Bigfoot Silva Happy to Shock the World Again by Beating Cain Velasquez

Just days after his thrilling knockout victory over Alistair Overeem at UFC 156, Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva got the call that he’s waited for but didn’t necessarily expect so soon. The former Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix participant was offered a sh…

Just days after his thrilling knockout victory over Alistair Overeem at UFC 156, Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva got the call that he’s waited for but didn’t necessarily expect so soon.

The former Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix participant was offered a shot at Cain Velasquez and the UFC heavyweight title at UFC 160 in May.  He was more than happy to accept the offer, but wasn’t sure even after his last win that it would come that quickly.

It all changed when he received word from the UFC that he would be the man to challenge Cain Velasquez in his first title defense since capturing the belt from Junior Dos Santos at UFC 155 late last year. 

It was certainly a dream come true to be offered the shot, but just fighting for the belt isn’t enough for Silva.

To truly realize his dream, he needs to win it.

“I was very happy, and that is being a part of the realization of my dream, and May 25th I will complete my dream and be champion,” Silva told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview just after receiving the news about the title shot.

The fight with Velasquez goes beyond just the UFC heavyweight title—it also falls into the category of redemption. In May 2012 in his UFC debut, Silva fell victim to Velasquez losing by TKO in the first round after suffering a nasty cut that left him bleeding and unable to stop the barrage of punches coming from the former Arizona State wrestler.

When looking back on the fight, Silva doesn’t regret the loss as much as he ponders why he wasn’t able to stick to the strategy determined by his coaches to get him ready for the bout.  As a matter of fact, Bigfoot plans on keeping his training almost identical as the last time he prepared for Velasquez.

The biggest difference is applying what he does in the gym to what he unleashes on fight night.

“I learned that I have to do what I trained with my coaches and follow the strategy,” Silva answered when asked what he will do differently the second time around.  “I will follow my strategy 100-percent and my training will be basically what I did in my first fight against Cain.”

Since his loss to Velasquez last year, Silva has managed to knock out previously undefeated heavyweight prospect Travis Browne as well as his thunderous finish of Alistair Overeem at UFC 156.

The two emphatic victories catapulted Silva back into the title picture, and with his win against Overeem, he became the last man standing in the heavyweight contender’s race.

Since the fight was announced, there have been some naysayers that didn’t necessarily care for Silva’s name being selected for a title shot.  It had less to do with him being the No. 1 contender and more the fact that he had just lost to Velasquez two fights ago.

Silva is used to being the underdog and counted out, so this is nothing new.  When he fought former Pride champion Fedor Emelianenko, most believed it was the Russian’s time to triumph.  That was until Silva blasted Emelianenko and dominated him en route to a TKO stoppage after two rounds.

The same odds were against Silva when he faced Overeem at UFC 156.

Overeem had all but been anointed as the next heavyweight title contender until Silva smashed his jaw with a series of right hands that left him crumpled against the cage and down on the mat.   The Brazilian just knows how to overcome the odds.

That’s one reason Silva welcomes the label of underdog, and he invites everyone to count him out.  It’s nothing he hasn’t heard before, and he’s happy to come out on top once again.

“I’m already used to it,” Silva said about not being favored to defeat Velasquez.  “It gives me more energy and will to win.”

Silva will test his resolve in May when he gets his rematch with Velasquez, and a shot at becoming the new UFC heavyweight champion at UFC 160.

Damon Martin is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained first hand unless otherwise noted.

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Retired UFC Fighter Nate Quarry Teaches Mixed Martial Arts to the Comic Book Men

The sport of mixed martial arts and the world of comic books rarely clash against one another, although they do carry some of the same characteristics. Both feature larger than life figures doing extraordinary things like rescuing damsels in distress a…

The sport of mixed martial arts and the world of comic books rarely clash against one another, although they do carry some of the same characteristics.

Both feature larger than life figures doing extraordinary things like rescuing damsels in distress and fighting in cages, as in the case of MMA

Retired UFC middleweight Nate Quarry brought the two worlds together recently with his independent comic book release Zombie Cage Fighter and is now combining the brands even more with an appearance on AMC‘s Comic Book Men, airing on Thursday night.

The reality show focuses on a store in Red Bank, New Jersey called Jay and Silent Bob’s Secret Stash, owned by famed Clerks director and pioneer of SModcast Kevin Smith. Typically, Comic Book Men stays centered around the world of superheroes, but in the next episode, Quarry introduces them to what mixed martial arts is all about.

