he was intimidated by the sneaks and ankle socks look by Choi.
A Bakersfield, Calif. boy saved a friend and her dog after a pitbull tried to attack them. Did he do it by calmly coaxing the dog with a sweet voice, and then singing to it? Nope. He did it using a choke he learned in a jiu-jitsu class, which he held for 20 minutes until the police showed up.
Isn't it better that he was in this class instead of sitting on a couch, playing video games and eating Twinkies? The next time I hear MMA described with the words "human cockfighting," I will find this wonderful young man, who talks about the ordeal here, and have him choke out the idiot who said it.
Brock Lesnar has arrived. He is the UFC heavyweight champ. So it's understandable that he's going to fight once every four or five months. It's probably not the wisest thing for a guy with that little mixed martial arts experience but it's to be expected in his newfound position. Another former WWE wrestler, Bobby Lashley, doesn't have the same luxury. He's only got one professional fight under his belt and needs to get on the fast track to pick up lots of in-ring experience. Lashley isn't messing around waiting for his early promoters to find fights to see he's moving around the country to gain experience. He's now signed on to fight for Palace Fighting Championship 12 at Tachi Palace Feb. 6 in Lemoore, California.
Chad Dukes from WJFK in Washington D.C. caught up Lashley just before the signing. The 6-3, 265-pounder answered the obvious question about Lesnar:
"Brock is doing an excellent job. It's going to be hard to knock him out," said Lashley, who like Lesnar has a solid college wrestling pedigree. "We're going to stay really active this year. Hopefully get a good 4-5 fights in this year. Then we should look for the big one. In a year, we'll look to take the next step."
Lashley crushed Joshua Franklin in his first fight last month. He was at his home for the holidays during this interview but was training with American Top Team in South Florida prior to his debut.
Coming from the world of make believe wrestling, Lashley knows there's a lot of resistance from veteran mixed martial artists but he doesn't quite understand it:
"(Lesnar coming over) is a great thing. Not to take anything from all the other fighters. (Brock and all the viewers from WWE) does so much more for everyone else. Some guys don't understand. That brings so much more money for the sport. If Bobby Lashley is a reason to watch so be it."
Lashley breaks down how he would fight Lesnar and also spoke about how ATT is trying to make him a well-rounded fighter.
]]> Can the UFC possibly cut Neer? The UFC set a precedent with its decision to not discipline Quinton Jackson after his driving rampage in July. Jackson served no penalty and wasn't fined, so what can the UFC do to Josh Neer after his world's wildest police chase act on New Year's Day? Neer isn't so confident that he'll be fighting on Feb. 7 at Ultimate Fight Night 17 on SpikeTV. The UFC lightweight sat down with KDSM television in Des Moines and was grilled by reporter Elias Johnson.
Johnson said once you're done with the UFC, you're done! Is that entirely true? How many fighters has the organization cut based on disciplinary issues? It is very likely that Neer could be axed if he's blown out by Mac Danzig and drops to 3-5 in the UFC.
Neer was charged with OWI (DUI). Is there a difference between Neer's state of mind and Jackson's diagnosed delirium? Or does star power enter into the mix when making a decision on Neer's future?
Two years ago, Takanori Gomi was regarded as the unbeatable force at 155 lbs. when he got off to a 25-2 start to his career. In 2007, Nick Diaz chipped away at that mystique by bludgeoning Gomi in a 160 lb. fight at Pride 33 in Las Vegas. Gomi has since lost to an underwhelming lightweight from Russia and at Sengoku 7 this morning, he was handed a submission loss inside of two minutes.
Can anyone say Eddie Alvarez? It was almost a carbon copy of the loss Shinya Aoki handed the Philadelphian last week at K-1 Dynamite 2008 except that Gomi's conqueror is no Aoki. Kitaoka, 28, came in with 23 wins in 40 fights and was ranked 19th in the world at lightweight according to Bloody Elbow's Top 25.
