Grappling Coach Neil Melanson Weighs in on Chris Weidman vs. Anderson Silva

Neil “The Ground Marshall” Melanson is the head grappling coach of Xtreme Couture, and one of the most sought after and highly respected grappling coaches in all of MMA.  He has trained Randy Couture, Vitor Belfort, Chael Sonnen and Gray Mayn…

Neil “The Ground Marshall” Melanson is the head grappling coach of Xtreme Couture, and one of the most sought after and highly respected grappling coaches in all of MMA.  He has trained Randy Couture, Vitor Belfort, Chael Sonnen and Gray Maynard. Currently, he works with Bellator lightweight champion Mike Chandler and Ryan Couture, among others.

Melanson spoke with Bleacher Report on Friday about UFC 162’s main event between Anderson Silva and Chris Weidman.

Here is the full transcript of the interview.

 

Bleacher Report: Do you think Weidman is the toughest test for Anderson Silva thus far in his career?

Neil Melanson: I think matchup-wise, yeah.  I think Weidman has the full package to possibly beat Anderson.  I think he is the better wrestler, and he’s going to be better on the ground.  Obviously, his striking is going to be nowhere near Anderson’s.  I’m favoring Chris.  I like his coaches.  I think he’s the guy to beat him, but Anderson has made a nice career of beating people that have better matchups against him.  Anderson can definitely knock him out, no doubt.

 

B/R: Would you agree that the combination Weidman hasa good wrestling base combined with high level jiu-jitsuis a bad combination for Silva?  Especially when you look at how Chael Sonnen and Dan Henderson could take Silva down, but they couldn’t attack with submissions the way Weidman can and has shown already.

NM: Weidman is definitely better on the ground than those guys.  He should be able to hold him down, put good shots on him, land some good damage and he should also be able to have an opportunity to submit him.  I think Chris is going to take it.

 The thing about it too is he seems very confident.  I talked to Matt Serra the other day, and he said, ‘man, he is so dialed in mentally.’  He raved about him as a person.  He’s a guy you want to cheer for.  He’s kind of like an everyday American that works hard.  He’s a beast, and I want him to win.

 

B/R: How much does having confidence help and prepare you for a guy like Silva?  You see so many guys that end up like a deer in headlights.  To me, it’s half the battle.  If you’re not confident, it’s like the fight is already lost.

NM: Confidence is definitely a big factor.  I think most fighters I know pray upon that, having that good confidence.  But, unfortunately what I’ve noticed with most fighters is they’re so dependent on protecting their ego that they don’t push.  They don’t bring in enough hard partners in training camp.

They have to be winning all the time.  Some guys, they can’t lose in training—otherwise they fall apart. That’s a bad thing.  You want to build your confidence up by having a hard training camp and bringing in tough guys.  You shouldn’t feel confident by just beating up on scrubs.

I know athletes out there, and I won’t say their names.  That’s exactly where their confidence comes from.  They just want to beat up on nobodies and they go out there and they don’t want to be pushed.

 

B/R:  Weidman was a grappling prodigy who went to the ADCC in less than a year of training.  You are someone with a high pedigree in grappling. How advanced does someone’s skill have to be to take to the sport and advance that fast, that soon?

NM: Sometimes with these guys too, they get invites.  It’s not like he doesn’t know people.  He trains with Matt Serra and Renzo Gracie.  Those guys have some pull with that department.  If they wanted to get him in when he was junior, they could easily make that happen. It’s not too hard for them.  So he could’ve been getting there because of skill, or because of who he knows.  I know some guys that went to Abu Dhabi simply because a buddy made a phone call.

I know guys like Chris Weidman that come from that wrestling base…They are already great athletes, and then on top of it they have something that not everybody has.  They’re just like this type of competitor.  They have this breed about them.  It’s in all sports: football, basketball, whatever, hockey. They just have this overwhelming desire to compete and win at all costs.  

