Jones Unfazed By ‘Polish Power’

Photo by Mike Roach/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC

With former two-division champion, Daniel Cormier, coming off a recent loss at heavyweight, it’s unlikely that “DC” will be in line for another shot at longtime rival and reigning 205-pound champion…

UFC 235: Jones v Smith

Photo by Mike Roach/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC

With former two-division champion, Daniel Cormier, coming off a recent loss at heavyweight, it’s unlikely that “DC” will be in line for another shot at longtime rival and reigning 205-pound champion, Jon Jones.

That means “Bones” can either jump up in weight and test his might against current heavyweight kingpin, Stipe Miocic, or hang around his current division to see what names the promotion can dredge up for his next fight.

Jan Blachowicz (24-8) is shooting his shot, or whatever the kids are calling it these days.

“Jon Jones, if you give me the title shot, you will feel the legendary Polish power,” Blachowicz told ESPN on Monday. “I promise you are going to get the hardest fight of your life. Thank you.”

Jones is no stranger to hard fights, having just gone five rounds with Thiago Santos in what proved to be a tougher bout than most of us expected. Still, “Bones” believes he’s got the innate ability to neutralize the power-punching Pole.

“I’m assuming he’s never competed against an inner-city black kid from the U.S. before, that’s no small task either,” Jones said on Twitter. “We got Jan out there politely asking for a taste of the dream team. We all know what happens here.”

Jones (25-1, 1 NC) has pretty much cleaned out the light heavyweight division over the last few years. Dominick Reyes and Johnny Walker, two contenders currently in the mix, still have some work to do before securing the golden ticket.

Blachowicz, 36, has won five of his last six and sits at No. 5 in the official rankings. I’m sure the promotion could do worse in terms of title challengers, but this feels more like keeping the seat warm until Jones and Co. are ready for the next big thing.

Dana White Explains Why Darren Till Is Fighting Kelvin Gastelum

When Darren Till’s next fight was announced, many were confused as to why he’ll be competing against a middleweight the caliber of Kelvin Gastelum. While Till can certainly hold his own inside the Octagon, this bout contradicts what White h…

When Darren Till’s next fight was announced, many were confused as to why he’ll be competing against a middleweight the caliber of Kelvin Gastelum. While Till can certainly hold his own inside the Octagon, this bout contradicts what White had said about pushing “The Gorilla” too soon. Here’s what the UFC boss told ESPN back […]

The post Dana White Explains Why Darren Till Is Fighting Kelvin Gastelum appeared first on MMA News.

Video: B.J. Penn Involved In Another Bar Fight

UFC Hall of Famer, B.J. Penn has reportedly been in another bar fight. TMZ Sports attained the video that showed the Hawaiian on top of a citizen and landing down heavy punches. It reportedly took place at the Lava Shack on the Big Island. This is not the first time B.J. Penn has been in a […]

The post Video: B.J. Penn Involved In Another Bar Fight appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

UFC Hall of Famer, B.J. Penn has reportedly been in another bar fight.

TMZ Sports attained the video that showed the Hawaiian on top of a citizen and landing down heavy punches. It reportedly took place at the Lava Shack on the Big Island.

This is not the first time B.J. Penn has been in a bar fight. Back in June, a video got released of the UFC Hall of Famer in a bar fight and his friends struggling to get him off him.

In this fight, according to the report, the police eventually showed up on the scene although no arrests were made and Penn has yet to comment on the incident.

Penn, of course, is set to return to the Octagon against Nik Lentz where the expectation will be the fight takes place later this year. It will also be Penn’s last fight in the UFC according to Dana White.

The Hawaiian is currently on seven-fight winning steak and has not won a fight in eight straight fights as before his losing streak had a draw against Jon Fitch. His last win came back at UFC 123 when he knocked out Matt Hughes in the first round. On his current losing streak he has lost to the likes of Nick Diaz, Rory MacDonald, Frankie Edgar, Yair Rodriguez, and Clay Guida among others.

What do you make of this incident?

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Modernizing Egypt’s Ancient Martial Art 

Egyptian painting by Alaa Awad depicting tahtib | Alaa Awad

Karim Zidan delves into Tahtib, the ancient martial art that incorporates stick fighting into its arsenal, and how Egypt plans to modernize the 5000-year-old sport.  On Ju…

Egyptian painting by Alaa Awad depicting tahtib | Alaa Awad

Karim Zidan delves into Tahtib, the ancient martial art that incorporates stick fighting into its arsenal, and how Egypt plans to modernize the 5000-year-old sport. 

On June 20, 2019, the Ministry of Antiquities organized an exhibition at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo that paid homage to the country’s sports heritage ahead of the 32nd African Cup on Nations (AFCON) football tournament. The exhibit, titled ‘Sports Through the Ages,’ showcased more than 90 Egyptian artifacts that represented the wide range of sports that locals participated in through the ages.

The remarkable items on display included a statue of King Tutankhamun, which welcomed visitors as they step into the exhibit. The boy king is seen holding a javelin in his right hand, and a chain in his left, capturing him in the act of throwing the spear. There is also a painting taken from inside the tomb of ancient Egyptian official Baqet III that showed 220 pairs of wrestlers in unique poses.

Hidden amongst the impressive statues and murals is a small ceramics plate from the Fatimid era (909–1171 A.D.) painted a picture of two men practicing a traditional stick-fighting martial art called tahtib. It was a subtle callback to the ancient combat sport that continues to exist in small pockets of Egyptian society, but it also under threat of extinction.

