Glory 4 Results

MMA Fighting has Glory 4 results for the Glory 4 Tokyo Grand Slam tournament at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.
Semmy Schilt headlined the 16-fighter field.
Check out the Glory 4 results below.
GLORY Grand Slam Tournament:

Semmy

MMA Fighting has Glory 4 results for the Glory 4 Tokyo Grand Slam tournament at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.

Semmy Schilt headlined the 16-fighter field.

Check out the Glory 4 results below.

GLORY Grand Slam Tournament:
Semmy Schilt def. Brice Guidon by KO, R2
Rico Verhoeven def. Sergei Kharitonov by Decision (Unanimous)
Gokhan Saki def. Raomoru by TKO, R1
– Anderson “Braddock” Silva def. Igor Jurkovic by TKO, R1
Remy Bonjasky def. Filip Verlinden by Decision (Split)
Jamal Ben Saddick def. Errol Zimmerman by Decision (Unanimous)
Mourad Bouzidi def. Peter Aerts by TKO (Injury), R1
Daniel Ghita def. Jhonata Diniz by Decision (Unanimous)
GLORY Grand Slam Tournament Quarterfinals:
– Semmy Schilt def. Rico Verhoeven by Decision (Unanimous)
– Gokhan Saki def. Anderson “Braddock” Silva by KO, R1
– Jamal Ben Saddik def. Remy Bonjasky by decision (Unanimous)
– Daniel Ghita def. Mourad Bouzidi by TKO (Injury), R2
GLORY Grand Slam Tournament Semifinals:
– Semmy Schilt def. Gokhan Saki by Decision (Unanimous)
– Daniel Ghita def. Jamal Ben Saddik by KO, R1
GLORY Grand Slam Tournament Final:
– Semmy Schilt def. Daniel Ghita by TKO, R1
Kickboxing Superfights:
– Robin van Roosmalen def. Yuichiro Nagashima by Decision (Unanimous)
– Jason Wilnis def. Toshio Matsumoto by Decision (Unanimous)
– Mutsuki Ebata def. San Che Kim by Decision (Unanimous)

Dream 18 Results: Aoki vs. McKee, Kawajiri vs. Omigawa

MMA Fighting has Dream 18 results from the New Year’s Eve special at the Saitama Super Arena in Tokyo, Japan.Among the key bouts in the event, Shinya Aoki will square off against Antonio McKee, Melvin Manhoef will battle Denis Kang, a…

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MMA Fighting has Dream 18 results from the New Year’s Eve special at the Saitama Super Arena in Tokyo, Japan.

Among the key bouts in the event, Shinya Aoki will square off against Antonio McKee, Melvin Manhoef will battle Denis Kang, and Tatsuya Kawajiri will face Michihiro Omigawa.

Check out the complete Dream 18 results below.

MMA Bouts:

Tatsuya Kawajiri def. Michihiro Omigawa by Decision (Unanimous)
Georgi Karakhanyan def. Hiroyuki Takaya by Decision (Split)
Shinya Aoki def. Antonio McKee by Submission (Verbal submission following a punch), R2
Bibiano Fernandes def. Yoshiro Maeda by Submission (Triangle Choke), R1
Melvin Manhoef def. Denis Kang
by KO (Knee to the body), R1
Hayato Sakurai def. Phil Baroni by Decision (Unanimous)
Marloes Coenen def. Fiona Muxlow by Submission (Armbar), R1
Will Brooks def. Satoru Kitaoka by TKO (punches), R2

Kickboxing bout:

Jerome Le Banner def. Koichi Pettas by KO (Punch), R3

UFC on FUEL 6: Zhang Tiequan injures hand on bout against Jon Tuck in Macau

MACAU, CHINA — Zhang Tiequan and Jon Tuck put on a stellar performance this past weekend at UFC Macao: Franklin vs. Le, with the two fighters going back and forth for majority of their 15 minute bout. Most people in the arena conside…

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MACAU, CHINA — Zhang Tiequan and Jon Tuck put on a stellar performance this past weekend at UFC Macao: Franklin vs. Le, with the two fighters going back and forth for majority of their 15 minute bout. Most people in the arena considered it as the unofficial Fight of the Night, and while both men gained a lot of respect from the local Chinese fans, it looks like it will take a while before they can see their hometown hero back in the cage.