In the opening minute, Gomi fought tentatively allowing Kitaoka to stalk him from a distance. As soon as they engaged, Gomi was in trouble. Kitaoka shot for a takedown and it looked like Gomi nailed him with a right. Kitaoka wasn't hurt but he did allow Gomi to get control of his back for a second. Gomi looked really amateurish at this point as Kitaoka quickly reversed to get top control and work towards a heel hook. Gomi was safely sitting on his knees but then showed impatience falling to his rear end. That's when Kitaoka cinched in the hold even deeper for the finish at 1:41. If you count the Diaz no contest (positive marijuana test), the once unbeatable Gomi is now just 5-4 since April of 2007. Kitaoka, who won the Sengoku lightweight title, was in awe, almost apologetic to Gomi after the fight.
Kitaoka is a quality fighter. Many of those fights were draws in Pancrase. He has beaten some very good fighters including Kurt Pellegrino, Paul Daley and Carlos Condit, who have all made names for themselves in the U.S.
The mystery of the event was Jorge Santiago. Santiago won the Sengoku middleweight title in dominant fashion. But he only dominated in the fifth round!
The Brazilian is solid in all aspects of the game while Kazuo Misaki is not. Misaki is weak on the ground as Frank Trigg, Paulo Filho, Ed Herman, Jake Shields, Ricardo Almeida and Nate Marquardt all showed in taking him down at will in previous fights. For some unknown reason, Santiago chose to stand with Misaki for the first four rounds and was probably down 4-0 (3-1 at best) as he couldn't catch the counter-puncher.
Santiago went for a takedown with 3:13 left in the fight. Bingo! It took him less than 75 seconds to breakdown Misaki and mount him with 1:59 left in the fight. Misaki gave up his back six seconds later. The choke was in at 1:45 and Misaki was out cold 11 seconds later.
Santiago fights for American Top Team out of South Florida. He fought three times for the UFC going 1-2 with his lone win coming against the recently deceased Justin Levens.
The UFC hasn't had much interest in stealing Japan's biggest Japanese stars in the past. But when the promotion decides to do so, apparently it means business. It's a 99-percent certainty that the UFC has won the battle for the 2008 Olympic Judo gold medalist Satoshi Ishii. He visited Las Vegas to attend UFC 92 and took time for plenty of photo opps with the likes of Dana White, Brock Lesnar and Randy Couture. The UFC interest is two-fold - 1. Capture a bigger part of the Japanese market; 2. Take away a potential future star from Japanese promotions like DREAM, K-1 and Sengoku.
Ishii, wearing his UFC t-shirt, was brought out during intermission of Sengoku 7 for a short speech in the ring this morning. Also appearing were UFC middleweight Yushin Okami and former UFC/Pride light heavyweight Kazuhiro Nakamura.
After the intermission, another Olympic judo gold medalist, Hidehiko Yoshida attempting to remake his career at 205 lbs., came up empty. Yoshida won his medal in 1992 and he looked every bit of 39-years-old. He was controlled on the ground in the first, got caught in a heel hook and mounted in the second. In the third, he was out of gas when Sanae Kikuta took him down and mounted him with four minutes left in the fight. Yoshida never got back to his feet and took a beating on the ground. It went the distance but Kikuta was given the decision.
An elite amateur wrestler goes to Team Quest and turns into a top level mixed martial artist. Forgive us if you've heard the story before involving guys like Randy Couture, Dan Henderson and Matt Lindland. They head the list of wrestlers that Team Quest has turned into fighting machines. Now it's only the beginning stages but it looks like former Olympic wrestling hopeful Muhammed Lawal has the goods to be the next guy.
He scored an easy win over Yukiya Naito this morning at Sengoku 7. Naito ran for much of the fight, although he did take a few seconds to engage King Mo in some in-fight dancing. Lawal eventually caught Naito with a big right to the chin that floored the Japanese fighter. Naito retreated to the opposite corner where he was floored again by a left uppercut. Once on the ground, Lawal finished Naito with four big lefts at 3:54 of the first. Naito came in riding a six-fight win streak.
Lawal was a collegiate wrestler at Oklahoma State and Central Oklahoma. He was the Division II champ in 2002. He also won the 2006 U.S. Open and 2007 Pan-Am Games. He finished second to Andy Hrovat at the 2008 Olympic trials at 185 lbs. Lawal fought this one at 204 lbs.
Lawal is now 3-0 since starting his MMA career in September. He won his debut against MMA vet Travis Wiuff. That was a nice win fighting at 220 lbs. against the 246-pound Wiuff.
