Kazushi Sakuraba vs. Renzo Gracie, Rory MacDonald vs. J.T. Torres announced for Metamoris 5

Metamoris returns in November, and will feature two of the greatest mixed martial artists in the main event.
Metamoris announced on Wednesday that Renzo Gracie and Kazushi Sakuraba, who battled inside the PRIDE ring in Aug. 27, 2000, are set…

Metamoris returns in November, and will feature two of the greatest mixed martial artists in the main event.

Metamoris announced on Wednesday that Renzo Gracie and Kazushi Sakuraba, who battled inside the PRIDE ring in Aug. 27, 2000, are set to collide once again under Metamoris rules on Nov. 22.

“A little mistake that I made, he was able to capitalize on it. It cost me a broken arm,” Gracie said of their fight in PRIDE, when Sakuraba submitted him with a kimura, in a promotional video. “I failed jiu-jitsu that day.”

“I was lucky to be in a position to finish that way. And a lot of time as passed since that fight,” Sakuraba said.

Metamoris 5 takes place at the The Long Beach Convention Center in California and airs live on pay-per-view at Metamoris.com.

UFC welterweight Rory MacDonald will take on jiu-jitsu expert J.T. Torres in the co-main event. The other matches announced are Yuri Simoes vs. Rafael Lovato, Vinny Magalhaes vs. Kevin Casey, Garry Tonon vs. Zak Maxwell and a secret match.

Wanderlei Silva criticizes ‘show-off promoters’, questions NAC’s integrity

Recently retired MMA fighter Wanderlei Silva is starting a war against the UFC, and he’s going after the promotion’s low fighter pay.

Banned for live and fined $70,000 by the Nevada Athletic Commission on Tuesday for running from a random drug test earlier this year, the former PRIDE champion criticizes promoters that “never get slapped in the face and want to show off more than the athletes.”

“The money paid to the athletes is very few. How much does (the promotions) make? How much they generate? Those are things that are pissing off the fighters,” Silva said in an interview to Combate. “Another thing that bothers me is that if someone wants to sponsor you, they have to pay $50,000 to the promotion before sponsoring you. But the money they pay the promotion stays there. It doesn’t go to the athlete. It’s an outrage. They have to pay (the UFC) to sponsor someone? They are taking money from the athletes.”

“And it looks like they want to get it away from the fighters, too,” he continued. “They want to put you on a uniform, create a white team and a yellow team. And what will the athlete get from this? This $4,000 they want to pay you to fight? It’s a robbery. They are making rivers of money, slandering us, so it’s time for us to rise and show the truth.

“(MMA) became a freak show. The promotions put fighters against each other, and they don’t want to pay anything to them. If you refuse to fight, the promoter shows up – and sometimes he wants to show off more than the fighters. This is a shame. He never gets slapped in the face and wants to show off more than the athletes, saying ‘you’re good. This one didn’t want to fight this one. He’s afraid.’ No, no one is afraid of anyone. Everybody who steps into a ring deserves respect, recognition, and we’re not getting it. And they want to throw our fans against us.

“He says things, and people buy it. ‘This guy is not the same anymore. He doesn’t want to fight this other guy.’ That’s not the case. They don’t want to pay. They pay you nothing. You ask for more, they say they don’t have it. How so? They have money, but they don’t want to pay. And then they say you’re afraid? It pisses me off.”

He kept going against “promoters,” but never mentioning UFC president Dana White’s name.

“They are the ones who go to the TV after the event, wanting to show off more than the athletes,” Silva said. “At the end of the event, he’s there saying ‘You fought well. You haven’t, so you suck.’ Who are they to judge you? The athlete needs money to prepare for a fight and to perform well. How are you going to prepare well if you have to have another job to make money? If you have better performances, pay better.”

“There’s a monopoly over the sport right now. If you create a monopoly like that, you have to pay for it. You can’t use it to dominate the fighters, pay less money and criticize them later. We’re the ones who make the show. There’s no event without fighters. When we get united, we will see how we want things, and it will change. It’s going to be good for the sport. It still is too amateur. Most of the fighters don’t have a good education. When you get to the promotion, you can’t ask for more. You go there begging for the love of God for an opportunity, and they take advantage of you. They put you against who they want, pay how much they want and until you make a name for yourself, you’re treated like garbage.”

