Eddie Yagin Excited for 2nd Chance After a Brain Injury Nearly Ended His Career

It’s been more than a year since Eddie Yagin last stepped foot in the UFC Octagon, but his absence was much more serious than your average training injury. As he was preparing for a December 2012 showdown against German striker Dennis Siver, Yagin star…

It’s been more than a year since Eddie Yagin last stepped foot in the UFC Octagon, but his absence was much more serious than your average training injury.

As he was preparing for a December 2012 showdown against German striker Dennis Siver, Yagin started to experience very serious headaches that were not dulling no matter what kind of rest or medication he took.

He eventually made his way to the emergency room when the pain got too severe to handle, and his diagnosis was very scary.  Following an MRI and CAT scan, Yagin received word that he had a subdural hematoma, which is essentially blood collecting around the brain, causing swelling. It can be a life threatening condition.

It forced Yagin to re-evaluate everything he had in life because for the past 12 years all he knew was fighting, and this one moment threatened to take it all away.

“It’s like the most mind racking thing that could ever happen.  You’re in limbo, and you don’t know what exactly is going to happen,” Yagin explained when speaking to Bleacher Report.  “For me, I have plans on doing other things in my life but not until I’m retired from fighting.  I have other plans in my life, but right now I’m at the age where I need to fulfill my destiny. 

“You only live once.  You only have that age once in your life.  I don’t want to live with that would have, should have, could have don’t this.  I like to live it up until I can’t go.  Drive until the wheels fall off.”

Doctors told Yagin that he would need approximately six months off to see if the condition improved before he could return to the cage.  During that time, Yagin fell into a bit of a dark place because without fighting it was hard to identify the man staring back at him in the mirror.

Yagin‘s friends and teammates tried to get him into the gym to stay active, but with so much uncertainty haunting his every step, motivation wasn’t at an all-time high.  Fear crept into Yagin‘s thoughts because with such a serious head injury, he was scared that one wrong punch or move could land him back in the hospital with a much more serious health issue.

“I didn’t train hard.  A lot of my friends wanted me to come to the gym and roll, and most of the time I didn’t want to do any contact stuff too much because of how aggressive people can get in the gym,” Yagin said.  “Sometimes training is harder than fighting. I just wanted to do my thing and stay in shape.  I lifted weights and hit the bag and did cardio.  The only thing that killed me was my diet.”

The head injury also forced Yagin to reassess how he would approach fighting if he were ever able to return.  During his biggest moments in the sport, Yagin was known as a banger—a fighter who would trade punch for punch until either he or his opponent fell down. 

The style gained him a big fan following, but he also took a ton of damage while playing that dangerous game.

“It taught me to keep my hands up,” Yagin said about his injury.  “I went back through my injury, and I was watching video and watching myself, and I need to keep my hands up more.  I used to study (Mike) Tyson a lot and how Tyson used to keep his hands by his chin.  His hands were tucked to his chin, and I was a real big fan of that. I used to practice that. 

“Now that I had a head injury, the weakest parts of your head are your temples. So now instead of training hands up to your chin, it’s hands up and your thumbs are touching your temples.”

As time passed by, Yagin waited for his doctor’s appointment to see if everything was cleared up enough to allow him to return to fighting.  Monday, he got the news that he was fully recovered and could resume his MMA career.

Yagin was so excited he even posted the doctor’s release on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook just to share his good news with the world.

Six months ago, Yagin wasn’t sure he’d ever be able to fight again, and his head injury was literally threatening to put him into brain surgery.  Now, with the clearance to get back in action, Yagin is looking at this as a new life and new chapter in his MMA career.

“It’s such a blessing for me.  I feel like it’s a second chance,” Yagin said.  “This injury taught me a lot.”

For now, Yagin‘s main goal is to get back in shape after a bad diet put a lot of extra pounds on his body, while he was unable to work out much or stay in the gym.  Once he sheds the weight, Yagin will await a call from the UFC to give him his next assignment, so he can get back to business.

