As one of the last of his generation, Josh Thomson primes for biggest battle

Josh Thomson, who headlines Saturday’s FOX card against Benson Henderson, looks back on how everything has changed since he was one of the original MMA fighters long before anyone outside of San Jose had heard of the AKA Gym.
Josh T…

Josh Thomson, who headlines Saturday’s FOX card against Benson Henderson, looks back on how everything has changed since he was one of the original MMA fighters long before anyone outside of San Jose had heard of the AKA Gym.

Josh Thomson probably doesn’t like thinking about his age as an MMA fighter. But he’s being hit daily with constant reminders that he’s had a long career in the sport, just days before what can be argued is his biggest fight.

Thomson, who has been through different generations and evolutions of the sport, headlines Saturday night’s UFC on FOX card against Benson Henderson, with a possible UFC lightweight title shot at stake.

A main event on the FOX network is a long way from the days when the sport wasn’t on television, and he had to leave his home state, where the sport was banned, just to get fights.

On Wednesday, while being interviewed on UFC Tonight by Kenny Florian, who has been retired for a couple of years, Florian noted long before he was on the first season of The Ultimate Fighter (TUF), he remembered watching Josh Thomson fight in the UFC.

It really hit Thomson (20-5, 1 no contest), who has garnered a lot of attention over the last week by saying what virtually no fighter will ever say: that he had the worst training camp of his life. It wasn’t that he’s not in shape, but a guy used to having some of the best training partners near his size in the world at the AKA camp, was substituting a lot of live sparring for practicing hitting mits because nobody was around.

The original crew he started with at the gym when the sport was in its infancy, like Frank Shamrock and B.J. Penn, are long gone. For the second phase of his career, he had Mike Swick, Jon Fitch and Josh Koscheck as regular training partners. And now they’re all gone as well, with Swick living in Thailand having opened up a gym, Fitch having moved to Syracuse, N.Y., and Koscheck having opened a gym in Fresno, Calif. after leaving over a falling out with coach Javier Mendez.

“I was one of the original guys,” noted Thomson, who grew up in San Jose and has lived there his entire life. “Then Swick came right after me. Then Fitch. Then Kos. And that group is gone. It’s just me and a new generation of guys. It’s not the same at all.”

It’s not that AKA is depleted of quality talent, but a unique series of circumstances happened all at the same time. Gray Maynard was knocked out by Nate Diaz on Nov. 30, and has taken time off. Tyson Griffin is out with neck surgery. And with the holidays, a lot of his regular partners who came from all parts of the world, went back to those parts. Khabib Nurmagomedov returned to Russia, Noad Lahat went back to Israel, and Thomas Diagne to France.

It was so long ago, that few remember Thomson and Yves Edwards as the UFC’s two big lightweight stars before the company dropped the division for several years. By the time they brought it back, Thomson was under contract to Strikeforce and became one of that group’s biggest stars through its entire run. To most, he was the guy who had the three great fights with Gilbert Melendez, the last two on Showtime, in trading back-and-forth that company’s lightweight title.

For years, he felt that he and Melendez never got their due, as he was almost never ranked in the top ten. This even led to a remark Henderson has brought up in motivation for this bout, when Thomson thought it was ridiculous that Henderson, a star in World Extreme Cagefighting, was ranked ahead of some of the top Strikeforce lightweights.

“That was so many years ago,” Thomson said. “It wasn’t even that I thought he wasn’t top ten. I don’t think I ever meant that. I just didn’t understand how he, at the time, was ranked above J.Z. (Cavalcante). This was when MMA was big in Japan. Japan had (Shinya) Aoki, (Tatsuya) Kawajiri and Eddie Alvarez, and J.Z. fought all of them and beat some of them. How could you have Benson in WEC ranked ahead of J.Z. at the time? Plus, I was with another promotion and I was trying to help the promotion. At the time, I wanted to prove that me, Gilbert and J.Z. were the best and that’s what fighters do.”