“Tell me five guys that are rich,” Silva continued. “Anderson (Silva) might be rich, (Georges) St. Pierre is rich, but who else? Nobody is making money with this sport. And they are filling their pockets with money. I’m not against it. If they do the event, I want them to make money. But you have to pay your employees. If you pay them like amateurs, you want them to perform like professionals?”

Silva, who went 4-7 under the UFC banner, wants to terminate his current contract with the promotion. He says he doesn’t want to fight for any other promotion, though.

“I’m still under contract. They wanted me to sign a new one recently, but I said I didn’t want it. I want to terminate my contract,” he said. “I won’t work for this organization anymore. I won’t fight for the UFC again.

“I’m not interested anymore. I won’t fight for them, and I won’t fight for anyone. (The UFC) didn’t treat me as I deserved. Not only me, but other fighters don’t want to talk. I can say it because I made good money in Japan, I was smart enough with my money, and I can say. I don’t depend on them for nothing.”

Silva wants nothing from the UFC, including a Hall of Fame status.

“I don’t need it,” he said. “A Hall of Fame is made by the fans. I don’t want anything from this promotion. If they want to give me, I won’t accept. My Hall of Fame is my fans.”

With 18 years of professional fighting and 49 bouts under his belt, “The Axe Murderer” retires with a 35-12-1 (with one no-contest) record and some injuries.

“My family totally supported my decision. It’s a dangerous sport, you can get really hurt,” he said. “God helped me, protected me so I wouldn’t have any damage, any serious injury. I want to know if the promotions that pay their fighters so poorly, will help them with anything in the future.”

“I have some issues that I don’t know if they will become issues,” Silva added. “I have some things in my head, I forget things. I can’t turn my head a lot or my brain crashes. I have back and wrist pain. … This is a result of my ‘extreme’ fighting style, more ‘kamizake.’”

Right after NAC announced his punishment on Tuesday, Silva went on Twitter to call them “sons of b—–s” and warn that “war is just beginning.” And he questions the athletic commission’s calls in Chael Sonnen’s case, too.

“The punishment they gave (Sonnen) was unfair. We don’t know what’s behind this commission because at the same hearing they punished Sonnen they cleared (Vitor Belfort), who tested positive for high levels of testosterone in February, to fight for the title in December,” he said. “Both had a history. The same case. One is banned, the other one is cleared to fight.”

“We have to know who’s regulating this commission, who controls it, because it looks like a circus,” he continued. “They do what they want, and where are we going to complain about it? Nobody knows who controls the commission. They don’t respect their own laws. It’s complicated. Nobody knows what’s going on, who’s in charge, and who’s behind it.

“You can’t punish one and don’t punish the other. You punish all of them, or you don’t punish at all. And in the UFC, this guy said he was a big friend of (Sonnen) but let him go from the TV. Released him. And wanted to stop him from competing in a jiu-jitsu match. So he can’t work anymore? Who will pay his bills? Are they going to help him? They won’t. They use us, do whatever they want, and then kick our butt. It will end.”

Recently retired MMA fighter Wanderlei Silva is starting a war against the UFC, and he’s going after the promotion’s low fighter pay.

Banned for live and fined $70,000 by the Nevada Athletic Commission on Tuesday for running from a random drug test earlier this year, the former PRIDE champion criticizes promoters that “never get slapped in the face and want to show off more than the athletes.”

“The money paid to the athletes is very few. How much does (the promotions) make? How much they generate? Those are things that are pissing off the fighters,” Silva said in an interview to Combate. “Another thing that bothers me is that if someone wants to sponsor you, they have to pay $50,000 to the promotion before sponsoring you. But the money they pay the promotion stays there. It doesn’t go to the athlete. It’s an outrage. They have to pay (the UFC) to sponsor someone? They are taking money from the athletes.”

“And it looks like they want to get it away from the fighters, too,” he continued. “They want to put you on a uniform, create a white team and a yellow team. And what will the athlete get from this? This $4,000 they want to pay you to fight? It’s a robbery. They are making rivers of money, slandering us, so it’s time for us to rise and show the truth.

