Josh Barnett: ‘Give Me My Moment, and I’ll Give You What You Want’

Filed under: StrikeforceDALLAS — There was hardly a moment in Josh Barnett’s Strikeforce heavyweight Grand Prix quarterfinal bout with Brett Rogers where he wasn’t in the driver’s seat, so it was only fitting that he seized control of the post-fight i…

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DALLAS — There was hardly a moment in Josh Barnett‘s Strikeforce heavyweight Grand Prix quarterfinal bout with Brett Rogers where he wasn’t in the driver’s seat, so it was only fitting that he seized control of the post-fight interview as well.

“Gus, I love you. I know you have a job to do,” Barnett told Showtime commentator Gus Johnson in the cage following his second-round arm-triangle submission victory over Rogers. “But then again so do I, and I think the people want to hear what I have to say right now.”

What followed was yet another monologue from Barnett about the state of his career and his future goals, only this one also included references to stacking up skulls and “standing on top of a pile of bodies with gold in [his] hand.”

This, Barnett said in the post-fight press conference, is the kind of thing we should all just get used to now that North American MMA has an entertainer like him back in the big leagues.

“I’m not here to do everything that everyone tells me to,” Barnett said. “I’m here to entertain. I don’t need my hand held. I don’t need to be directed. I don’t need to have anybody try to prompt me to give something interesting. Just give me my moment, give me my time, and I’ll give you what you want and then some. People want to hear what I’ve got to say, and if anybody wants to see how I finished the fight, hit rewind on the DVR. You can check it out as much as you want.”

Barnett had little trouble dispatching the less experienced Rogers after taking him down easily in both the first and second rounds. Even with a dominant position for most of round one, however, he said he had to be careful not to get too reckless looking for the finish and, in the process, put his chances of continuing on in the tournament at risk.

“You go in there, you have a strategy. I stuck to it for the most part, but once I got in there it became a matter of also making him drown underneath me — taking his wind, taking his spirit, taking his energy, and doing it without any sort of injury, because this is a tournament. I have another fight, and I have another fight after that, so it’s important to be very tactical and very strategic about how you take these guys out.”

But Barnett’s strategic approach wasn’t an immediate hit with the Texas fans, who booed his first-round performance. That made for a somewhat inauspicious start for a fighter who prides himself on being such a showman, but Barnett insisted that it never bothered him.

“You can’t listen to the crowd very much. You got to go out there, you got to do your thing. And you know what? The crowd can boo you one minute and cheer you the next,” he said.

Now Barnett moves on to face Russian striker Sergei Kharitonov in the semi-final round in the fall. Kharitonov fought his way in with a knockout win over Andrei Arlovski in his quarterfinal fight, and Barnett expects him to be a tougher opponent than Rogers, he said.

“[Kharitonov] is a more well-rounded fighter. He’s a much better boxer. In terms of technical, very sound boxing technique. I don’t know if he’s got the slugging ability — in fact, I think Brett might actually be a little bit faster than Sergei, to a point — but Sergei has a chin of granite. He’s got a better ground game too, so I’ve got to train hard.”

For Barnett — who’s had a rocky few years after a positive drug test torpedoed his hopes of a high-profile fight with Fedor Emelianenko in the now defunct Affliction organization — the Strikeforce Grand Prix represents a golden opportunity. Not only does it give him the chance to prove himself as a top heavyweight, it also offers him some hope of mending fences with UFC president Dana White now that the UFC’s parent company, Zuffa, owns Strikeforce.

It’s a chance he may never get again if he squanders it this time, and no one seems more aware of that fact than Barnett.

“This is my chance,” he said. “This is my triple crown. This is my WGP. This is my opportunity to go out there and display myself as one of the best heavyweights who’s ever walked the earth. I know it, but people want to see it. They want me to prove it. Fine. As long as you can line people up against me, I’m going to go out there and keep taking them out. That’s my job. I’m born and bred to fight. So anybody that thinks they want to kick my a–, make them sign so I can go prove them different.”