“I’ll keep praying and keep my fingers crossed.  In the meantime, I’m just going to stay in the best shape that I can, so if I can replace someone if I need to replace them,” Yagin said.  “If not, we can schedule something, and I will bang with the best.”

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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Rampage Jackson Reveals How the UFC Hated Him for Beating Chuck Liddell

In his second fight with the UFC, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson knocked out Chuck Liddell to win the UFC light heavyweight title and began what he thought would be a very long, happy relationship with the promotion. Jackson knew the day he signed his UFC c…

In his second fight with the UFC, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson knocked out Chuck Liddell to win the UFC light heavyweight title and began what he thought would be a very long, happy relationship with the promotion.

Jackson knew the day he signed his UFC contract that he was being brought in to face Liddell, who he had defeated in 2003 while competing under the Pride banner in Japan. What Jackson says he didn’t know was how his relationship with the UFC and their employees would change after beating the company’s golden boy.

Dana White really wanted me because I was the last guy Chuck (Liddell) wanted to get his revenge on,” Jackson explained when speaking to Bleacher Report. “Everybody was really nice to me, I’m telling you when I beat up Marvin Eastman, everybody, people behind the scenes at the UFC they’re really like a big family. 

“Chuck was part of the family. They was all really nice to me, like a hog going to the slaughter, and then after I beat Chuck right away like 90 percent of them hated my guts. They didn’t talk to me no more, they didn’t smile at me when I came back there, it made me feel awkward.”

Jackson says the awkward feelings with the UFC employees were obvious to him anyways after dealing with hatred for a big part of his life based solely on the color of his skin. He’d never accuse anyone in the UFC of being racist, but he admits the feelings felt similar in some ways.

“You can tell when people don’t like you. Especially being a black man born and raised in the South in America, you can tell when people don’t like you,” Jackson said. “It’s just a skill that you get. I’m not saying people’s racist or stuff or not, I’m just telling you when you deal with that, you can tell when people don’t like you.”

Jackson moved forward with his UFC career, unifying the UFC and Pride light heavyweight titles when he defeated Dan Henderson at UFC 75. His next sour experience with the promotion came one fight later when he lost the title to Forrest Griffin at UFC 86.

The fight was close on all the scorecards, but Jackson still believes to this day that he defeated Griffin.  He was disappointed that the judges scored him losing the fight, but he was even more disappointed when the UFC didn’t give him a rematch.

Jackson still managed to go back out and win two more big fights in a row over Wanderlei Silva and Keith Jardine before he was chosen to coach on The Ultimate Fighter season 10 opposite former light heavyweight champion Rashad Evans.

The two fighters engaged in one of the most heated and hate-filled feuds that the reality show had ever seen. When it was over, they were scheduled to settle the score at UFC 107 in Memphis—which also happens to be Jackson’s hometown.

It was then that Jackson says his entire relationship with the UFC fell apart when he decided to forgo the fight with Evans in favor of filming his role in the film The A-Team.  Jackson has spoken openly about how that one decision virtually severed his relationship with UFC president Dana White, but for maybe the first time ever he now says he knows he was wrong for making that choice.

“Dana and I had our disagreement when I went and did the movie. I was wrong, I did the movie instead of fighting Rashad (Evans) in Memphis. I admit I was wrong for doing that, but I had to do it,” Jackson stated. “That killed our relationship and nothing went right after that.”

Jackson did manage to make it back to another title shot after that situation, but following his loss to UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, the former Pride fighter had seen enough of the UFC and just wanted out.

He finished the last two fights on his contract with losses to both Ryan Bader and Glover Teixeira, essentially fighting on one leg according to Jackson, who has been dealing with knee issues. Jackson says he was so unhappy at that point in his career, he just wanted to finish out his contract and get away from the UFC. He just kept fighting, even when he knew he had no business being in the cage.

He also points out to a time when White spoke poorly about him after his fight in Japan against Bader. It was a sign that it was time to go.

“I’m not saying I don’t make excuses, but I just keep it real. Fans can say it’s making excuses, but to me I don’t care,” Jackson said. “I know a good, healthy, close to 100-percent Quinton Jackson can beat Glover (Teixeira) and Ryan Bader—both in the same night.