On Sunday, MMAFighting.com has learned from Zhang himself that he had sustained an injury to his left hand during the bout against Tuck. The Chinese star showed his heavily wrapped and bandaged hand, stating through a translator that it was his left thumb that was broken.

Although there has been no official word yet on a timetable for his return, the 34-year-old fighter will likely be out of commission for months.

The decision loss to Tuck marks his 3rd in a row, and drops his overall record to 15-4. Prior to heading to the UFC, the China Top Team product joined the WEC in 2010 and has gone 2-4 under the Zuffa banner, with submission wins over Pablo Garza and Jason Reinhardt.

Observations from UFC on FUEL 6 you may have missed

MACAU, CHINA — UFC Macau is in the books and Zuffa’s first trip to China ended up as a success. Apart from having that arena feel, commercials may have cut out several minutes of your viewing experience. To make up for that, here are…

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MACAU, CHINA — UFC Macau is in the books and Zuffa’s first trip to China ended up as a success. Apart from having that arena feel, commercials may have cut out several minutes of your viewing experience. To make up for that, here are several tidbits from being live at the Cotai Arena that you may have missed out on during the FUEL TV broadcast:

– Macau is a popular tourist spot which is just a few short hours away from several countries in Asia. This was one of the primary reasons the UFC chose this location to start with their Asian expansion, as they knew a lot of people would fly in to see the event while also catering to a very young Chinese market at the same time.

They were right on the money with this one, as a huge percentage of the crowd were indeed from several different nations. This led to the crowd being split during several bouts with huge contingents from countries like the U.S., China, Brazil, and South Korea cheering on their countrymen.

– Like a lot of events in the U.S., the judges in Macau all had monitors they can use cageside.

– During the prelims of Caceres vs. Tezuka, Motonubu’s cornerman was slapping him in the face multiple times. in between rounds to wake him up, I guess. Unfortunately for him, it didn’t work as Caceres cruised to a split decision. Speaking of, judge Bass Singh scored that for Tezuka. Did he accidentally turn off his monitor?

– Following the fight, Motonobu Tezuka’s left eye was swollen shut from the bout against Caceres.

– In what I can only assume to be unique to this Chinese event, celebrities who attended the event were announced, and personalities such as action movie stars Donnie Yen and Daniel Wu were introduced to the crowd in different languages. Speaking of multiple languages, the promo videos where Jon Anik gives previews before every fight all had Chinese subtitles.

– TUF veteran, Andy Wang was in Mac Danzig’s corner for his fight against Takanori Gomi.

– Also, a tidbit that wasn’t shown on the FUEL broadcast, right before the decision was announced, Danzig & Gomi had a bro-hug while they were both being carried by the shoulders of their cornermen.

– Korean ring girl Kang Ye Bin was seated for most of the event, but when it came to Dong Hyun Kim’s bout, she was standing, intently watching and cheering for his countryman.

– With all the Asian fighters on the card, it’s funny that it was the scary Bulgarian in Stanislav Nedkov who decided to walk out to the popular Gangnam Style song.

– In the UFC’s history, they have hosted over 200 events and there has never been a card that had every single fight go to a decision. Saturday’s event seemed to be going that way with the first seven bouts left to the judges hands, but Thiago Silva and Cung Le put an end to that securing the card’s only submission and knockout. That automatically won them the fight night bonuses.

– Prior to getting the third round submission, all three judges scoring the Thiago Silva vs. Stanislav Nedkov fight had Silva winning the first two rounds, even if Nedkov scored a big knockdown and controlled most of the fight on the fence. Had the Bulgarian not gassed and got finished, it could’ve been a very controversial issue right now.

– Lastly, do you remember the Japanese lady doing translation at UFC Japan (UFC 144) with those cool, fluffy pens? She’s back in Macau, doing translations for Gomi and the other Japanese fighters.