When guys have that drive, that’s what makes them champions.  That desire to compete…When things aren’t perfect, and they still find a way to win.  When you have athletes like that, those are the real guys, those are the grinders.

I think Weidman has those characteristics, and I think his history of his wrestling pedigree and the things he has done on short notice and short time have proven his willingness to competeeven when things aren’t perfect.  That shows his mental strength.  I think he is going to do well.  

He got thrown into this because Munoz was the guy that possibly could beat Anderson.  Munoz was a tank, was a great wrestler, heavy handed…Chris took him out so effortlessly, and it brought all that attention to him and I’m excited for him.  

 

B/R: What surprised a lot of people was not necessarily that he beat Munoz, but the way he beat him.  He was just all over him, attacking with submissions, never giving him any quarter and then hitting that wicked elbow.  He took him down whenever he wanted to and immediately passed his guard, showcasing his level of skill.  It surprised a lot of people. Were you surprised at his performance when he defeated Munoz?

NM: It surprised the heck out of me.  I thought it was going to be more back and forth.  I never trained with Mark Munoz.  I really hope to wrestle around and grapple with him, but I know guys that have wrestled with him.  They have told me how strong he is and how great of a wrestler he is.

To see Weidman dump him with that outside single, and some of the stuff he was doing and it was like butter.  I was just shocked after that fight.  I was hoping that Weidman was going to have it, and I think he’s got the full package.

If not, there are some good guys coming over from Strikeforce in the division, like Jacare—he’s sick.  I mean he’s fast, he’s strong and he’s probably the best jiu-jitsu guy in MMA.  I mean he is unbelievable.  He’s a guy that could be a potential candidate for a title shot in the future.

Then you have Tim Kennedy,. If he has good luck against Roger Gracie, he could spring board into that.  There are other athletes out there that could pose that package to beat Anderson, but it’s been a while.  I think Chris is that first guy that we think that can blueprint him and beat him.  I’m excited to see it.

 

B/R: We know Weidman obviously has to get it to the ground.  He isn’t on the same level of striking as Silva.  We’ve seen Henderson get him down.  We’ve seen Sonnen get him down. Technique-wise, how does he use his boxing to close distance and get Silva on the ground? 

NM: Well, I’m not going to give any advice on how to strike with Anderson Silva, that’s for sure.  The one thing that I think is going to be important is pressure.  You were talking about confidence earlier.

If you watch Anderson when he fights, he kind of feels things out.  He’s very confident in his chin.  There’s a certain point where you can visibly notice he gets loose.  It’s like a few minutes in, maybe it’s the second round or it’s halfway through the first, where all the sudden his shoulders just kind of change, and he just gets loose.  You can see his confidence in his eyes and his poise.

When he’s in that mode, he’s going to be creative.  When you have confidence like that, you are going to be creative, you are going to be able to improvise very easily.  The stress is off you; you have that full belief in yourself.  

I think what Chris needs to do is put pressure and hammer into Anderson, so he doesn’t get into that comfort zone and he starts to have a little doubt.  And feel the pressure to have to be perfect or he can’t miss…When he is relaxed like that, he’s just got it.  

Like when he knocked out Vitor.  I trained Vitor for that whole camp.  Vitor was waiting and waiting and then, all the sudden, you see Anderson get a little loose, and then that kick comes out of nowhereperfect target, perfect execution, it was impressive.  I don’t think he can hang out on the outside.  I think if he does that, Silva will be able to finish him.


B/R:  Do you think it is going to have to be a consistent thing for Weidman?  An example being: If Anderson avoids a takedown, he can’t lose confidence.  He has to keep going and keep at it until he gets him down.

NM: He has to chain wrestle for sure.  He can’t come just straight in.  If he misses on the shot, he can’t come in like a zombie.  Anderson is too good on countering, and he’s too explosive.  You can’t get caught in a sparring match.  