“After I fought injured for them in Japan and Dana kind of talked bad about me for missing weight and all this stuff. He said something different to my face. So he’s going to be two-faced and all this other stuff, so I’m leaving.”

The business of Quinton “Rampage” Jackson is much better these days.

He signed a new long term, lucrative deal with Bellator Fighting Championships, TNA Wrestling and Viacom which will allow him to re-enter the entertainment business as well as get his fighting career back on track. He’s about to start shooting a new reality show this Friday with four episodes airing this year, and around 10-to-13 episodes airing in 2014.

He’s also developing a new movie that he wrote about the MMA world, which he calls “a MMA movie (Hollywood) should have made” with a part created specifically for him to star in the project as well. Jackson says the current MMA films that have been released just aren’t accurate, and he hopes to make a much better version because “MMA fans know more about fighting than some fighters.”

He’s also dabbling in professional wrestling while healing his knee so he can return to action later this year. 

Jackson says for the first time since he competed in King of the Cage from 2000 to 2002, he’s got a promoter who understands him and is working with his best interests at heart.

“Bjorn Rebney, I haven’t fought for him yet, but he’s been legit on everything he’s said. He’ll look you in your eye and keep it real. These are the types of people I want to be in business with,” Jackson said. “So far the only two promoters I liked was Bjorn Rebney and Terry Trebilcock from King of the Cage.  The only two promoters that treated me well so far.”

Jackson can’t speak for other fighters and their relationship with the UFC, Bellator or any promotion. He just knows he’s extremely happy with the deal he received, and he knows there are fighters out there that would be elated with a similar kind of contract.

One name that comes to mind is former Ultimate Fighter winner Roy Nelson, who Jackson dealt with during his time as coach on the reality show alongside Rashad Evans. Jackson would welcome a fighter like Nelson to Bellator—and then he’d slap him silly.

“What I’ve got to say is it worked for me. I’m more than just a fighter, I’m an entertainer, I like to entertain people,” Jackson said.  “Why stick with a place that wants to control everything and won’t let you have certain sponsors, and only sticks to just fighting, and chew you up and spit you out when you can be with a company that wants you to get movies, wants you to get those big endorsements, helps you get those big endorsement deals.”

“A person like Roy Nelson, a lot of people can relate to him. A lot of Americans look like him, especially where I come from in the South.  Be honest, he’s a lot of people’s hero.  I’m thinking he’s the type of guy to get his own reality show.  I think it would be a great show. Bellator‘s into promoting people, they’re not just about promoting their brand. I wouldn’t mind seeing Roy Nelson over where I’m at so I can knock his head off.”

Knocking heads is what Jackson knows best, and while his head may be wrapped around a million different ideas right now, ultimately his home is still inside the cage. He’s aware of the mistakes he made in the UFC and Pride for that matter, and he’s got something to prove when he returns to action later this year.

It’s not a chip on his shoulder or getting the fans back on his side. It’s something personal for Jackson, because he knows he hasn’t been at his best for the last few years. This old dog still has time to learn some new tricks.

“I know what’s wrong with me. I know why I lose fights. If you don’t know why you lost a fight or won a fight, you shouldn’t be fighting. I know when I do right when I win, and I know what I do wrong when I lose,” Jackson said. “I know what I’ve got to do to get back into the winning circle. I know what I’ve got to do.”

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted

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Anderson Silva, Lyoto Machida Star in New MMA Film called Tapped

Mixed martial arts films are becoming a popular genre in Hollywood, and the latest offering features appearances from some of the top fighters in the UFC, including middleweight champion Anderson Silva and former light heavyweight champ Lyoto Machida.T…

Mixed martial arts films are becoming a popular genre in Hollywood, and the latest offering features appearances from some of the top fighters in the UFC, including middleweight champion Anderson Silva and former light heavyweight champ Lyoto Machida.

The new film titled Tapped stars both fighters, alongside UFC light heavyweight competitor Krzysztof Soszynski, in a featured role with an expected release date later this year.