It wasn’t until Strikeforce closed up in late 2012 that Thomson ever got the vindication for what he had been saying for a half dozen years, when Melendez walked into UFC and fought Henderson for the lightweight title, losing a decision that could have gone the other way. Since he and Melendez’s three fight series was as close to even as it could possibly be, he saw that as proof he and Melendez had been among the best the entire time.

Just before that fight, Thomson became the first and still the only fighter ever to finish Nate Diaz, who was coming directly off a title match. Thomson had always said, since he trained daily with top ranked UFC fighters, that he knew he could hang with the best in the division.

“I watched it (Melendez vs. Henderson), and it was a fight that could have gone either way,” he said. “When I beat Nate right after Nate fought for the title, people have now seen that I was speaking the truth.”

Thomson said the biggest difference in going from Strikeforce to UFC isn’t the competition, but the promotional work.

“The biggest difference is the P.R.,” he said. “UFC is such a powerhouse promotion. It’s huge. I can’t even put into words how big it is. I have a lot of respect for Strikeforce, but I’d have never been shown on the NFC championship game, and shown five or six times in the game, in Strikeforce. Their ability to promote fights is unbelievable.”

Fighting this week in the frigid weather in Chicago wasn’t the original plan. He was first booked to face champion Anthony Pettis on Dec. 14 in Sacramento, Calif., a title shot close to home turf. The fight was canceled when Pettis opted for surgery due to a torn meniscus. Thomson immediately noted he had the same injury just before his third fight with Melendez, fought, and lost a razor-close split decision.

Thomson said he always had a premonition that fight wasn’t going to happen.

“I actually kind of expected it,” he said. “He (Pettis) was injured and pulled out of the Aldo fight. Then he got healthy enough to fight Benson for the title in Milwaukee, his home town. Then he won the title. I think he jumped back into training so fast that I kind of expected it. I wasn’t going to believe the fight was really happening until fight week and I made weight. I never got my hopes up. I found out when they called me in Las Vegas when I was watching the GSP vs. Hendricks fight and asked me, `Do you want to fight Benson Henderson?’ I said, `Sure, I’ll fight him.’ He’s a former champion and he’s probably the toughest guy in the weight class right now. People said I was risking a title shot. Well, if I can’t beat him, I didn’t deserve the title shot.”

That meant a complete change in what he was working on, and in strategy. His trainer, Javier Mendez, noted right away even though Pettis beat Henderson (19-3) to win the title, he believed Henderson would be a more difficult opponent because of the lack of holes in his game.

“They both kick a lot,” noted Thomson. “Benson puts a lot more emphasis on wrestling. Pettis tries to stay long. Benson jumps in with punches and kicks. Pettis tries to stay on the outside with kicks to make it hard to reach him. It’s a way different fight. Eventually, you have to fight both of them anyway. After I beat Benson, I plan on fighting Pettis. Benson wrestles more. I’m expecting him to try to wrestle me to death.”

On paper, the fight looks to have a good chance of going the distance, and will almost surely be fast-paced. Thomson, an 11-to-4 underdog, has only been stopped once in his career, taking a flying kick to the back of the head from Edwards in 2004 that is still among the most spectacular finishes in UFC history. Henderson has only been stopped twice, a submission loss in 2007 when he was just getting started, and the armbar loss to Pettis on Aug. 31. Both have exceptional cardio, are good in every facet of the game, and have been in all-out five round battles, Thomson with Melendez and Clay Guida, Henderson with Pettis (in their first fight), Donald Cerrone, Melendez and twice with Frankie Edgar.

“The fight is going to be fought everywhere,” Thomson said. “I think he’s going to try and wrestle me a lot. I have to keep the distance and push the pace, get right in his grill, get in the range where I can land my stuff and take him down as well.”

But the date became a problem. Thomson’s peaking cycle was all out of whack. And worse, he noted, this is the time of year that nobody really wants to fight.