I’ve had other boxing coaches break down Anderson for me to help me understand him.  One of the things that Anderson does that a lot of the other fighters you see in the top ranks do, is just hit hard.  When Anderson has his hands down, his style is loose, but a lot of it is guys jab at him.  He’s got a good chin.  If they can touch his chin, he knows that he can hit them.  As soon as they start to touch him, he just throws hard.  Other guys are pawing at him.

I think it’s very important that Chris doesn’t go out there and try to paw at him and spend too much time trying to find range or any of that stuff.  If he does, Anderson is going to drill him.  I think he’s got to be out there like a wrestler, and he’s got to chain and try to get in on him and when he gets him down he’s got to stay busy.

 

B/R:  What we’ve seen, at least in his last few fights, he isn’t a huge threat off his back.  He did get the triangle on Chael, but he’s usually flat on his back.  He’s been kind of content at times just avoiding damage as opposed to fighting to get back up to his feet or sweep.  How do you see Weidman in this position? Do you think he will be able to hold him there?  Also, Weidman is good in the front-headlock position, working the guillotine and D’arce combinations.  Do you think he will be able to attack in that area?

NM: I think it depends on how Chris plays him when he’s on top.  You can play your pressure on top a certain way and force a guy to turtle away or to come up towards you.  Those kind of things will set up certain chains, like whether or not you want to get him into the front-headlock game, or whether or not you want to focus on keeping the back flat and just wail on him.  

It’s going to be interesting to see what Chris did in his training camp and his approach.  Whether or not he’s going to take him down and just try to wail on him and see what happens, or if he has a complete game plan, where he is going to put pressure a certain way and kind of bottleneck him into a certain finish or certain position.

Like with Mike Chandler’s last fight with Rick Hawn.  There was a reason why we played that top game the way he was low on the hips.  The whole plan was to set up for that particular rear naked choke just the way we had it.  It was to get Hawn to turtle out and not to go for the choke, but to stretch him out. And when he does that, he wasn’t going to be able to protect his neck, and then slide the choke in.

That was all set by the way Chandler was playing him the entire fight.  We knew where he was going to go, forced him to go there, we were waiting on him and that’s how he was able to get the victory.

If Weidman does something like that and Serra and his coaches have worked on things like that, then he can guide Silva right to the finish he wants.  If that’s not his style and he’s just going to try and tag on him, Anderson might be able to survive a little longer.  It’s not like he doesn’t know how to grapple, he’s been around.  I’m sure he has good training partners down in Brazil that are swift on the ground.  I’m sure he’s going to be ok.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen Anderson get cut.  I always thought that would be an important thing if you fought Anderson, to try and cut him and see how he handles it.  His face never got swollen, and Chael hit him how many times?  Anderson’s face was fine.  I don’t know if he has leather skin or what, but I think if someone cut him that may change the whole way…That might break him a little bit and mix him up.  

That might be a way to approach Anderson, not try to knock him out but try to cut him first and then put pressure on him and see if that messes with his head and he looks for a way out. 


B/R: Do you think we would ever see Silva tap if Weidman caught him in a submission, or he would just go to sleep or get an arm snapped or something along those lines?

NM: I don’t know.  I think that would be foolish for him to let himself get hurt.  He’s acting in soap operas down in Brazil.  He’s big money now, he doesn’t need to get himself hurt.  As far as I’m looking at Anderson, I don’t think he’s got anything to lose unless he’s really hanging on to his perfect record in the UFC, and that’s super important to him.  

He’s going to rank as the greatest fighter of all time probably.  He’s got a whole other life down in Brazil.  He’s got money and big sponsors.  If he loses this and he wants to retire, nobody is going to say anything.

He can go on and be a Hall of Famer and be the man.  I’m sure he’s going to train hard and fight hard. Losing to Weidman, there’s no shame in that.  The kid is tough.  Getting choked out is no big deal, but letting him get his arm snapped would be foolish.  No sense in doing that.


B/R: How do you think this fight is going to play out?