One piece of advice, Lawal can drop the WWE Godfather/pimp entrance. I don't mind the crown but surrounding himself with six "ho's" only plays to awful stereotypes that exist about African-Americans in Japan.
]]> Silva risks his future for that? What a disaster. Antonio Silva's controversial fight in Japan was over in the less two minutes. And it wasn't even a blow that ended the fight. Yoshihiro Nakao injured his left during an exchange on the feet. He was not hit. He simply planted in an awkward manner, limped to his left, called for a timeout and went down to the mat. The fight was given to "Big Foot" at 1:42 of the first round.
Silva (12-1) ignored his one year long suspension in the U.S. to take this fight at Sengoku 7. It'll be interesting to see if he gets to fight in the U.S. anytime soon. He doesn't have a win over a Top 15 heavyweight yet, but he's an intriguing prospect at 6-5, 260 pounds and 29 years old.
Silva's suspension began in August. He clearly snubbed his nose at the penalty. Should he ever be allowed to fight in the U.S. again? If he were, would it be fair to someone like Hermes Franca who sat out his 12 months without traveling out of the country for a payday?
Nakao was actually 7-1 coming into the fight with decent wins over Don Fyre and Cabbage Correira. He's most famous for his kiss of current UFC heavyweight Heath Herring. Herring knocked out Nakao before the fight began.
]]> Pee Wee's bad adventure Never underestimate your opponent. It seems like an easy axiom to follow yet Dave Herman fell victim to overconfidence like so many before him. The undefeated heavyweight prospect out of Indiana put his hands down and started stalking what appeared to be a listless Choi Mu Bae with 3:30 left in the second round. After a quick clinch, Herman turned to the side and began to walk away when he was blasted in the grill by two right hands.
Herman was rocked and retreated as Choi poured it on before "Pee Wee" fell to his knees against the ropes at 2:22 of the second round. Herman (pictured during a win over Kerry Schall) was a sitting duck and referee Hiromi Okamoto had to stop it. It was the first loss of Herman's career.
Eiji Mitusuoka schooled Sergei Golyaev in the next fight.
Mitsuoka scored a takedown less than 60 seconds into the fight. He rotated between full guard and side control. Golyaev worked well from the bottom minimizing damage but he simply could not get the fight back to the feet even with a reset at 1:15 left in the round. Mitusuoka worked through a loose half guard moving to the mount with 32 seconds left. It was a high mount that he quickly transitioned into an armbar. It didn't appear that Golyaev tapped but the referee quickly stopped the fight giving Mitsuoka the win at 4:42 of the first.
One is looking to take his career to the next level, the other may be ending his career as a fighter in the U.S. EliteXC folded a little over two months ago, so fighters are scrambling to make some bucks. You can't blame Dave Herman and Antonio Silva for wanting to get back into the ring. The problem with Silva is that he's in the midst of serving a one year suspension from the California State Athletic Commission for a positive steroids test. The former EliteXC heavyweight champ has said screw it and is fighting in Japan on Sengoku 7 card against Yoshihiro Nakao.
Herman (13-0) is an intriguing prospect at 6-foot-5, 240 lbs. he's stopped 12 of his 13 victims in the first round. He's facing 261-pound Mu Bae Choi.
Top five lightweight Takanori Gomi is on the card fighting for Sengoku's lightweight title. Kazuo Masaki is facing former UFC fighter Jorge Santiago for the middleweight title. A slimmed down Hidehiko Yoshida, a former Olympic judo gold medalist, is also on the card fighting at light heavyweight.
The card is slated to begin at 2 a.m. ET Sunday morning.
]]> Boxing could be Arlovski's downfall in big MMA match Could training with Freddie Roach actually be a bad thing for Andrei Arlovski as he preps for his Jan. 24 fight against Fedor Emelianenko? We're being fed coverage of his stand-up work at Roach's Wild Card Gym in Hollywood so we really don't know how much he's working on his submission/takedown defense. His striking may be where he wins the fight but it's more likely that weaknesses with takedown defense could spell doom for the Belarussian.
This obsession with a pro boxing career isn't helping things either. Now Roach is talking about pitting Arlovski, with zero pro boxing matches under his belt, against WBA champ Nikolay Valuev:
“If Andrei wins against Fedor on the 24th, I would put in right into a title fight with Nikolai Valuev right away," Freddie Roach told Fighthype.com. "It would be Belarus vs. Russia and that’s huge marketing for PPV and Andrei has a huge crowd in that area. He will cross over into boxing though; that is a definite! His next fight after Fedor will be a boxing match.”