“With the holidays, there’s a lot going on in life,” he said. “Fighters really don’t like to take fights right after the holidays. It’s hard to get guys to train with. There’s Christmas shopping, relatives coming, visiting relatives, fighters who spend the whole year in the gym are pretty much gone.”

It really hit him Sunday, as he watched the hometown San Francisco 49ers lose in the NFC championship game to the Seattle Seahawks.

“I hadn’t thought about it, but watching the game, it really put it into perspective,” he said. “I started training for Pettis in October, right after the football season started. Now I’m fighting, and it’s a week before the Super Bowl. I trained the whole NFL season, sometimes three times a day, at least twice every day. That’s a lot.”

Because he trained to peak in mid-December, he’s gone through ups and downs of late.

“I felt good, then I started feeling flat,” he said. “Then I didn’t feel strong. My weight was staying off. Sometimes when I was done with training, I was around 162-164 pounds. My diet’s been clean. Usually it’s an eight-to-ten week camp, and you peak at the end from eating clean the whole time. This camp was long, and I didn’t feel as strong at the end because I was eating so clean and training so hard for so long. One night I went to bed and I was 174, and woke up at 166. I’m fighting to keep weight on.”

In addition, he just opened a new business, a San Jose gym called Dash Cardio Studios, three weeks ago. The opening was supposed to be timed right after his fight.

“It’s not a fighting gym, it’s a straight cardio fitness gym for all fitness levels,” he said.

Instead of athletes looking to peak, his clientele includes women who are pregnant, women trying to lose weight after pregnancy, and he’s got someone trying to regain his fitness after battling cancer.

His opponent had his own distractions, though, since Henderson got married to his longtime girlfriend a few weeks ago.

But even as he’s outlived his contemporaries when it comes to still being a leading contender, and he knows what’s at stake, he’s not feeling the pressure.

“I don’t feel a sense of urgency,” he said. “But if I lose this fight, I don’t think they’ll be giving me a title shot, even if I win my next one or two fights. I really need to win this fight.”

Vitor Belfort says he’ll ask for testosterone TUE for Chris Weidman fight

Vitor Belfort told UFC Tonight’s Ariel Helwani on Wednesday that he is going to ask for a therapeutic use exemption for testosterone for his next fight, which is expected to be against middleweight champion Chris Weidman later this …

Vitor Belfort told UFC Tonight’s Ariel Helwani on Wednesday that he is going to ask for a therapeutic use exemption for testosterone for his next fight, which is expected to be against middleweight champion Chris Weidman later this year in Las Vegas.

The statement contradicted an earlier statement by manager Glenn Robinson, who said on The MMA Hour that he didn’t think Belfort would apply for a TUE in Nevada.

Belfort said he regarded the testosterone use as medication that he needs. In theory, a TUE for testosterone should only be granted if someone’s natural production of testosterone is at well under normal levels, and thus not having enough testosterone in the body is a health concern. Taking testosterone, an anabolic steroid, is otherwise prohibited in most major sports. Using testosterone signals the body to not produce it on its own, and it would continually weaken the body’s natural production of it. Thus, an athlete, or anyone being prescribed the drug, would be expected to have to use it for life.

No date has been announced for the championship fight, but Lorenzo Fertitta, UFC’s CEO, has previously stated they were looking for it either over Memorial Day weekend, or on July 5.

“I don’t believe so,” Robinson told Helwani, when asked if Belfort would be applying for a TUE. “It’s something that him and I have not discussed.”

Belfort (24-10) and testosterone use in Nevada is a hot button issue, because Belfort failed a steroid test, for testosterone on October 21, 2006, before a Pride fight in Las Vegas where he lost to Dan Henderson. No fighter who has previously tested positive for steroids has been granted a TUE in Nevada.

Keith Kizer, the Executive Director of the Nevada State Athletic Commission had previously stated that he didn’t believe an athlete who had failed a steroid test would be granted an exemption, noting he didn’t believe in granting exemptions if their low natural production was based on prior steroid use, which is illegal in MMA. However, Kizer will not be involved in the case, since he’s leaving the commission on Monday.