History of Tahtib

Tahtib (or tahteeb) is an ancient martial art performed with wicker or bamboo-like sticks that dates back over 5000 years.

According to engravings from the archaeological site of Abusir located in south-western Cairo, tahtib dates back to 2500 BC during the Fifth Dynasty. The Pyramid of Sahure showed images and captions of soldiers using tahtib as part of their military training, along with archery and wrestling. Several tombs in the Beni Hassan necropolis (1900-1700 BC), as well as the archaeological site of Tell el Amarna (1350 BC), also contained engravings with scenes of tahtib as a tool of warfare.

Tahtib engraved on ancient archaeological sites

The first evidence of tahtib being practiced in civilian context by peasants and farmers for festive reasons appeared on engravings on the walls of Luxor and Saqqara in the New Empire (1500-1000BC), at which point it had already begun to develop as a performance art and form of sports entertainment.

Over the years, tahtib lost its place as a martial art and evolved into a form of demonstrative dance. It remained popular amongst peasants and rural communities, who performed the dance as a form of stress relief. The dance was always accompanied by music, usually a tabla (goblet drum), and a mizmar (folk-style oboe made of reed).

As Egypt’s rural communities began to migrate to the cities in search for employment and better opportunities in the 20th century, the practice of tahtib dwindled and once again took new form. Women started to take part in tahtib, using it as a form of flirtatious dancing calls Raqs al-assaya (dance of the stick), which they performed either as soloists or with a male counterpart at cabarets and weddings.


Wikicommons
tahtib performace

However, the past few years have seen a resurgence in tahtib as a martial art form by formalizing the techniques used and applying a fixed structure that better facilitates competition.

Modernizing an Ancient Sport

The establishment of modern tahtib is credited to one man: Adel Boulad. As the founder of the modern form of tahtib, he revived the ancient techniques and presented it as a form of training, while also incorporating the dance aspect for performance value. All this was done in an effort to ensure that the ancient martial art does not become extinct.

Boulad’s efforts were not in vain. In November 2016, tahtib was added to the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage List by the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage — a step taken to help ensure that the sport does not become extinct. Training centres were opened in Egypt and across the world, including Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and France, where the tahtib championships is held.


Wikicommons

In modern tahtib, participants wear loose clothing such as t-shirts and athletic wear. After an opening ritual, the players take turns on the attack, where their goal is to touch the opponent’s head with the stick without being touched themselves. Players stay within a designated circle as they attempt this, while victory in ensured after any touch to the head or three touches to the rest of the body. Music remains essential to the sport, and is still performed with a bass drum and a mizmar.

Ahead of the first tahtib championships in July 2017, Al-Monitor interviewed Rania Medhat, the first Egyptian woman ever to be certified as a tahtib instructor. She was selected by the Association of Upper Egypt for Education and Development, a nongovernmental organization based in Cairo, to take part in a modern tahteeb training course in Cairo taught by none other than Adel Boulad. She completed the 30-day program and became the country’s first certified female player and instructor.

“In the Upper Egyptian governates, with their conservative communities, it is difficult for me as a woman to perform tahteeb, a male-dominated sport. So I attended the courses in the capital. The first-ever modern art tournament for tahteeb will be held this July in Cairo as well,” Medhat told Al-Monitor.

After seeing her friends eager to learn the sport, Medhat urged Egyptians to help keep the ancient sport alive and to push for it to be included in Egypt’s physical education curriculums.

”Apart from being our ancestors’ heritage, tahteeb helps in developing one’s physical skills” like flexibility, reaction speed and strength, she said. “It can be used as a new method in fighting a harasser, even without the stick. This art is really helping to strengthen the Egyptian identity and enhance the self-confidence of its practitioners.”

BJ Penn Smashes Bar Patron In Violent Beatdown

My favorite part of this video is the background music as people are getting their heads smashed in. Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) should amend its official Code of Conduct, preventing all active fighters from visiting their local wa…

My favorite part of this video is the background music as people are getting their heads smashed in.

Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) should amend its official Code of Conduct, preventing all active fighters from visiting their local watering holes. I’m not sure how else to prevent a handful of hotheads, like former two-division champion BJ Penn, from getting into drunken fistfights.

As I’m sure you’re all aware by now, “The Prodigy” is no stranger to after-hour meltdowns, though we probably haven’t seen the 40 year-old grappling ace unleash this sort of violence since his 2009 drubbing of Diego Sanchez in Memphis.

The incident embedded in the video above went down at the Lava Shack on Hawaii’s “Big Island” on Tuesday night. TMZ reports that no charges have been filed at this time and no arrests have been made, so perhaps Penn will avoid any legal repercussions.

Fellow UFC head puncher, Conor McGregor, may not be so lucky.

Despite losing seven straight fights, Penn is expected to get one last crack at retiring with a win when he collides with Nik Lentz later this year. While a date and venue have not been determined, promotion president, Dana White, promises this will be the final fight of the Hawaiian’s UFC career.

His career on the bar-fighting circuit, however, is just getting underway.

Demetrious Johnson Says Henry Cejudo’s Shtick Is ‘Hilarious’

Count Demetrious Johnson as a fan of Henry Cejudo’s shtick. Cejudo has embraced the cringe role and many have taken a dislike to it. He has called for an intergender fight with Valentina Shevchenko, and has been calling out opponents in videos an…

Count Demetrious Johnson as a fan of Henry Cejudo’s shtick. Cejudo has embraced the cringe role and many have taken a dislike to it. He has called for an intergender fight with Valentina Shevchenko, and has been calling out opponents in videos and telling them to bend the knee. Meanwhile, at UFC events he has […]

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