 

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Alistair Overeem Victorious, but Frustrated by Fabricio Werdum’s Strategy

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DALLAS — Alistair Overeem and Fabricio Werdum couldn’t agree where their Strikeforce heavyweight Grand Prix fight would be contested on Saturday night. Overeem voted in favor of the feet. Werdum wanted it on the mat. In the end, neither man got exactly what he was hoping for, and neither did the fans.

Overeem, the reigning Strikeforce heavyweight champion, won a unanimous decision after three rounds at the American Airlines Arena. He mostly dominated the striking portions of the fight early on and easily stuffed Werdum’s takedown attempts in the first round, but the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu specialist Werdum continually flopped to his back in an attempt to turn the bout into a ground battle, frustrating Overeem down the stretch.

“I think he didn’t really come to fight,” Overeem told MMA Fighting after the bout. “He was stalling a lot. In the beginning he opened up his guard, so I could stand up. Later on he kept his guard closed, so I couldn’t stand up. Then he was just stalling the fight.”




Werdum wasn’t wholly outclassed in the striking game when he did deign to stay on his feet, however. He peppered Overeem with punch combinations and knees throughout the fight, but Overeem insisted he was never hurt by any of the blows, and said he was disappointed that Werdum opted to spend so much time on his back throughout the fight.

“Basically I think that’s all he can do,” Overeem said. “I think he didn’t really come to fight. He just set-up his strikes to get the takedown. He wasn’t striking to knock me out. What can I say? It takes two to tango.”

With the decision victory, Overeem advances into the semi-final round of the Strikeforce Grand Prix, where he’ll face Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva in an event that Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker said would most likely take place some time this fall.

And while Coker admitted that Saturday’s main event wasn’t exactly the biggest hit with the fans, who showered Overeem and Werdum with boos throughout the fight, he refused to lay blame on either party for it.

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Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum Photos
Alistair Overeem knees Fabricio Werdum at Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum on Saturday, June 18, 2011 at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin and Junior dos Santos trade shots at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin attempts to take down Junior dos Santos at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos tries to finish Shane Carwin late in the first at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos (right) rocks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos kicks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin is bloodied up at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos punches Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos lands a left hand against Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Blood drips down the face of Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin makes a last ditch effort late in the third round at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos


“I think it was a tactical fight on Werdum’s part,” Coker said. “I think that after a point…Josh [Barnett] said Alistair got frustrated, I think Fabricio got frustrated as well. I think that it was a tactical fight. Fabricio wanted to come down to the ground; Alistair didn’t want to do that. It turned out to be a tactical strategy fight.”

Overeem landed heavy right hands and knees to Werdum’s head at several points in the fight, but it was difficult to tell just how badly Werdum was hurt, since he was always willing to fall to his back after any exchange in the hopes that Overeem would follow him down. On more than one occasion he beckoned the 260-pound Dutchman down, even putting his hands together in a pleading motion at times. Overeem, however, refused to take the bait, remaining on his feet and taunting Werdum for his unwillingness to engage.

For his part, Overeem blamed Werdum’s strategy for making both men look bad in front of the fans in attendance and those watching at home on Showtime, but said it wasn’t indicative of his abilities, as people will soon realize.

“I can tell you, there’s a lot more that I can show to the fans,” said Overeem. “When the fans look at my previous fights, they will know that. It’s hard when somebody comes to not fight. I knew that that chance was there with Fabricio Werdum. He is a character. But I did expect him to put more of a fight against me. He was talking a lot of crap before the fight, but yeah, I believe he was not there to fight.”

 

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DALLAS — Alistair Overeem and Fabricio Werdum couldn’t agree where their Strikeforce heavyweight Grand Prix fight would be contested on Saturday night. Overeem voted in favor of the feet. Werdum wanted it on the mat. In the end, neither man got exactly what he was hoping for, and neither did the fans.