Belfort was suspended for the test failure. While under a Nevada suspension, he fought in the United Kingdom for the Cage Rage promotion. All U.S. athletic commissions honor suspensions from other states, and promotions who have Nevada licenses also honor those suspensions. But a foreign promotion that has no intention of running in Nevada would not have to honor such a suspension.

Belfort hasn’t fought in Las Vegas since his Feb. 5, 2011, loss to Anderson Silva in a middleweight title fight. For that fight, he did not request a TUE. Since that fight, he’s gone 7-1, with the only loss coming on a short notice fight, moving up a weight division to challenge light heavyweight champion Jon Jones.

Belfort, who will be 37 at the time of his next fight, has had a career resurgence while given an exemption for testosterone. On recent shows in Brazil, he’s scored consecutive high kick knockout wins over Michael Bisping, Luke Rockhold and Dan Henderson.

Bjorn Rebney calls UFC reaction to GSP ‘tasteless’

Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney was critical of UFC President Dana White, and his recent comments on Georges St-Pierre, on Monday.
White on Wednesday, after the UFC’s show in Duluth, Ga., was critical of St-Pierre’s comments a few days ea…

Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney was critical of UFC President Dana White, and his recent comments on Georges St-Pierre, on Monday.

White on Wednesday, after the UFC’s show in Duluth, Ga., was critical of St-Pierre’s comments a few days earlier. St-Pierre had said one of the reasons he was taking time off was that UFC didn’t stand behind him when he was trying to set an example of stronger drug testing before his Nov. 16 welterweight title defense against Johny Hendricks.

St-Pierre enrolled himself in the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association and was subject to extensive testing throughout camp. St-Pierre offered by pay for both his and Hendricks testing, but Hendricks side refused, stating after seeing St-Pierre on the VADA web site, they wanted testing from another organization.

While discussions took place involving both sides, Hendricks ended up not subjecting himself to the extensive testing. White, at the time, felt both fighters looked silly in the process.

White noted that on Nov. 16, when St-Pierre told he and Lorenzo Fertitta why he was leaving, he mentioned a personal life issue which neither side has publicly revealed, and never mentioned drug testing, nor had he told the promotion any of this since what he said publicly. White noted the company has ramped up drug testing in recent years,and felt St-Pierre’s asking to be tested extensively was to prove suspicions levied by Nick Diaz and B.J. Penn against him weren’t true.

He also stated it was silly to categorize UFC as a monopoly, since Bellator was owned by Viacom, one of the biggest media conglomerates in the world.

“I do have an opinion,” said Rebney when asked of the situation. “The UFC has set the bar pretty high in terms of tasteless comments. The recent comments on Georges St-Pierre are some of the most tasteless comments they’ve made in some time. I look at Georges St-Pierre as one of the most honorable champions our sport has ever seen.

“I don’t think Georges St-Pierre owes us as fans anything. I don’t think he owes the UFC anything. He’s given us fans and the organization he’s fought for, he’s given everything. We should be thankful we’ve had a guy like that fight in the last ten years. A lot of his points are good points. He’s been a de facto ambassador for our sport and I put a lot of credence and credibility in what he’s been saying.”

Rampage, King Mo headline Bellator tournament in season opener

When Quinton “Rampage” Jackson signed with Bellator last year, there was little talk of him entering tournaments and going for championships. But after one fight, he’s jumping in all the way for a run at Bellator’s light heavyweight…

When Quinton “Rampage” Jackson signed with Bellator last year, there was little talk of him entering tournaments and going for championships. But after one fight, he’s jumping in all the way for a run at Bellator’s light heavyweight title.

He’s hoping the first leg of a successful journey starts at Bellator’s season opener on Feb. 28 on Spike TV in its usual Friday night slot at 9 p.m. ET, taking place at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Conn.