Quarry says it’s actually quite natural that comic book fans could be MMA enthusiasts and vice versa. It’s just a matter of the two worlds colliding at just the right moment. 

“It’s the exact same demographic if you look at, for lack of a better term, comic book nerds and fight nerd—they’re the exact same guys,” Quarry told Bleacher Report. “The fight nerds are more about the three-dimensional guys fighting in cages. The comic book nerds they’re looking at the two-dimensional with the superheroes, but in both cases, people are looking for something greater than the average everyday life that most people go through.”

Quarry’s appearance on the show centers on him attempting to get the store to carry his comic book, but he also has the chance to show the guys a little mixed martial arts.

“They had never seen a real fight before. It was just a whole new world for them to come see,” Quarry said. 

“When I was a kid, I got prejudice from the cool kids in school for liking comic books and not playing sports.  Now as an adult who still loves comic books, I get prejudice from the comic book world because I’m this jock who obviously is just glomming onto the popularity of zombies.  So I’ve had to break down barriers with people in the comic book world to show that this is a story I’m passionate about.”

In the episode, Smith and his co-star and best friend Jason Mewes (who actually is a long time MMA supporter and has appeared on Inside MMA previously) coach two fighters who square off in the cage dressed as their signature counterparts, Jay and Silent Bob.

Quarry says the whole crew flocked to MMA once they understood it, and one member of the team, Ming Chen, actually started taking kickboxing classes after the show wrapped just to see what the rage was all about.

It was a hard sell at first, but Quarry was persistent, and by the end of his time in New Jersey, he had turned the Comic Book Men into MMA fans.

“I could see when I first showed up, they couldn’t see the connection,” Quarry said. “They didn’t know how I was going to fit into their world because I’m coming from some place completely different, but then after being able to spend a little bit of time with them, they could really see I’m exactly like them. I just chose to be a fighter instead of running a comic book store. Our passion about what we do is exactly the same.”

Quarry’s appearance on Comic Book Men airs on Thursday night at 9 p.m. ET on AMC.

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

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Dana White: Wrestling’s Demise Could Bring MMA to the Olympics

The wrestling community has been on the ropes ever since Tuesday’s decision by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to remove the sport from the games starting in 2020. Just about every wrestler that’s ever competed or aspired to compete in the Ol…

The wrestling community has been on the ropes ever since Tuesday’s decision by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to remove the sport from the games starting in 2020.

Just about every wrestler that’s ever competed or aspired to compete in the Olympics has voiced their disapproval about their sport being shafted by the committee’s vote, removing one of the original Olympic competitions from the games.

Several high profile mixed martial artists have also stepped up to support wrestling in its hour of need after they either competed and won medals in the Olympics, or had a dream as a teenage kid to make it to the games one day.

One common theme that’s been running ever since the IOC put wrestling on the chopping block was that the sport needed a savior—a corporate sponsor, a lobbyist or somebody with extreme influence to step in on behalf of wrestling the way that the modern pentathlon did when the IOC was making their final decision to save that sport while cutting wrestling.

UFC president Dana White has been one of the major people mentioned since his promotion has helped transform some of wrestling’s best into some of the premier mixed martial artists in the world.  

Unfortunately, White and the UFC believe that wrestling has a bigger problem than needing him to fund a grappling coup d’etat with the International Olympic Committee. 

“I’ve been battling this problem for years now,” White said when speaking to reporters following the UFC on Fuel 7 press conference.  “Colleges are dropping it, high schools are dropping wrestling.  The problem with wrestling is it’s an awesome base for fighting, for mixed martial arts, and everything for what it does.  I’ve never wrestled, but what I hear it does to guys who wrestle, it changes people’s lives and it’s just grueling hard work and dedication.  All the things that go in with being a wrestler.

“The problem is nobody wants to watch it.  Any sport especially these days, it’s about selling tickets, and eyeballs, and viewers and all these other things.”

One of the key issues brought up by the IOC when determining whether or not to cut wrestling was the viewership they received in the last Olympic games in 2012.  The peak viewers for the show maxed out at 58.5 million while wrestling programming as a whole averaged 23 million viewers worldwide.

White says wrestling’s problems could actually be a benefit to mixed martial arts eventually finding a home in the Olympics.

“What this could be is the evolution of mixed martial arts becoming an Olympic sport,” White said.  “We bring spectators, eyeballs, whether it’s on TV or whatever it is this sport draws, wrestling doesn’t.”