Roach says in the video piece that Fedor can't fight going backwards. We'll see. If this one gets to the ground, Arlovski is in huge trouble. He couldn't get off the mat against Jake O'Brien and Roy Nelson early in those fights. What happens when the best fighter in the world is pounding away and working for submissions?
]]> Stankie will die in his Ultimate Fighter garb Al Stankiewicz emerged as an odd character on this season of the The Ultimate Fighter. There are so many unsung folks who support the fighters and Stankie was able to gain a little personal fame. But the show also unearthed a disturbing trend, the guy now lives in his Ultimate Fighter gear. Ryan Bader told a story about Stankie wearing his gear to the Palms Sports Book and slapping a patron. Then another story where the old coot while wearing his TUF outfit and hits himself in the face with his own shoe. Or when he tried to pick up a woman at a grocery store wearing his TUF stuff.
Then photographer Tracy Lee snapped a shot of him after The TUF 8 Finale. What a shocker! He was still in his TUF gear. Then this video emerges of Vitor Belfort training for the Jan. 24 Affliction card. Stankie is wearing the same outfit!
Belfort has again become a fighter to watch. He really hit the wall losing 5-of-7 fights from late 2004 into late 2006. Belfort tested positive at Pride 32 for the steroid 4-hydroxytestosterone. At just 29, it looked like the end of the road was near. He is now trying to rebuild his career at 185 lbs. and looked awesome in his middleweight debut against Terry Martin. He'd be a nice addition for the UFC to build depth in that division.
Here is another impressive Belfort training video where he's performing takedowns against a much bigger training partner while attached to a harness.
]]> Now this may be human cockfighting It can't get any lower. Art Davie, one of the founders of the UFC, may have come up with the dumbest sport we've ever seen. I would rather watch the chick slapping championships than the nonsense being called XARM. Let's tie two guys together and let them beat the (expletive) out of each other.
The UFC is always looking to add to its heavyweight ranks. Is it ready to roll the dice on former light heavyweight Alistair Overeem. Normally a light heavy moving up is dangerous proposition since he's probably walking around at 220 lbs. Not Overeem, he has made the miraculous jump from a lean 6-foot-4, 205 lbs. to 253 lbs. at his last fight K-1 Dynamite 2008. Wow! Overeem (pictured on the left) is the rare athletic, big heavy with a great set of striking skills.
He spoke with DreamFighters.com and said he is interested in fighting in the U.S. again:
DreamFighters.com: What is next for you? UFC, Lesnar, Fedor, what?
Alistair Overeem: Well I challenged (Remy) Bonjanksy on K-1 rules and yes, Fedor (Emelianenko) and (Brock) Lesnar are on my list, (Frank) Mir as well!
DreamFighters.com: Who would you like to fight next?
Alistair Overeem: I am going on a holiday as I really trained hard whole 2008, beginning of February I will start training again, my management is in negotiations now, I might visit the UFC (93) in Ireland on January 17th.
DreamFighters.com: Have you had any talks with Dana White or the UFC - Any interest fighting for the UFC or Affliction?
Alistair Overeem: My management has been in contact with Affliction as well as the UFC, I am a fighter and i concentrate on fighting, I am very happy with Golden Glory!
Overeem would be a nice get for UFC. He has the look and he is very dangerous on the feet. He's also been super effective with the guillotine choke when shorter fighters give their heads standing.
Overeem gave Chuck Liddell everything he could handle during a Pride event in 2003. He rocked Liddell with a left less 10 seconds into the fight and landed a ton knees. When have you seen Liddell ditch the stand-up game so he could wrestle? He did against Overeem. Liddell won the fight when Overeem gassed. Watch the video to see some of Overeem's game.
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Now the big question is can Overeem carry that 253 naturally? They don't test in Japan and we know California and Nevada don't mess around. Overeem did fight three times in the states in 2006 and 2007. He fought for Strikeforce in 2006 against Vitor Belfort at 210 and twice in 2007: Feb. 24 Pride 33 v. Shogun Rua at 205 and Nov. 16 Strikeforce v. Paul Buentello at 224. He passed all those tests. Should a red flag go up? Seven months later Overeem fought in June for DREAM 4 at 240, September for DREAM 6 at 241 and then came back for the K-1 Dynamite event at 253.