NM: I think I’ll be able to judge it based on how quickly Weidman closes the gap.  If he closes the gap pretty quick and puts pressure on him…He’s got to watch out for Anderson’s knees to the middle.  I think if he gets in on him, we’ll know in the first minute or so how it’s going to go.  I’m going to predict Weidman.  Anderson always has a way to prove me wrong, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he does it again.


B/R: What round do you think he wins it in?

NM: I don’t know.  If it went five, I would imagine that Weidman would win the decision.  I can’t see Silva winning a lot of rounds.  I see Silva knocking him out or not.  That’s pretty much how I see it.  


B/R: You think if Weidman wins, it’s by submission, not TKO?

NM: You would assume.  You would assume, because we haven’t seen Anderson hurt.  If Weidman can’t do the job, there’s other guys, but no one is better suited than Chris.  

Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.  All quotes were obtained first hand unless otherwise noted.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Perpetual Myth Of Anderson Silva

The way some fans and media talk about Anderson Silva these days—forever it seems actually—you would think that when Chris Weidman enters the cage against him at UFC 162, he’s putting himself at as much risk as Nik Wallenda did two we…

The way some fans and media talk about Anderson Silva these days—forever it seems actually—you would think that when Chris Weidman enters the cage against him at UFC 162, he’s putting himself at as much risk as Nik Wallenda did two weeks ago tightrope walking over the Grand Canyon.

They speak of any fighter taking a bout with Silva as a cautionary tale and embellish every one of his victories as if it were a chapter from a Brothers Grimm story.  

During last week’s UFC 162 conference call, a reporter asked Weidman if he hired a mental coach for his upcoming fight against Silva.

Really? 

While it is quite common for major-sport athletes to hire sport psychologists to help with their mental approach to their sport, this question seemed to imply that Weidman would need extreme mental preparation because he’s facing Silva, i.e., risking his life.

Maybe someone should’ve asked Weidman—who by the way, owns a degree in psychology—if he feels better now that his father will be with him, because it will be dark when he walks out to the Octagon; or if he has informed his wife and children he may not return from Vegas alive.  That’s how silly the question was and how ridiculous the overall conversation has become in regards to Silva.

Last time I checked, Weidman won’t be fighting Jason Voorhes on July 6, and when he gets in the cage in Las Vegas this weekend, Silva won’t be wielding a machete either.  He’ll be fitted with the same four-ounce gloves that Weidman will be wearing.

Yes, Silva is arguably the most dangerous striker the sport as ever seen.  Dangerous, as in an opponent can lose or get knocked out by him, not carted off in an ambulance or have last rites read to them.  To quote Tony Burton’s character Duke from the movie Rocky IV, “He’s not a machine, he’s a man.”

Silva has found himself in compromising positions before, been on the receiving end of strikes—some of which have knocked him down—and has fell victim to takedowns.  Although we have seen some sublime performances from him, flawless he is not.

Credit must be given to his 16-fight win streak.  It’s remarkable and unequivocally the best title run in UFC history.  While he has beaten all his opponents, there is quite a bit of revisionist history that forgets that he didn’t defeat all of his opponents in 30 seconds flat and that not all of them were exactly top-tier competition.

Yes, Silva has displayed a high level of skill.  That can’t be argued against, but some of his fights were over before they ever began.  Forrest Griffin and Yushin Okami gave up when they faced the champion, and both Thales Leites and Demian Maia stayed away from Silva like he was the third rail on the subway tracks.  That’s called intimidation.  They made it easy for Silva—by getting psyched out and not trying to the best of their abilities.

Aside from his other attributes, Weidman has confidence—a necessary ingredient that many others were missing when facing the champion.  Not many fighters have openly asked to fight Silva.  Weidman wants the challenge, and possesses a skill set strongly suited to match up well against the areas where we have seen Silva  most vulnerable.

While many experts feel that the long layoff will be a deterrent for the challenger, the flip side is that he has had a year to solely focus on dethroning the UFC middleweight king.