Regardless of MMA‘s inclusion or exclusion from the Olympic games, White won’t be the white knight galloping in on a steed trying to stave off wrestling’s demise.  He says he’s funded wrestling programs for years, but if the Olympics want to deliver the death blow, he can’t be the one to stop it.

“I can’t be the guy to try and run out and save wrestling,” White stated.   “You know how many wrestling programs I’ve funded over the last five or six years? A lot.  I don’t want to see wrestling go away either, it’s such a big part of the sport, but something’s going to happen here.  It’s going to evolve into mixed martial arts and MMA or something I don’t know.

“I don’t think wrestling’s going to go anywhere, but competitive wrestling definitely is.”

Mixed martial arts definitely won’t be in the Olympics for at least the next couple of sessions with the sports already chosen for the 2016 games, and the vote coming up in May to determine the final count of competitions for 2020 doesn’t currently include MMA as an option.  That doesn’t mean wrestling couldn’t be revived by then or MMA couldn’t somehow find an Olympic home in 2024, but it’s unknown what the future holds as of now.

Damon Martin is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report

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WSOF 2 Adds UFC Veteran Aaron Simpson to Five Fight Televised Main Card

World Series of Fighting will debut their second show on March 23 with the card airing on NBC Sports Network, and they are pulling out all the stops for a blockbuster lineup. The main event will pit former UFC champion Andrei Arlovski against fellow Oc…

World Series of Fighting will debut their second show on March 23 with the card airing on NBC Sports Network, and they are pulling out all the stops for a blockbuster lineup.

The main event will pit former UFC champion Andrei Arlovski against fellow Octagon veteran Anthony Johnson, who moves up a weight class for a chance to face a tough challenge from the Russian heavyweight.

Also on the card will be a bantamweight showdown between Tyson Nam, who recently knocked out Bellator’s 135 pound champion Eduardo Dantas, as he takes on Marlon Moraes fresh off of his win over former WEC king Miguel Torres.

“Andrei Arlovski, Anthony Johnson and Marlon Moraes are all coming off superb performances on our inaugural fight card, and Tyson Nam has been on fire of late, so we felt that it was essential to showcase these stars at the top of our first card on the East Coast,” said World Series of Fighting President Ray Sefo via a press release distributed on Wednesday.

Former UFC welterweight Aaron Simpson, who recently exited the UFC after he was unable to come to terms on a new contact with the promotion, draws Josh Burkman in a 170 lb contest on the card.

Paulo Filho returns to action to face David Branch, while Gesias “JZ” Cavalcante takes on rising prospect Justin Gaethje rounding out the five fight main card that will air on NBC Sports Network.

One new fight that was confirmed exclusively to Bleacher Report on Wednesday by World Series of Fighting officials features former Strikeforce competitor Danillo Villefort as he takes on former Ultimate Fighter finalist Kris McCray in a bout on the night’s undercard.

The card will take place at the Revel Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey with preliminary bouts kicking off at 5:30pm ET and featured bouts airing on NBC Sports Network kicking off at 9:30pm ET.

The preliminary card will also feature six fights including Duke Roufus student Rick Glenn against Alexandre Pimentel, while former UFC competitor Waylon Lowe draws Ultimate Fighter veteran Cameron Dollar.

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

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All UFC 156 Fighters Drug Tested by Commission, All Return Negative Results

Following an action packed night of fights at UFC 156, the Nevada State Athletic Commission has released the drug testing results from the Feb. 2 card in Las Vegas. According to Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Director Keith Kizer, all 22 fi…

Following an action packed night of fights at UFC 156, the Nevada State Athletic Commission has released the drug testing results from the Feb. 2 card in Las Vegas.

According to Nevada State Athletic Commission Executive Director Keith Kizer, all 22 fighters on the card were tested and all tests came back negative.

UFC 156 featured a main event pitting featherweight champion Jose Aldo against former lightweight title holder, Frankie Edgar. After a back and forth battle for five rounds, Aldo came away the victor with a successful title defense.

The fighters on the card are tested for performance enhancing drugs (steroids, etc) as well as drugs of abuse (marijuana, cocaine, etc). 

The card featured the return of former K-1 and Strikeforce champion Alistair Overeem, who was in the center of a drug testing scandal in 2012 that prevented him from competing for the UFC heavyweight title.

Prior to his scheduled bout at UFC 146 in 2012 against then champion Junior Dos Santos, Overeem failed a pre-fight screening for having elevated levels of testosterone. Overeem was removed from the fight and eventually was denied a fight license by the commission and handed a de facto 9-month suspension.