It would be nice to see Overeem in the states to fight legit heavyweights in MMA. He shouldn't have to reach for fights under K-1 rules.
Rashad Evans is catching up on Christmas after sacrificing his holidays for a shot at the UFC heavyweight title. It was worth it, he took the strap from Forrest Griffin but it meant that he only got to see his new daughter for about three days during the lead up to UFC 92. He was in good spirits when he entered the TAGG radio "cave" to talk about the fight, his future and his junk grabbing display in the second round after a flurry of Griffin punches:
"It was just a little fun," said Evans, who was hanging in the Chicago area during a phone interview with Gorgeous George, MMAJunkie's John Morgan and Frank Trigg. "He hit me with a good shot and he gave me a little smile. We were just going back and forth. (It's like) when you're in the gym there's some stuff going on. There will be a little trash talking. It ain't nothing personal, just getting into the fight."
Click below to listen to the Evans interview (TAGG Radio):
Evans broke down the fight and said he may have gotten too amped up beforehand. He had a surprising thought enter his head seconds before the fight and that mindset may have led to his slow start in the first two rounds.
Evans got into what is next. He may be the first UFC light heavyweight to go on record saying that he'd actually like to fight Lyoto Machida. Machida has an awkward counter-striking style and most 205ers have said that they want no part of him.
]]> Rampage II? UFC fighter Neer arrested after wild car chase Is delirium a common ailment amongst UFC fighters? Apparently driving like a jackass may be. Now it's only two instances, Quinton Jackson (pictured during his July arrest) and Josh Neer, but the cases are eerily similar.
Just after midnight, a squad car on routine patrol was stopped for a red light on Court Avenue when the car behind rear-ended it, according to a written report. The woman told police her car was also struck from behind.
The 25-year-old male driver in the third car, a black Audi Quattro, then pulled out, crossed into oncoming traffic on Court Avenue, and turned north on Fourth Street, the police report stated.
Police chased the Audi 20 miles.
At Sixth and Euclid avenues, the officer attempted a stop the fleeing car by hitting the back right quarter panel with the front left side of the squad car, a technique known as a precision immobilization technique, or PIT maneuver.
The Audi spun around but the driver regained control and continued west on Euclid Avenue.
Des Moines police continued the chase as the Audi traveled into Urbandale, then onto Interstate Highway 80 eastbound. The Audi reached speeds in excess of 100 mph in a 65 mph zone, the police report says. The chase ended at mile marker 137.
Neer was released on $7,000 bail and charged with eluding the police and operating a vehicle while intoxicated. Delirium was the explanation for what fueled Jackson's driving rampage in Southern California back in July.
“I called (UFC owner) Lorenzo (Fertitta) and our attorney at three in the morning, after I saw Rampage that night, and I’m like, ‘You guys have no (expletive) idea what I just saw. You have no idea what I just saw,’” said UFC president Dana White about visiting Jackson in jail.
The next day, the police went to Jackson’s home and took him to a psychiatric ward, where he was held for 72 hours. The immediate diagnosis was that the fighter was suffering from delirium induced by severe dehydration, reportedly caused by a week of staying up all night on energy drinks. When he was arrested, he hadn’t eaten or slept in four days.
The UFC did not suspend or penalize Jackson. He simply took five months off before winning his comeback fight at UFC 92 against Wanderlei Silva.
Will the UFC wait for the system to process Neer's incident or does it need to send a message and take him off the high profile SpikeTV Feb. 7 main event against Mac Danzig?
*Portland freelance reporter Brad McCray has covered MMA since the early days of Team Quest in Oregon.
*Dave Meltzer has covered the sport since UFC 1 in 1993. He is an MMA staff writer for Yahoo! Sports and has published the Wrestling Observer for 25 years.
*Pramit Mohapatra, who formerly wrote for SportsIllustrated.com and The Baltimore Sun, is the founder of Fightticker.com.