Overeem, the reigning Strikeforce heavyweight champion, won a unanimous decision after three rounds at the American Airlines Arena. He mostly dominated the striking portions of the fight early on and easily stuffed Werdum’s takedown attempts in the first round, but the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu specialist Werdum continually flopped to his back in an attempt to turn the bout into a ground battle, frustrating Overeem down the stretch.

“I think he didn’t really come to fight,” Overeem told MMA Fighting after the bout. “He was stalling a lot. In the beginning he opened up his guard, so I could stand up. Later on he kept his guard closed, so I couldn’t stand up. Then he was just stalling the fight.”




Werdum wasn’t wholly outclassed in the striking game when he did deign to stay on his feet, however. He peppered Overeem with punch combinations and knees throughout the fight, but Overeem insisted he was never hurt by any of the blows, and said he was disappointed that Werdum opted to spend so much time on his back throughout the fight.

“Basically I think that’s all he can do,” Overeem said. “I think he didn’t really come to fight. He just set-up his strikes to get the takedown. He wasn’t striking to knock me out. What can I say? It takes two to tango.”

With the decision victory, Overeem advances into the semi-final round of the Strikeforce Grand Prix, where he’ll face Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva in an event that Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker said would most likely take place some time this fall.

And while Coker admitted that Saturday’s main event wasn’t exactly the biggest hit with the fans, who showered Overeem and Werdum with boos throughout the fight, he refused to lay blame on either party for it.


“I think it was a tactical fight on Werdum’s part,” Coker said. “I think that after a point…Josh [Barnett] said Alistair got frustrated, I think Fabricio got frustrated as well. I think that it was a tactical fight. Fabricio wanted to come down to the ground; Alistair didn’t want to do that. It turned out to be a tactical strategy fight.”

Overeem landed heavy right hands and knees to Werdum’s head at several points in the fight, but it was difficult to tell just how badly Werdum was hurt, since he was always willing to fall to his back after any exchange in the hopes that Overeem would follow him down. On more than one occasion he beckoned the 260-pound Dutchman down, even putting his hands together in a pleading motion at times. Overeem, however, refused to take the bait, remaining on his feet and taunting Werdum for his unwillingness to engage.

For his part, Overeem blamed Werdum’s strategy for making both men look bad in front of the fans in attendance and those watching at home on Showtime, but said it wasn’t indicative of his abilities, as people will soon realize.

“I can tell you, there’s a lot more that I can show to the fans,” said Overeem. “When the fans look at my previous fights, they will know that. It’s hard when somebody comes to not fight. I knew that that chance was there with Fabricio Werdum. He is a character. But I did expect him to put more of a fight against me. He was talking a lot of crap before the fight, but yeah, I believe he was not there to fight.”

 

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Strikeforce Live Blog: Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum Updates

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DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce live blog for Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum, a heavyweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum card at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

Overeem (34-11) is the Strikeforce heavyweight champion and last year stopped both Brett Rogers and Todd Duffee. Werdum (14-4-1) is coming off a career-defining win one year ago over Fedor Emelianenko. In this non-title tournament bout, the winner will advance to face Antonio Silva in the Strikeforce Grand Prix semifinals at a later date.

The live blog is below.




Round 1:
Werdum starts us off with a head kick that Overeem ducks under. Werdum tests the distance with a two-punch combo, then shoots for his first takedown 45 seconds into the fight. Overeem stuffs it easily. Two more takedown attempts also fail, with Werdum not even coming close. He’s not setting up the shots at all, which doesn’t help. Overeem catches a Werdum kick and tosses him to the mat, but no way is he following him down. Overeem moves in close for a punch and Werdum pulls guard. Overeem stands up and backs away, and this scenario repeats itself a few moments later. The second time Overeem backs up with his hands in the air, taunting Werdum. Werdum gets up and lands a decent punch combo followed by a knee, but Overeem is unfazed. Overeem sits Werdum down with a big left hook, then steps back and takes a look at his hand. Werdum now literally begging Overeem to come down, but nothing doing. Werdum pulls half-guard just before the horn, but can’t get anything going. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 Overeem.