Jackson (33-11), a former UFC light heavyweight champion who one of MMA’s best known active fighters, faces former Bellator light heavyweight champion Christian M’Pumbu (18-5-1) in the first round of a four-man tournament to get a title shot. Mikhail Zayats (22-7) takes on former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion “King” Mo Lawal (11-3, 1 no-contest) in the other semifinal that night.

The tournament winner will face the winner of a March 21 title fight in Wichita, Kan., where champion Attila Vegh (29-4-2) defends his title against interim champion Emmanuel Newton (22-7-1), who holds two wins over the past year against Lawal.

The show will also feature the opening round of an eight-man featherweight tournament. Because Bellator usually has four, and a maximum of five fights on its live broadcast, at least one featherweight tournament match will be on the Spike.com prelims that night.  Participants in the tournament were not announced.

“Yeah, I wasn’t interested in doing the tournament,” admitted Jackson, who ended a three-fight losing streak in the UFC with a first-round knockout of Joey Beltran in his Bellator debut on Nov. 15. “For a tournament, I like how Pride was, two fights in one day (in the finals). My manager told me I should fight in the tournament so I can win the belt. Why not be champion? A lot of things come with the championship belt.  My manager talked me into it, and this is the toughest tournament in MMA. I want to establish myself as top of the food chain.”

Jackson, 35, who insisted his ailing knees are back at 100 percent, faces M’Pumbu, a 36-year-old kickboxer who was born in Congo but now lives in France. M’Pumbu is an undersized light heavyweight who would actually be a small framed middleweight by current standards. He captured Bellator’s tournament for the title in 2011, but after his tournament win, lost a non-title to Travis Wiuff, and then dropped his title to Vegh via decision on Feb. 28. This will be his first fight in exactly one year.



At the press call on Monday to announce the tournament, Jackson kept, on purpose, botching M’Pumbu’s name, but then saying it’s all in fun, calling him names like Christian A boo-boo and Christian M poo-poo.

“People shouldn’t take anything I say personally,” he said, when asked if M’Pumbu might be offended by Jackson continually making fun of his name. “I like to joke around a lot.  If you take it seriously, it reflects on you. And really, his name is complicated for me to pronounce.”

Zayats, a Russian who is a former world champion in combat Sambo, lost a tournament final to Newton in March, but rebounded by knocking out Aaron Rosa in 47 seconds on Oct. 11.

Lawal, who along with Jackson and Tito Ortiz were Bellator’s most heavily promoted signings since going on  SpikeTV. The former national champion wrestler is trying to rebound from his second loss to Newton. When signed, Lawal was expected to dominate Bellator’s light heavyweight ranks.

At 33, the former world-class wrestler had multiple surgeries due to a staph infection in his leg in 2012, and may not have fully recovered, as he didn’t have the same wrestling game as in the past in his second fight with Newton on Nov. 2 in Long Beach. .

“I’m not going to sit here and say I’m changing up my whole game plan, and you are going to see a new fighter,” said Lawal. “That’s just not me. I know what I do. I know who I am, and that’s who you are going to see on Feb. 28, plain and simple. Me. It’s all about getting that belt.”

Jackson and Lawal had a very public feud a few years back, but it was somewhat settled. If they were to meet in the tournament final, it would likely the most talked about company fight, with the exception of the two Eddie Alvarez vs. Michael Chandler bouts.

“Well, there’s no secret that King Mo and I didn’t see eye-to-eye years ago,” said Jackson. “I don’t know what his problem was. We did a signing together with MMA Elite. We were civil. We’re human beings, not wild animals. But we don’t hang out. We don’t go clubbing. He’s a fighter just like I am. You put someone in the cage with me, and I’ll try to knock King Mo out. As long as he keeps his mouth shut, I won’t try to kill him.”

Jackson noted that he has no interest in a fight with Tito Ortiz, which had been scheduled for November, before Ortiz fractured his neck in training. He also said he hasn’t heard a word about a potential fight with Roy Jones Jr., which at one point was talked about as a potential Bellator pay-per-view bout.

“I’m worried about Christian M’Pumbu,” he said.  “He’s the only person on my mind.”