The story, according to the producers of the film, is about “a disgruntled teenager, sent to do community service at a rundown (karate) school, (who) enters an MMA tournament to face the man who killed his parents.”

The film also stars notable names like Michael Biehn (Aliens, The Terminator) and Martin Kove, most notably known for his starring role in the first and third Karate Kid movies.

Check out the trailer above to see Silva and Machida in action as part of the Tapped cast.

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Steve Carl Wanted to Face Josh Burkman 7 Months Ago, Wants it Even More Now

Steve Carl will be the first to admit that he struggled during the early part of his career matching his physical skill set with his mental makeup. No matter how talented a fighter might be, if there’s something wrong in the head, the mind and body wil…

Steve Carl will be the first to admit that he struggled during the early part of his career matching his physical skill set with his mental makeup.

No matter how talented a fighter might be, if there’s something wrong in the head, the mind and body will battle against each other instead of working in sync.  Carl saw that happen too many times when he competed under the Bellator umbrella in 2010 and 2011, when he amassed a record of 2-2 before leaving the promotion.

It took Carl some serious time to get his mind right, but once he figured out how to mentally attack MMA and his body followed suit, the results started to roll in.

Carl is now a winner of six fights in a row, including his last two bouts in the World Series of Fighting cage.  His last four wins have barely broken the five-minute mark—if you added up the time it took him to finish all four opponents in total. 

Carl is hitting on all cylinders right now, and he’s getting so good he’s finishing his opposition before he even gets a chance to try out some new tricks.

“I’m really unlocking my mental potential. These fights are getting easier and easier and I’m getting frustrated because I finally get that mental game right and I want to put it all together in the cage, but I can’t because I end the fights too quickly,” Carl told Bleacher Report recently.  “The problem is when you’re calm and you do everything correct, then the fight doesn’t last very long.”

Carl is positive his next opponent will give him the test he’s desired for the last year.

According to the welterweight contender, he’s been promised a slot against fellow World Series of Fighting competitor Josh Burkman later this year with the 170-pound title on the line.  World Series of Fighting officials have yet to make any kind of announcement about the fight, but Carl is confident that will be his next opponent in the promotion

“We were told before the fight that the winner of my fight would fight the winner of Burkman and (Jon) Fitch. Ray Sefo came out and told in numerous interviews that’s what was going to happen,” Carl stated.  “They mentioned to me afterwards, I haven’t got a date or a specific time, but I can’t see how any other matchup would be made right now.”

Burkman has been equally impressive in his last few outings.  He won a decision over former UFC fighter Gerald Harris in his first appearance for World Series of Fighting, then demolished Aaron Simpson and former UFC title contender Jon Fitch in back-to-back fights.

Carl believes Burkman is the exact kind of fighter that will give him a serious challenge.

“I’ve been wanting to fight Josh Burkman since World Series of Fighting 1.  After he beat Gerald Harris, I said holy crap that’s a great win for Josh, I love his style but I also love the way we match up.  I think it’s a good style for me.  I think he would be an amazing fight,” Carl said. 

“Since then, he went out and beat Aaron Simpson and then he just went out and beat Jon Fitch.  So I’m getting that matchup that I wanted seven months ago, and Josh Burkman is now ranked in the top 10.  I get to fight for a title for it, it’s perfect.”

The title is an added bonus according to Carl, but it’s not the main reason he wants the fight.  He wants to fight a veteran, proven contender like Burkman to prove he belongs in the same sentence with the best welterweights in the world.

Carl will happily take the title as well, but beating Burkman is bigger than any gold he’d have around his waist when the fight is over.

“That title at the end of the day is just a strap to go around your waist,” Carl said.  “The title’s great, it’s all well and good, but at the end of the day it’s who you beat and how you beat them, and not necessarily what you won by doing so.”