“(MMA) became a freak show. The promotions put fighters against each other, and they don’t want to pay anything to them. If you refuse to fight, the promoter shows up – and sometimes he wants to show off more than the fighters. This is a shame. He never gets slapped in the face and wants to show off more than the athletes, saying ‘you’re good. This one didn’t want to fight this one. He’s afraid.’ No, no one is afraid of anyone. Everybody who steps into a ring deserves respect, recognition, and we’re not getting it. And they want to throw our fans against us.

“He says things, and people buy it. ‘This guy is not the same anymore. He doesn’t want to fight this other guy.’ That’s not the case. They don’t want to pay. They pay you nothing. You ask for more, they say they don’t have it. How so? They have money, but they don’t want to pay. And then they say you’re afraid? It pisses me off.”

He kept going against “promoters,” but never mentioning UFC president Dana White’s name.

“They are the ones who go to the TV after the event, wanting to show off more than the athletes,” Silva said. “At the end of the event, he’s there saying ‘You fought well. You haven’t, so you suck.’ Who are they to judge you? The athlete needs money to prepare for a fight and to perform well. How are you going to prepare well if you have to have another job to make money? If you have better performances, pay better.”

“There’s a monopoly over the sport right now. If you create a monopoly like that, you have to pay for it. You can’t use it to dominate the fighters, pay less money and criticize them later. We’re the ones who make the show. There’s no event without fighters. When we get united, we will see how we want things, and it will change. It’s going to be good for the sport. It still is too amateur. Most of the fighters don’t have a good education. When you get to the promotion, you can’t ask for more. You go there begging for the love of God for an opportunity, and they take advantage of you. They put you against who they want, pay how much they want and until you make a name for yourself, you’re treated like garbage.”

“Tell me five guys that are rich,” Silva continued. “Anderson (Silva) might be rich, (Georges) St. Pierre is rich, but who else? Nobody is making money with this sport. And they are filling their pockets with money. I’m not against it. If they do the event, I want them to make money. But you have to pay your employees. If you pay them like amateurs, you want them to perform like professionals?”

Silva, who went 4-7 under the UFC banner, wants to terminate his current contract with the promotion. He says he doesn’t want to fight for any other promotion, though.

“I’m still under contract. They wanted me to sign a new one recently, but I said I didn’t want it. I want to terminate my contract,” he said. “I won’t work for this organization anymore. I won’t fight for the UFC again.

“I’m not interested anymore. I won’t fight for them, and I won’t fight for anyone. (The UFC) didn’t treat me as I deserved. Not only me, but other fighters don’t want to talk. I can say it because I made good money in Japan, I was smart enough with my money, and I can say. I don’t depend on them for nothing.”

Silva wants nothing from the UFC, including a Hall of Fame status.

“I don’t need it,” he said. “A Hall of Fame is made by the fans. I don’t want anything from this promotion. If they want to give me, I won’t accept. My Hall of Fame is my fans.”

With 18 years of professional fighting and 49 bouts under his belt, “The Axe Murderer” retires with a 35-12-1 (with one no-contest) record and some injuries.

“My family totally supported my decision. It’s a dangerous sport, you can get really hurt,” he said. “God helped me, protected me so I wouldn’t have any damage, any serious injury. I want to know if the promotions that pay their fighters so poorly, will help them with anything in the future.”

“I have some issues that I don’t know if they will become issues,” Silva added. “I have some things in my head, I forget things. I can’t turn my head a lot or my brain crashes. I have back and wrist pain. … This is a result of my ‘extreme’ fighting style, more ‘kamizake.’”

Right after NAC announced his punishment on Tuesday, Silva went on Twitter to call them “sons of b—–s” and warn that “war is just beginning.” And he questions the athletic commission’s calls in Chael Sonnen’s case, too.

“The punishment they gave (Sonnen) was unfair. We don’t know what’s behind this commission because at the same hearing they punished Sonnen they cleared (Vitor Belfort), who tested positive for high levels of testosterone in February, to fight for the title in December,” he said. “Both had a history. The same case. One is banned, the other one is cleared to fight.”

“We have to know who’s regulating this commission, who controls it, because it looks like a circus,” he continued. “They do what they want, and where are we going to complain about it? Nobody knows who controls the commission. They don’t respect their own laws. It’s complicated. Nobody knows what’s going on, who’s in charge, and who’s behind it.