Eddie Alvarez was about to burst onto the American fighting scene with an EliteXC appearance before the company went under. Now he's been set back even further with a lopsided loss to Shinya Aoki at K-1 Dynamite 2008. Alvarez didn't want to go to the ground with Aoki, who may be one of the top five submission fighters in MMA. Yet he threw a sloppy kick that was caught. Aoki took Alvarez's back standing and got the fight to the ground. He quickly slapped on an ankle lock, Alvarez tried to roll but only made it worse when he went for Aoki's leg. Alvarez quickly tapped from the heel hook and was unable to even stand after the submission. The 25-year-old Aoki may look like a nerd but he's a killer. He is now 19-3 and likely to be ranked No. 2 in the world behind B.J. Penn on many lightweight top 10 lists. Alvarez, a native of Philadelphia, is now 15-2.
Watch the Aoki win after the jump. The other fight featuring top 10 lightweights, Gesias Cavalcante and Joachim Hansen, never reached the ring. It was announced before the card that Hansen was unable to fight because of a prior head injury.
Gegard Mousasi, who is an intriguing opponent down the road to possibly face Anderson Silva, walked over Musashi fighting under K-1 rules.
Musashi went down two times before he was finished by a 15 punch flurry. Mousasi, 23, has a solid kickboxing background but really carved out a name for himself by winning Dream's 185-pound MMA tournament earlier this year. He's a big dude for a middleweight. He fought this one at 215 lbs. destroying the heavier Musashi.
Kazushi Sakuraba lost a unanimous decision to Kiyoshi Tamura. Sakuraba, 39, was on the bottom for much of the fight trying to work submissions but could never catch Tamura.
Knockout of Night should go to Melvin Manhoef who buried Mark Hunt in 18 seconds. Manhoef was called in yesterday to replace Jerome LeBanner. Bad news for Hunt!
He caught Hunt on the chin with a devastating combo to floor the 287-pound Samoan.
The guy was supposed to come over lay waste to the UFC's heavyweight division when he was signed back in early 2007. Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic went 1-2 over the course of seven months and scurried back to Japan. It's time for him to come back to the U.S. or retire. He danced around this morning with 7-foot-3 freak Hong Man Choi before finishing the 327-pound Korean with a inside kick to the left knee at 6:32 of the first round. Cro Cop spent most of the fight running from Choi trying to pick his shots in a fight under K-1 rules. The ref gave both fighters a warning for stalling after five minutes of little action. Cro Cop, 34, is way too talented to be fighting on this type of card. It featured a guy fighting in a mask, a high school tournament, several fights with 75 pound weight differentials and worst of all, the blood curdling screams of the Suzyn Waldman-clone ring announcer.
There's no reason Cro Cop wouldn't be in the mix with the top six fighters in the UFC heavyweight division. Dana White told the Best Damn Sports Show on FoxSportsNet that he would welcome Cro Cop back. The Croatian announced after the fight that he'll be sidelined for six months because of knee surgery and will then decide his future.
"Kinnikuman's" outfit and mask were a bit ridiculous but the pro wrestler actually put up a very solid fight against Bob Sapp, who outweighed him by 140 lbs. Akihito Tanaka used his wrestling to takedown Sapp on two occasions in the opening round. In the second case, he controlled the "The Beast" for over three minutes getting in some solid punches. The 6-foot-4, 365-pound Sapp finally powered his way back to the feet and landed a huge right followed by an uppercut. Less than 30 seconds later, Tanaka was getting pummeled by huge shots in the corner and turned his back to give up. Sapp gets the win at 5:22 of the first round at K-1 Dynamite 2008.
The Japanese matchmakers get the job done again as Sapp moves to 10-3-1 in MMA. He beat a fighter basing his character on a Japanese cartoon. Give the guy credit as a part-time fighter and full-time pitchman, the former Washington Husky and Chicago Bear offensive lineman has made himself into a superstar in Japan. He's appeared in 23 commercials, 200 times on TV, in 1000 interviews, on 200 products with his name or image. You watch the fight after the jump.
Alistair Overeem destroyed the trash talking Badr Hari in a fight under K-1 (kickboxing) rules.
The 253-pound Overeem stalked Hari until he caught him with a big knee followed by a left. Hari got up but was then planted by another left for the TKO win. This is a helluva win for Overeem or K-1 sucks. Hari (69-8) was the K-1 heavyweight champ before being stripped of the title earlier this year when he was disqualified for taking down and striking Bojansky on the ground during the K-1 2008 World Grand Prix Final. It was just the fifth K-1 fight of Overeem's career.