Round 2: Overeem whiffs on a right hand lead. Werdum punches his way into the clinch and looks for a takedown. Overeem tosses him to the mat again, but won’t follow him there. Werdum lands a nice right hand and actually manages to put Overeem down. He’s back up quickly, but he eats a hard knee that wobbles him just a bit. Werdum smells blood and comes in swinging, but Overeem stays calm and recovers. More guard-pulling from Werdum, and he’s slower and slower to get up each time. Overeem rocks him with a hard right that puts Werdum on his back, and this time Overeem follows into the guard. The big man may be taking a breather here. Werdum tries to get something going with the open guard, but Overeem backs away. A big knee from Overeem drops Werdum again, but it’s hard to tell whether he’s rocked or just pulling guard. Most likely it’s the latter. Overeem again winds up in Werdum’s guard in the final minute, but Werdum can’t even begin to set up a submission. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Overeem.

Round 3: Werdum opens up with punch combos to start the final frame. Overeem covers up and backs away, landing a hard right that sends sweat flying of Werdum’s head. Werdum again tries pulling half-guard to no effect, and then pulls guard off an Overeem right hand a few moments later. He’s just holding on to Overeem to keep him on the mat with him, but it doesn’t let him work much offense. Overeem stands up and baits Werdum back to his feet. Werdum lands a couple nice blows, but he eats a hard right and again tries to pull half-guard. Werdum is not unsuccessful in the stand-up game, but he seems like he’d rather lose a decision off his back than take a chance on his feet with Overeem. A chant of ‘Stand them up’ erupts in the crowd. We enter the final minute of the fight and they’re still mired in a quagmire on the ground. 30 seconds left, and they’re back on their feet. Werdum lands several nice punches on a defensive Overeem, then pulls guard and looks for a leg lock, but runs out of time. MMA Fighting scores the round 10-10.

Alistair Overeem def. Fabricio Werdum via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27, 30-27)

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Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum Photos
Alistair Overeem knees Fabricio Werdum at Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum on Saturday, June 18, 2011 at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin and Junior dos Santos trade shots at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin attempts to take down Junior dos Santos at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos tries to finish Shane Carwin late in the first at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos (right) rocks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos kicks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin is bloodied up at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos punches Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos lands a left hand against Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Blood drips down the face of Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin makes a last ditch effort late in the third round at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

 

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DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce live blog for Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum, a heavyweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum card at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

Overeem (34-11) is the Strikeforce heavyweight champion and last year stopped both Brett Rogers and Todd Duffee. Werdum (14-4-1) is coming off a career-defining win one year ago over Fedor Emelianenko. In this non-title tournament bout, the winner will advance to face Antonio Silva in the Strikeforce Grand Prix semifinals at a later date.

The live blog is below.




Round 1:
Werdum starts us off with a head kick that Overeem ducks under. Werdum tests the distance with a two-punch combo, then shoots for his first takedown 45 seconds into the fight. Overeem stuffs it easily. Two more takedown attempts also fail, with Werdum not even coming close. He’s not setting up the shots at all, which doesn’t help. Overeem catches a Werdum kick and tosses him to the mat, but no way is he following him down. Overeem moves in close for a punch and Werdum pulls guard. Overeem stands up and backs away, and this scenario repeats itself a few moments later. The second time Overeem backs up with his hands in the air, taunting Werdum. Werdum gets up and lands a decent punch combo followed by a knee, but Overeem is unfazed. Overeem sits Werdum down with a big left hook, then steps back and takes a look at his hand. Werdum now literally begging Overeem to come down, but nothing doing. Werdum pulls half-guard just before the horn, but can’t get anything going. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 Overeem.