Carl will now sit impatiently by the phone while he waits on the official word that he’s facing Burkman for the first-ever World Series of Fighting title later this year.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report, and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Chris Weidman Expects to Face Anderson Silva Twice to Cement His Place as Champ

On July 6 at UFC 162, Chris Weidman will try to end the seven year, 16 fight unbeaten streak of Anderson Silva’s reign of terror through the best of the best in the Octagon. Weidman has shown extreme confidence at every phase of the process leading int…

On July 6 at UFC 162, Chris Weidman will try to end the seven year, 16 fight unbeaten streak of Anderson Silva‘s reign of terror through the best of the best in the Octagon.

Weidman has shown extreme confidence at every phase of the process leading into this fight, and he’s not letting up now.

He readily admits that Silva is the best fighter this sport has ever known, but Weidman believes beyond a shadow of a doubt that he will beat him when they face off next weekend.

Weidman is even ready for his next fight because beating Silva once won’t be enough—he knows he’ll probably have to do it twice to solidify his place as middleweight champion.

“If I beat Anderson Silva, I definitely kind of expect a rematch,” Weidman said.  “Unless he decides to retire because he’s the greatest of all time.  He’s been undefeated in the UFC, and I’m sure he’s not just going to lose and then fight a couple of guys to get a title shot again. He’s going to be right back in there.”

Check out this exclusive interview with Chris Weidman where he talks UFC 162 and his showdown with Anderson Silva.

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UFC 162: Anderson Silva Responds to Georges St-Pierre’s Support of Chris Weidman

Anderson Silva will enter UFC 162 looking to defend his middleweight title for the 11th straight time when he faces top contender Chris Weidman, but there seem to be more than a few fighters who believe this fight will end his reign as champion. At the…

Anderson Silva will enter UFC 162 looking to defend his middleweight title for the 11th straight time when he faces top contender Chris Weidman, but there seem to be more than a few fighters who believe this fight will end his reign as champion.

At the top of that list is UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre, who recently spoke out about the fight and overwhelmingly gave his support to Weidman.

“I believe (Weidman) is going to beat Anderson Silva. I believe it’s a bad matchup for Anderson Silva, it’s very bad,” St-Pierre told SportsNet in March.

 “Not only is he going to beat him, but I believe he’s going to finish Anderson Silva. I believe he’s not going to be too long in that fight. People will be shocked.”

Now it has to be noted that St-Pierre is a training partner of Weidman‘s when they both work out at Renzo Gracie’s academy in New York City, but still the welterweight champion’s endorsement is a strong indicator of how he believes this fight will break down.

For his part, Silva tries not to listen to much of the chatter about his fights before they take place—especially when it concerns what other fighters have to say.

Everybody has an opinion, but in St-Pierre’s case, Silva did sound a little angered by the comments when speaking to the media during a UFC 162 conference call on Tuesday.

Silva has been gunning for a superfight with the Canadian champion for some time now, but he says that St-Pierre had every chance to accept the challenge and the bout never happened.

“Imagine if I were to start listening to everything that people say. St-Pierre had his chance to pronounce himself about fighting me and he didn’t do it,” Silva told Bleacher Report. “So that’s what he chose to say and that’s fine. But I’m not paying attention to what everyone else is saying.”

UFC President Dana White confirmed that St-Pierre’s belief in Weidman was so strong that he shot down the idea of a superfight against Silva because, after UFC 162, he will no longer be the undisputed middleweight champion of the world.

“He 100 percent, absolutely, positively knows that (Chris) Weidman is going to beat Anderson Silva. No doubt in his mind,” White stated after UFC 160 ended in May.

“The fight with (Anderson Silva) won’t happen because Weidman‘s going to win. There’s no what-if for him. He absolutely, positively knows he’s going to win that fight.”

If Silva does come away victorious on July 6, it will then get very interesting to see if St-Pierre changes his tune at all and would be interested in a potential superfight for the ages with the UFC’s reigning middleweight champion.

St-Pierre’s attention is currently focused on the defense of his welterweight title against Johny Hendricks in November. It’s unknown if Silva would be willing to sit around and wait for St-Pierre or if the fight would ever materialize anyway.

Judging by Silva’s statement, he’s not confident in St-Pierre’s willingness to accept the fight no matter what.

 

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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