Daisuke Nakamura put on a show against Hideo Tokoro. They rolled and transitioned at a ridiculous pace over the course of 90 seconds. Nakamura worked two different armbar scenarios before he tied up Tokoro like a pretzel and finished him with one final armbar at 2:01.
One of the best lightweights in the world Tatsuya Kawajiri crushed Kozo Takeda under K-1 rules. He knocked down Takeda four times. The best came on a sweet flying knee.
]]> Smeared Sakurai can still fight Lately, he's been known more for a porn scandal than his 33 previous wins. But even a bloated Hayato Sakurai showed he can still dominate. He pounded out an overmatched Katsuyori Shibata this morning at K-1 Dynamite 2008. The fight opened with both fighters flying at each other with kicks. Sakurai (34-8-2) quickly got it to the ground where he switched between side control and the mount. Shibata (2-7-1) took it all - punches, elbows and even a few knees to face on the ground (legal in Japan). The ref finally stopped it at 7:01 of the first when Sakurai got in six unanswered punches.
Sakarai has wins over former/present UFC fighters Frank Trigg, Mac Danzig, Caol Uno, Dave Menne and Jens Pulver with losses to Anderson Silva, Ryo Chonan and Matt Hughes. With that kind of resume why exactly was Sakurai in with Shibata?
Andy Ologun showed solid power and submission defense in taking out Yukio Sakaguchi.
Sakaguchi slapped on a nasty looking triangle and then worked for an armbar for nearly two minutes. Ologun powered his way out and the fight was quickly brought back to the feet. That's when Ologun floored Sakaguchi and knocked him out on the ground with a brutal left at 3:52 of the first. The 25-year old Nigerian has a kickboxing background. He's also a popular figure on Japanese television and made news as a crime fighter in June. His brother Bobby is also a fighter and the real star of the family (31 kids!) with his television appeances on Super Karakuri TV. He was part of huge controversy in 2006 for an alleged assault.
Izuhisa Minowa shredded Errol Zimmerman's left foot. It took "Minowman" less than a minute to get Zimmerman to the mat. Once he applied the toe-hold, Zimmerman was screaming in pain before submitting at 1:01. It seemed like a bit of a mismatch with Zimmerman, a K-1 fighter/kickboxer, making his MMA debut against Minowman (41-29-8) in his 78th fight.
]]> Little guys shine in Japan on NYE B.J. Penn is the best lightweight in the UFC by a wide margin. He's been forced to move up for a fight against welterweight champ Georges St. Pierre at UFC 94 for two reasons. He's easily disposed of the UFC's top 155 pounders and the four best lightweights behind him may be fighting in Japan. They're all on display tomorrow morning on the K-1 Dynamite! 2008 card in the land of the rising sun.
Eddie Alvarez, 24, from Philadelphia battles Shinya Aoki. These two are arguably the No. 2 and 3 lightweights in the world. Aoki is a submission genius with two gogoplata submissions to his credit. Alvarez with a strong wrestling/boxing base is 15-1. Two other top six lightweights face off in Gesias Cavalcante and Joachim Hansen.
Mark Hunt, Sakuraba, Hayato Sakurai, Alistair Overeem, Badr Hari, Cro Cop, Tatsuya Kawajiri and Gegard Mousasi are all featured on the card.
]]> Diamond Dave more entertainer than fighter He's training in Las Vegas full-time with Frank Mir but maybe he should be alongside Terry Fator at the Mirage. Dave Kaplan's transition to UFC fighter to didn't go too well last month against Junie Browning. Phillipe Nover and Browning showed the guy is easy to hit. Maybe his head just isn't the game as he's working the game show circuit and coming up with brilliant entrance songs for his fights.
The "Diamond" side of Kaplan was first on display with his fine dancing and use of an 80's cheese hit from General Public for the Browning fight. Then we find out the guy is a karoake junkie with this appearance on The Singing Bee.
I've never seen this show. Frankly, Joey Fatone stinks as the host. He especially blows when he makes several eye gouging references about MMA. Kaplan flopped with The Supremes and Indigo Girl but nailed it with something called the Angels. Maybe the winner should win show hosting duties as well.