Round 2: Overeem whiffs on a right hand lead. Werdum punches his way into the clinch and looks for a takedown. Overeem tosses him to the mat again, but won’t follow him there. Werdum lands a nice right hand and actually manages to put Overeem down. He’s back up quickly, but he eats a hard knee that wobbles him just a bit. Werdum smells blood and comes in swinging, but Overeem stays calm and recovers. More guard-pulling from Werdum, and he’s slower and slower to get up each time. Overeem rocks him with a hard right that puts Werdum on his back, and this time Overeem follows into the guard. The big man may be taking a breather here. Werdum tries to get something going with the open guard, but Overeem backs away. A big knee from Overeem drops Werdum again, but it’s hard to tell whether he’s rocked or just pulling guard. Most likely it’s the latter. Overeem again winds up in Werdum’s guard in the final minute, but Werdum can’t even begin to set up a submission. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Overeem.

Round 3: Werdum opens up with punch combos to start the final frame. Overeem covers up and backs away, landing a hard right that sends sweat flying of Werdum’s head. Werdum again tries pulling half-guard to no effect, and then pulls guard off an Overeem right hand a few moments later. He’s just holding on to Overeem to keep him on the mat with him, but it doesn’t let him work much offense. Overeem stands up and baits Werdum back to his feet. Werdum lands a couple nice blows, but he eats a hard right and again tries to pull half-guard. Werdum is not unsuccessful in the stand-up game, but he seems like he’d rather lose a decision off his back than take a chance on his feet with Overeem. A chant of ‘Stand them up’ erupts in the crowd. We enter the final minute of the fight and they’re still mired in a quagmire on the ground. 30 seconds left, and they’re back on their feet. Werdum lands several nice punches on a defensive Overeem, then pulls guard and looks for a leg lock, but runs out of time. MMA Fighting scores the round 10-10.

Alistair Overeem def. Fabricio Werdum via unanimous decision (29-28, 30-27, 30-27)

 

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Strikeforce Live Blog: Josh Barnett vs. Brett Rogers Updates

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DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce live blog for Josh Barnett vs. Brett Rogers, a heavyweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum card at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

Barnett (29-5) is fighting on American soil for the first time in over two years. Last year Barnett defeated Mighty Mo at Dream.13 and Geronimo dos Santos at Impact FC 1. Rogers lost his last two Strikeforce fights and last October took a win over Ruben Villareal at a W-1 event in Canada. In this tournament bout, the winner will advance to meet Sergei Kharitonov in the semifinals at a later date.

The live blog is below.




Round 1:
Rogers tosses out the jab to try and keep Barnett at a distance, but Barnett wastes no time shooting in low and picking that foot. Barnett presses Rogers against the fence and scoops him up high for a big slam. That’s a lot of weight coming down on this mat. Barnett gets side control and looks to isolate and arm, but Rogers nearly scrambles out and forces Barnett to start again. Barnett stays on top and works into the full mount. Rogers has his arms locked around Barnett’s waist, but that’s not going to help much. Barnett works a few short punches and elbows from the top, but he’s clearly submission-minded. Barnett gets too high in the mount and allows Rogers to buck him and slip out the back door. That escape is short-lived, however, as Barnett quickly regains the mount with less than a minute left. Barnett tries for an Americana, but settles for a few more punches before the horn as the fans voice their displeasure. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 Barnett.

Round 2: Rogers is right back to trying to work that jab from a distance, but it’s completely ineffective at keeping Barnett at bay. He leaps in with a left hook that lands, then ties up and throws Rogers, essentially landing back in mount. The crowd is already antsy, but Barnett gets their attention by locking up an arm triangle choke from the top. He doesn’t even need to jump over to the side to finish it. He just squeezes and Rogers taps. Dominant, precise performance from Barnett.

Josh Barnett def. Brett Rogers via submission (arm triangle) at 1:17 of round two

Barnett seizes the microphone from Gus Johnson in the post-fight interview and delivers a monologue about stacking skulls and standing atop a pile of bodies. Easy night of work for Gus.