Silva has had a year to prepare as well, unless you count the TKO victory over Stephan Bonnar in October as being more than the equivalent of a sparring session.  He will be ready, is considered the favorite and has a considerable edge in experience.  However, that doesn’t mean Weidman can’t win even if he only has five fights in the UFC.  After all, Silva fought for the title in just his second fight for the promotion.

Look at the line for the fight. Silva is a -240 favorite (according to Bovada).  That is a particularly low line, especially for a Silva fight. Perhaps the oddsmakers are no longer subscribing to the perpetuating myth of how Silva can’t be beaten.

Weidman isn’t—and neither are several of his peers.  He knows that he’s not facing something super natural or fighting Neo from The Matrix.  He’s heading to UFC 162 to fight a man who happens to be the 185-pound champion, not a machine.      

Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Cain Velasquez vs. Junior Dos Santos 3 Heading to Houston on October 19

A date has been set for the rubber match between Junior dos Santos and current UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez.  Dana White has confirmed to ESPN the third heavyweight-title fight will take place on October 19 at the Toyota Center in Houst…

A date has been set for the rubber match between Junior dos Santos and current UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez.  Dana White has confirmed to ESPN the third heavyweight-title fight will take place on October 19 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas.

Velasquez defeated dos Santos by unanimous decision at UFC 156 in December of last year.   It was the highly anticipated rematch after dos Santos dethroned Velasquez at the first UFC on FOX card back in November 2011.

Since the rematch in December, both dos Santos and the current champion won their next fights.  Velasquez easily dispatched Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva at UFC 160, while dos Santos knocked out Mark Hunt by spinning back kick, in the last minute of the third round in the co-main event on the same card. The latter would win “Fight of the Night.”

The trilogy fight will headline what will likely be UFC 166, the third-ever UFC fight card at the Toyota Center.  UFC 69 and UFC 136 were the two prior events to take place in the arena.

Both of those main events were historic as Matt Serra had one of the greatest upsets in UFC history defeating Georges St Pierre at UFC 69 on April 7, 2007, while Frankie Edgar completed his trilogy with Gray Maynard with a knockout victory on October 8, 2011.

Velasquez is currently the No.6-ranked fighter on the UFC’s pound-for-pound rankings, and the AKA-team member will be seeking his second straight title defense.   

dos Santos is the No.1-ranked UFC heavyweight contender, and he will be trying reclaim the belt he once owned, and atone for the embarrassing defeat he suffered in the rematch.

Many experts agree that in the heavyweight division it’s Velasquez and dos Santos at the top, then everybody else.  There is a strong possibility that these two heavyweights could collide again after the third encounter in Houston.

White told ESPN it depends on how the fight unfolds: “I think if Cain wins the fight as impressively as he did the last one, it’d be tough to do that fight again,” White said.

Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report

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Glory Chief Executive Andrew Whitaker: ‘We Are Really On Our Way With SPIKE TV’

Remember Lloyd Dobbler? The lovable character portrayed by Jon Cusak in the late 80’s romantic comedy Say Anything? In a notable scene from the cult classic, he was asked by his girlfriend’s father at dinner to talk of his future plans:&nbs…

Remember Lloyd Dobbler? The lovable character portrayed by Jon Cusak in the late 80’s romantic comedy Say Anything? In a notable scene from the cult classic, he was asked by his girlfriend’s father at dinner to talk of his future plans: 

“So what I’ve been doing lately is kickboxing,” Dobbler said as other family members at dinner remained silent, much like the U.S. TV market since the sport’s inception. “Which is a new sport…I think it’s got a good future.”

Those same sentiments are shared by the upstart-kickboxing promotion Glory, as it signed a multi-year contract with SPIKE TV on Thursday, bringing its promotion to a channel that reaches nearly 100 million homes.