“You can’t punish one and don’t punish the other. You punish all of them, or you don’t punish at all. And in the UFC, this guy said he was a big friend of (Sonnen) but let him go from the TV. Released him. And wanted to stop him from competing in a jiu-jitsu match. So he can’t work anymore? Who will pay his bills? Are they going to help him? They won’t. They use us, do whatever they want, and then kick our butt. It will end.”

Wanderlei Silva reacts to NAC lifetime ban: ‘War is just beginning, sons of b—–s’

The Nevada Athletic Commission issued Wanderlei Silva a $70,000 fine and a lifetime ban, but the Brazilian veteran doesn’t sound impressed.

Following the NAC hearing, the former PRIDE champion reacted to the news on Twitter.

“Those who are trying to take me down, come get it,” Silva wrote. “War is just beginning, sons of b—–s.”

“They will see that we’re the ones who run this s—t, bunch of playboys.”

MMAFighting.com contacted Silva for a comment on his lifetime ban and fine, but the Brazilian fighter did not respond.

The $70,000 fine represents 35 percent of the fight purse Silva was expected to receive for his light heavyweight fight against Chael Sonnen at UFC 175 on July 5.

Silva’s attorney, Ross Goodman argued that NAC had no authority to suspend or fine the MMA fighter since he wasn’t licensed under the commission when he declined to do a random drug test in his gym earlier this year, and they intend to appeal the NAC decision.

The Nevada Athletic Commission issued Wanderlei Silva a $70,000 fine and a lifetime ban, but the Brazilian veteran doesn’t sound impressed.

Following the NAC hearing, the former PRIDE champion reacted to the news on Twitter.

“Those who are trying to take me down, come get it,” Silva wrote. “War is just beginning, sons of b—–s.”

“They will see that we’re the ones who run this s—t, bunch of playboys.”

MMAFighting.com contacted Silva for a comment on his lifetime ban and fine, but the Brazilian fighter did not respond.

The $70,000 fine represents 35 percent of the fight purse Silva was expected to receive for his light heavyweight fight against Chael Sonnen at UFC 175 on July 5.

Silva’s attorney, Ross Goodman argued that NAC had no authority to suspend or fine the MMA fighter since he wasn’t licensed under the commission when he declined to do a random drug test in his gym earlier this year, and they intend to appeal the NAC decision.

Bigfoot Silva’s surgery ‘a success’, expected to train again in two months

Antonio Silva underwent surgery on Tuesday morning in Brazil, and the procedure was a success.

The Brazilian heavyweight, who suffers from acromegaly, underwent surgery to remove a pituitary gland tumor that has reemerged, and should get released from the hospital in Sao Paulo next Monday.

“The surgery was a success,” Silva’s manager Alex Davis told MMAFighting.com. “It’s a head surgery, so it’s always complicated. They had to access the gland under the brain through the nose, so it’s not a simple surgery – especially for a fighter, who gets punched in the face for a living.”

According to Davis, “Bigfoot” is anxious to get back in action again after suffering a first-round knockout against Andrei Arlovski at UFC Fight Night 51, but he will only fight again next year.

“He should get cleared to train again in two months,” Davis said. “I think he will be ready to fight in five or six months. He wants to fight again. He’s disappointed with his last fight.”

Antonio Silva underwent surgery on Tuesday morning in Brazil, and the procedure was a success.

The Brazilian heavyweight, who suffers from acromegaly, underwent surgery to remove a pituitary gland tumor that has reemerged, and should get released from the hospital in Sao Paulo next Monday.

“The surgery was a success,” Silva’s manager Alex Davis told MMAFighting.com. “It’s a head surgery, so it’s always complicated. They had to access the gland under the brain through the nose, so it’s not a simple surgery – especially for a fighter, who gets punched in the face for a living.”

According to Davis, “Bigfoot” is anxious to get back in action again after suffering a first-round knockout against Andrei Arlovski at UFC Fight Night 51, but he will only fight again next year.

“He should get cleared to train again in two months,” Davis said. “I think he will be ready to fight in five or six months. He wants to fight again. He’s disappointed with his last fight.”