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Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum Photos
Alistair Overeem knees Fabricio Werdum at Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum on Saturday, June 18, 2011 at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin and Junior dos Santos trade shots at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin attempts to take down Junior dos Santos at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos tries to finish Shane Carwin late in the first at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos (right) rocks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos kicks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin is bloodied up at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos punches Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos lands a left hand against Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Blood drips down the face of Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin makes a last ditch effort late in the third round at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

 

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DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce live blog for Josh Barnett vs. Brett Rogers, a heavyweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum card at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

Barnett (29-5) is fighting on American soil for the first time in over two years. Last year Barnett defeated Mighty Mo at Dream.13 and Geronimo dos Santos at Impact FC 1. Rogers lost his last two Strikeforce fights and last October took a win over Ruben Villareal at a W-1 event in Canada. In this tournament bout, the winner will advance to meet Sergei Kharitonov in the semifinals at a later date.

The live blog is below.




Round 1:
Rogers tosses out the jab to try and keep Barnett at a distance, but Barnett wastes no time shooting in low and picking that foot. Barnett presses Rogers against the fence and scoops him up high for a big slam. That’s a lot of weight coming down on this mat. Barnett gets side control and looks to isolate and arm, but Rogers nearly scrambles out and forces Barnett to start again. Barnett stays on top and works into the full mount. Rogers has his arms locked around Barnett’s waist, but that’s not going to help much. Barnett works a few short punches and elbows from the top, but he’s clearly submission-minded. Barnett gets too high in the mount and allows Rogers to buck him and slip out the back door. That escape is short-lived, however, as Barnett quickly regains the mount with less than a minute left. Barnett tries for an Americana, but settles for a few more punches before the horn as the fans voice their displeasure. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 Barnett.

Round 2: Rogers is right back to trying to work that jab from a distance, but it’s completely ineffective at keeping Barnett at bay. He leaps in with a left hook that lands, then ties up and throws Rogers, essentially landing back in mount. The crowd is already antsy, but Barnett gets their attention by locking up an arm triangle choke from the top. He doesn’t even need to jump over to the side to finish it. He just squeezes and Rogers taps. Dominant, precise performance from Barnett.

Josh Barnett def. Brett Rogers via submission (arm triangle) at 1:17 of round two

Barnett seizes the microphone from Gus Johnson in the post-fight interview and delivers a monologue about stacking skulls and standing atop a pile of bodies. Easy night of work for Gus.

 

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Strikeforce Live Blog: K.J. Noons vs. Jorge Masvidal Updates

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DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce live blog for K.J. Noons vs. Jorge Masvidal, a lightweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum card at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

Noons (10-3) lost last October in a Strikeforce welterweight title bout against Nick Diaz. Masvidal (21-6) in March defeated Billy Evangelista via unanimous decision. The winner here will likely face Gilbert Melendez for the title.

The live blog is below.




Round 1:
Noons comes charging across the cage and Masvidal checks his progress with a leg kick. Big overhand right from Masvidal, followed by a glancing knee to the head. Noons stays on him, backing him up against the cage, but unable to pin him down. Masvidal is doing a good job of predicting where Noons’ head is going to be and meeting it with a punch. Noons ducks under a punch and eats a knee from Masvidal. Masvidal drops down for a takedown and gets it. Noons works for a kimura up against the fence, but eventually has to give up on it so he can work to his feet. Another knee to the head from Masvidal and Noons is bleeding from his forehead. The cut is causing a mess around his eyes. Masvidal drops Noons with a kick as he goes to slip a punch. Masvidal jumps on the stunned Noons and hammers him with right hands. Noons turtles up and avoids the choke, but barely survives the round. MMA Fighting scores it 10-8 Masvidal.