“We really wanted to find the exact right network for us and obviously SPIKE is in a class of its own in identifying what’s new and what’s next,” Chief Executive Andrew Whitaker told Bleacher Report. “Fortunately for us they agreed with us and believe we’re it. We really feel we’d be crazy not to take the best shot in hitting as many of Americas eyeballs as possible.“

The former WWE executive said SPIKE has “a good bunch of people to work with. Led by Kevin Kay, they have a good vision really in this. They’ve been there for the first meeting of the UFC,” he continued. “They took a gamble on that when it was unproven. He and his team, we really have respect for their foresight and how they really helped a big sport become really, an industry. We see ourselves very much as brothers in combat sports. To be a part of the SPIKE TV platform is a great thing.”

Glory just had its first big broadcast event in America on CBS Sports last Saturday. The event took place in Manhattan, but was shown later on delay playing second fiddle to the Arena Football League and Major Lacrosse league programming.

Whitaker had only praise for CBS calling them “the tiffany network of American broadcasting,” and a “great organization to work with,” before explaining why it wasn’t working out.  

“Essentially their programming commitments at this particular time lay elsewhere, and obviously we’ve done a deal with SPIKE and we are delighted with that,” he said. 

Kickboxing has never broken through in the States. The Professional Karate Association had kickboxing fights on ESPN during the mid-80s featuring the likes of Don “The Dragon” Wilson, Dennis “The Terminator” Alexio, and Jon Cusak’s mentor, Benny “The Jet” Urquidez, but they were not featured in prime time and did not gain huge popularity.

From the 90s into the turn of the century, the Japanese promotion K-1 became a kickboxing powerhouse.  It too would fail to capitalize in America. The promotion was televised on HDNet beginning in 2008, but it missed its big chance after a network deal with ESPN for a Friday-night time slot fell through in 2003.

How will Glory succeed where others have failed?

“I think you’ve sort of seen it firsthand yourself in New York, in Manhattan at Glory 9,” Whitaker said. “How it’s delivered, the caliber of talent that’s delivered in significant numbers.  The top-flight kickboxing athletes that are in Glory are really the crème de la crème when it comes to this discipline, coupled with the television production that is being delivered—I think by any standard is extremely high.”

It certainly has the best in the sport under its umbrella with fighters like Tyrone Spong, Daniel Ghita and Gokhan Saki among others. The production is loud as well as big, with a huge video screen being the backdrop for every fighter’s introduction and pyrotechnics adding to fans’ excitement.

A huge advantage with the SPIKE deal, Whitaker admits Glory “will be on in prime time” and “it will be live,” before saying he couldn’t reveal any other details as of now.  

“We will be announcing the specifics very shortly as it relates to the end of 2013 and, for that matter, the whole of 2014 as well,” he said.

While Glory can lay claim to having the best kickboxers in the world, it also have a smart strategy in place to build homegrown talent in the U.S. with “The Road to Glory” tournaments that have led to Glory contracts for the winners.

“There is tremendous young athletic talent in America,” Whitaker said. “I just really think that when it comes to kickboxing—I wouldn’t say it’s been lying dormant—it’s been active, it just hasn’t been active with the platform to assert it enough. I think the development of bringing up young Glory kickboxers is integral to the long term and mid-term health of the Glory sporting brand.”

While kickboxing only had boxing as a chief rival in the 80s and 90s, it now has MMA as well. Some fans will enjoy both sports, but others who aren’t particularly fond of the grappling aspect of MMA may prefer the stand-up action Glory can provide.

“You are not going to hear anything negative from Glory about MMA—as best exemplified obviously by the UFC,” Whitaker said. “Anybody who is anybody in the sports business and the television business the last x number of years knows that they’re the ones that people look up to, as it relates to what they have done in a very pioneering sense. In a kickboxing discipline we would very much want to emulate their success.”

The Glory chief executive gives the impression the goal isn’t to compete with MMA, it’s to carve out their own niche.

“I think it’s probably like anything else in sports, there’s some crossover but I think at the same time there will be a whole new and different audience as well that will be watching kickboxing,” he said.