UFC Fight Roundup: TUF winner Warlley Alves returns in November

The UFC officially announced the UFC Fight Night 56 card with a media day in Uberlandia, Brazil, on Tuesday, and added a new bout to the event.
The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil 3 winner Warlley Alves will return to the Octagon at the Nov. 8 figh…

The UFC officially announced the UFC Fight Night 56 card with a media day in Uberlandia, Brazil, on Tuesday, and added a new bout to the event.

The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil 3 winner Warlley Alves will return to the Octagon at the Nov. 8 fight card against Alan Jouban.

Alves (7-0) became the TUF: Brazil 3 middleweight winner by choking out Marcio Alexandre Jr. with a guillotine in May, and now returns to his original weight class at 170 pounds. During the reality show, Alves defeated Wendell Oliveira, Ismael de Jesus and Wagner Gomes.

Jouban (10-2), a former RFA welterweight title challenger, makes his second appearance inside the Octagon. In his promotional debut, at UFC Fight Night 47, “Brahma” knocked out Seth Baczynski in the first round.

Grace Tourinho, managing director of the UFC in Brazil, announced on Tuesday that Juliana Lima (6-2) and TUF: Brazil 3 alum Wagner Silva (3-1) will also compete at the UFC card in Uberlandia, but the opponents are not set yet.

Mauricio Rua vs. Jimi Manuwa headlines the UFN 56 card, with Rafael Cavalcante taking on Ovince Saint Preux in the co-main event.

The last UFC card in Brazil this year, set for Dec. 20 in Barueri, Sao Paulo, has a new match-up set as well.

Marcos Rogerio de Lima (12-2-1), who scored a 20-second knockout over Richardson Moreira at TUF: Brazil 3 Finale in May, takes on Igor Pokrajac. Pokrajac (25-11, 1 no-contest) desperately needs a win in the UFC after losing three of his last four, with one no-contest.

Headlined by Lyoto Machida vs. C.B. Dollaway, UFC Fight Night 58 takes place at the Jose Correa Gymnasium in Barueri, Sao Paulo.

‘Jacare’ Souza’s plans haven’t changed despite Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort postponement

Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort won’t happen on Dec. 6 after all, but that won’t change Ronaldo Souza’s plans.

“Jacare”, who scored his fourth straight victory under the UFC banner with a third-round submission over Gegard Mousasi in September, will still work to be the ‘plan B’ in case something happens to Belfort before his title fight against Weidman in February.

“I haven’t talked to Jacare about it yet, but my position, as his manager, is that we will wait until February,” Souza’s manager Gilberto Faria told MMAFighting.com. “That’s good because Jacare will have more time to recover, take some time off with his family before he returns to war.

“Our plan hasn’t changed much,” he continued. “We will be ready to replace Belfort, in case something happens to him, and fight Weidman. If Vitor fights (Weidman in February), we will get another fight quickly and be ready to fight the champion, whoever wins between Weidman and Vitor, in four or six months.”

Weidman was forced out of a planned UFC 181 main event against Belfort with a broken hand, and welterweight champion Johny Hendricks now headlines the fight card against Robbie Lawler. Anthony Pettis meets Gilbert Melendez for the lightweight championship in the co-main event in Las Vegas.

Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort won’t happen on Dec. 6 after all, but that won’t change Ronaldo Souza’s plans.

“Jacare”, who scored his fourth straight victory under the UFC banner with a third-round submission over Gegard Mousasi in September, will still work to be the ‘plan B’ in case something happens to Belfort before his title fight against Weidman in February.

“I haven’t talked to Jacare about it yet, but my position, as his manager, is that we will wait until February,” Souza’s manager Gilberto Faria told MMAFighting.com. “That’s good because Jacare will have more time to recover, take some time off with his family before he returns to war.

“Our plan hasn’t changed much,” he continued. “We will be ready to replace Belfort, in case something happens to him, and fight Weidman. If Vitor fights (Weidman in February), we will get another fight quickly and be ready to fight the champion, whoever wins between Weidman and Vitor, in four or six months.”

Weidman was forced out of a planned UFC 181 main event against Belfort with a broken hand, and welterweight champion Johny Hendricks now headlines the fight card against Robbie Lawler. Anthony Pettis meets Gilbert Melendez for the lightweight championship in the co-main event in Las Vegas.