Round 2: Masvidal slips out of the way of a Noons punch and lands a nice left. Noons, to his credit, is still coming forward with punches and elbows. Masvidal gets a takedown, despite Noons’ attempt to hold the fence, but can’t keep him down. Noons’ forehead is swollen badly now right over his eye. Another takedown for Masvidal and some nice elbows on the ground. Noons gets his back on the fence and works back to his feet. He’s still agressive, even though he’s starting to look a little Quasimodo-ish. Masvidal goes for another takedown and Noons gets warned a few more times to grabbing the fence. Noons turns the tables and gets Masvidal down on his back for some punishment, but Masvidal gets back up and lands a good knee before the round ends. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 Masvidal.

Round 3: Noons is stalking Masvidal to start the third, and Masvidal keeps slipping away from him. Noons’ face is lathered in blood now, and his forehead has a lump the size of a baseball on it. Masvidal shoots for a takedown and Noons gets another warning about grabbing the fence, but this time I actually don’t think he did it. Spinning back kick from from Masvidal, but he seems like he’s less aggressive than Noons now, though still roughly as effective. Takedown for Masvidal, but Noons is back up quickly. Masvidal puts him down again and ties up an arm, but can’t let loose with anything significant. Masvidal keeps Noons firmly on the mat, and he seems content with riding this one out to a decision. Noons is bloodied and battered when the horn sounds. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Masvidal.

Jorge Masvidal def. K.J. Noons via unanimous decision (30-27 x 3)

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Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum Photos
Alistair Overeem knees Fabricio Werdum at Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum on Saturday, June 18, 2011 at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin and Junior dos Santos trade shots at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin attempts to take down Junior dos Santos at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos tries to finish Shane Carwin late in the first at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos (right) rocks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos kicks Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin is bloodied up at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos punches Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Junior dos Santos lands a left hand against Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Blood drips down the face of Shane Carwin at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

Shane Carwin makes a last ditch effort late in the third round at UFC 131 on Saturday, June 11, 2011 at the Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

UFC 131 Photos

 

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DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce live blog for K.J. Noons vs. Jorge Masvidal, a lightweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum card at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

Noons (10-3) lost last October in a Strikeforce welterweight title bout against Nick Diaz. Masvidal (21-6) in March defeated Billy Evangelista via unanimous decision. The winner here will likely face Gilbert Melendez for the title.

The live blog is below.




Round 1:
Noons comes charging across the cage and Masvidal checks his progress with a leg kick. Big overhand right from Masvidal, followed by a glancing knee to the head. Noons stays on him, backing him up against the cage, but unable to pin him down. Masvidal is doing a good job of predicting where Noons’ head is going to be and meeting it with a punch. Noons ducks under a punch and eats a knee from Masvidal. Masvidal drops down for a takedown and gets it. Noons works for a kimura up against the fence, but eventually has to give up on it so he can work to his feet. Another knee to the head from Masvidal and Noons is bleeding from his forehead. The cut is causing a mess around his eyes. Masvidal drops Noons with a kick as he goes to slip a punch. Masvidal jumps on the stunned Noons and hammers him with right hands. Noons turtles up and avoids the choke, but barely survives the round. MMA Fighting scores it 10-8 Masvidal.

Round 2: Masvidal slips out of the way of a Noons punch and lands a nice left. Noons, to his credit, is still coming forward with punches and elbows. Masvidal gets a takedown, despite Noons’ attempt to hold the fence, but can’t keep him down. Noons’ forehead is swollen badly now right over his eye. Another takedown for Masvidal and some nice elbows on the ground. Noons gets his back on the fence and works back to his feet. He’s still agressive, even though he’s starting to look a little Quasimodo-ish. Masvidal goes for another takedown and Noons gets warned a few more times to grabbing the fence. Noons turns the tables and gets Masvidal down on his back for some punishment, but Masvidal gets back up and lands a good knee before the round ends. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 Masvidal.