During the time he was absent from the sport, Overeem was involved in several out-of-competition drug tests, with all coming back negative. His test taken at UFC 156 by the Nevada State Athletic Commission has now also come back negative as well.

While his tests came back clean, Overeem unfortunately suffered a loss on the card to Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva that likely cost him a shot at the UFC heavyweight title. Silva is now in position to face champion Cain Velasquez later this year at UFC 160.

Just last week the UFC returned a positive drug test from the UFC on FX 7 in Brazil, where lightweight fighter Thiago Tavares was suspended for nine months for having Drostanolone, an anabolic steroid, in his system.

 Damon Martin is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report

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Tarec Saffiedine Answers to Demian Maia’s Challenge for Potential Fight

Being the last-ever Strikeforce welterweight champion heading to the UFC is an honor for Tarec Saffiedine, but it also puts a rather large target on his back. Saffiedine defeated former UFC middleweight contender Nate Marquardt at the final Strikeforce…

Being the last-ever Strikeforce welterweight champion heading to the UFC is an honor for Tarec Saffiedine, but it also puts a rather large target on his back.

Saffiedine defeated former UFC middleweight contender Nate Marquardt at the final Strikeforce show to win the belt and solidify his spot on the UFC’s welterweight roster.  In doing so, however, he not only popped into the top-10 rankings, but now the rest of the contenders in the division are gunning for him on day one in the UFC.

“I’m glad, I’m happy, and that’s what I’m looking for—big challenges and tough fights in the UFC.  That’s what I’m looking for,” Saffiedine told Bleacher Report on Wednesday.

One name that popped up most recently was former middleweight title challenger Demian Maia, who has been nothing short of dominant since dropping down to 170 lbs last year.  Maia most recently dispatched Jon Fitch and now has his sights set on Saffiedine as a potential opponent.

It was revealed during UFC Tonight on Tuesday that Maia’s manager has requested a fight with Saffiedine for the Brazilian’s next fight.  While Saffiedine didn’t personally hear the message, he has no problem responding.

“I heard his manager was interested in the fight.  As far as my part, I don’t know.  I would definitely love to fight the top guys in the UFC, and he’s one of the top.  If everything works out, why not?  I don’t see any problem.  I want to also make sure I get a first, exciting fight for the fans.  You want to fight the right for you coming into the UFC, but you also want to make sure you put on an exciting fight for the fans.  So everything has to work out for everybody,” said Saffiedine.

“So if everything works out, why not?”

Since his win over Marquardt, Saffiedine did manage to take some much-needed time off, but he’s already back in the gym, awaiting word on his next fight.  He admits he didn’t get a chance to see Maia’s last performance over Fitch, but he did hear some of the criticism from fans that it wasn’t the most exciting bout on the card.

Exciting or boring, Saffiedine doesn’t really care what his last fight looked like.  If he faces Maia in the UFC, he wants the fans to be happy they paid to see it.

“To be honest I didn’t watch Jon Fitch and Demian Maia fight.  I know he took him down non-stop, took his back, so I understand the fact that the fans didn’t really enjoy watching the fight, but he’s a dangerous opponent.  He can take you down and wear you out.  I think I want to make a big coming-out party in the UFC and reach the fans on that fight,” said Saffiedine.

If Saffiedine vs. Maia gets booked, the former Strikeforce champion would like the time to prepare for the matchup with an adequate training camp.  That would likely put any potential fight at a late-spring, early-summer timeline for the Team Quest fighter.

“I’m healthy right now and usually l would like to have eight weeks (to train) or a little bit more if it’s five five-minute rounds.  So I think end of April, beginning of May would be a good time for me.  I’m already back at the gym for a couple of weeks.  I’m training and I’m 100-percent healthy,” said Saffiedine.

If Saffiedine can beat Marquardt and a fighter the caliber of Demain Maia in back-to-back fights, there’s no denying he would jump into the deep end of title conversation in the UFC.  The Belgium-born fighter isn’t ready to go that far just yet.

Saffiedine wants to book his first fight and actually compete in the Octagon and then he’ll worry about top-10 spots and title shots.

“I think after one or two fights we can talk about it,” said Saffiedine.  “Right now my main focus is getting my first fight for the UFC, put on an exciting fight and then we’ll see from there.  I don’t like to think ahead too much.  Of course, down the road it’s everybody’s dream, everybody’s goal to reach that belt.

“That’s a long-term goal, but I’ve got to stay focused on my next fight and then we can talk again.”

 

Damon Martin is a featured columnist at Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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