Round 3: Noons is stalking Masvidal to start the third, and Masvidal keeps slipping away from him. Noons’ face is lathered in blood now, and his forehead has a lump the size of a baseball on it. Masvidal shoots for a takedown and Noons gets another warning about grabbing the fence, but this time I actually don’t think he did it. Spinning back kick from from Masvidal, but he seems like he’s less aggressive than Noons now, though still roughly as effective. Takedown for Masvidal, but Noons is back up quickly. Masvidal puts him down again and ties up an arm, but can’t let loose with anything significant. Masvidal keeps Noons firmly on the mat, and he seems content with riding this one out to a decision. Noons is bloodied and battered when the horn sounds. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Masvidal.

Jorge Masvidal def. K.J. Noons via unanimous decision (30-27 x 3)

 

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Strikeforce Undercard Live Blog: Cavalcante vs. Wilcox, Heun vs. Almeida, More

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Gesias Cavalcante will battle Justin Wilcox on the Overeem vs. Werdum undercard Saturday night.DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce undercard live blog for all five of tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum preliminary bouts at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

On deck are Gesias Cavalcante vs. Justin Wilcox, Conor Heun vs. Magno Almeida, Nah-Shon Burrell vs. Joe Ray, Todd Moore vs. Mike Bronzoulis and Brian Melancon vs. Isaac Vallie-Flag.

The live blog is below.




Gesias Cavalcante vs. Justin Wilcox

Round 1:

Conor Heun vs. Magno Almeida

Round 1:

Nah-Shon Burrell vs. Joe Ray

Round 1:

Todd Moore
vs. Mike Bronzoulis

Round 1:

Brian Melancon vs. Isaac Vallie-Flag

Round 1: The first two fighters on the night touch them up. Vallie-Flag tries some kicks to the legs and body, and Melancon responds by unloading with some big hooks. Vallie-Flag seems to be reeling a bit, and the hooks keep coming. Melancon flips him to the mat and locks up a crucifix position in side control, working short punches to Vallie-Flag’s face.Vallie-Flag turtles up and Melancon nails him with hammer fists before slipping his hooks in and looking for a rear naked choke. It isn’t there, so he takes mount. Vallie-Flag stays calm, recovers position and works to his feet. Both men looking tired now. Big uppercut from Melancon is answered by a stiff jab from Vallie-Flag They punch their way into the clinch for a little breather, then end the round with each man landing a couple nice blows. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Melancon.

 

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Filed under:

Gesias Cavalcante will battle Justin Wilcox on the Overeem vs. Werdum undercard Saturday night.DALLAS — This is the Strikeforce undercard live blog for all five of tonight’s Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum preliminary bouts at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.

On deck are Gesias Cavalcante vs. Justin Wilcox, Conor Heun vs. Magno Almeida, Nah-Shon Burrell vs. Joe Ray, Todd Moore vs. Mike Bronzoulis and Brian Melancon vs. Isaac Vallie-Flag.

The live blog is below.




Gesias Cavalcante vs. Justin Wilcox

Round 1:

Conor Heun vs. Magno Almeida

Round 1:

Nah-Shon Burrell vs. Joe Ray

Round 1:

Todd Moore
vs. Mike Bronzoulis

Round 1:

Brian Melancon vs. Isaac Vallie-Flag

Round 1: The first two fighters on the night touch them up. Vallie-Flag tries some kicks to the legs and body, and Melancon responds by unloading with some big hooks. Vallie-Flag seems to be reeling a bit, and the hooks keep coming. Melancon flips him to the mat and locks up a crucifix position in side control, working short punches to Vallie-Flag’s face.Vallie-Flag turtles up and Melancon nails him with hammer fists before slipping his hooks in and looking for a rear naked choke. It isn’t there, so he takes mount. Vallie-Flag stays calm, recovers position and works to his feet. Both men looking tired now. Big uppercut from Melancon is answered by a stiff jab from Vallie-Flag They punch their way into the clinch for a little breather, then end the round with each man landing a couple nice blows. MMA Fighting scores it 10-9 for Melancon.

 

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