Whitaker explained how he can translate his knowledge, experience and expertise he gained from working with the WWE into success for Glory.

“I think the fact is obviously WWE, as everybody knows, is entertainment,” Whitaker said. “Moving that to one side, it is first and foremost a live event arena attraction that has a television component. That has the live events component. It has consumer products, merchandising, licensing, it has online and digital publishing response to it. So the same lines of business that sit in an entertainment company, sit in sporting brands as well.”

“While there is no quote-unquote similarity necessarily between a pure sport and an athletic form of entertainment,” Whitaker said.

He explained how the day-to-day operations of pro wrestling and a combat-sports promotion like Glory are very similar.

“The fact remains that there are the fundamental disciplines of marketing and public relations supporting all those lines of business that make a lot of the same work that you need to do with a sports league or a sports brand the same as you would for entertainment,” he concluded.

Whitaker referred to Glory as an “emerging global super league” and said the overall goal is “to build out Glory, and the intellectual property that Glory is, across all lines of business.  

“To build out the successful multi-line business that any sports league aspires to, whatever sport that happens to be that operates globally,” he continued. “We are very much fixated on building a successful multi-divisional business, a major global attraction where it’s watched by millions and millions of viewers on a regular basis. One in which we deliver many more live events where we build out and develop the other lines of business, such as at some point pay-per-view. And everything that goes along with having a healthy super league.”

Glory already has the popularity abroad. The U.S. is obviously its toughest challenge and now its main focus. They were able to land the deal with SPIKE after only a little over a year in existence. Even with the talent pool it has acquired, along with developing new talent, it could still fail. However, it appears as if it will be making the hardest effort and best attempt at succeeding yet.

“We believe we are the next big thing, but we’re not there yet,” a confident but honest Whitaker said. “We’re quite a ways away from being a billion or multi-billion dollar brand.  We firmly believe that give us a few years and come and check on us then.  We believe we have something really amazing here and we are really are on our way with SPIKE TV.”

Maybe Lloyd Dobbler was right. Maybe kickboxing really is the sport of the future. If Glory succeeds in the U.S. we’ll know he was.

Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.  All quotes were obtained first hand unless otherwise noted.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Rashad Evans: ‘I Wouldn’t Say the Swag Is Gone’

Rashad Evans was in New York City this past weekend. Not to fight of course—since MMA isn’t legal yet in the Empire state. He was in town to support his good friend and Blackzilian teammate Tyrone Spong—who would be competing at Glor…

Rashad Evans was in New York City this past weekend. Not to fight of course—since MMA isn’t legal yet in the Empire state. He was in town to support his good friend and Blackzilian teammate Tyrone Spong—who would be competing at Glory 9.

Evans would be serving as one of Spong’s cornermen and getting as good a view of the talented kickboxer as he gets at the Jaco Hybrid Training Center on a daily basis.

“Tyrone looked real sharp in camp,” Evans told Bleacher Report at the Hammerstein Ballroom this past Saturday. “He’s adding another level to his skill. I’m excited to see what he’s going to do.”

Spong went on to win the night’s light-heavyweight tournament. One of his victories was a brutal knockout, showcasing a skill set Evans said couldn’t be used at full speed against him in practice.

“I could go 100 percent all I want to, but if he went 100 percent it wouldn’t be too good,” Evans said laughing. “It’s just a different level all together. Somebody like Tyrone, at his level with his hands and his feet, it’s dangerous, it’s lethal. When he spars me, he looks out for me.”

Evans was born in New York and began his wrestling career at Niagara Wheatfield High School. Yet, the closest he’s come to fighting there is when he defeated Michael Bisping at UFC 78: Validation in Newark, NJ.

“New York, there is nothing like it, it’s the center,” Evans says with excitement. “There have been a lot of great fights that happened here. To be able to fight here would be amazing.”

The 33-year-old former champion’s last fight was a split decision win over Dan Henderson in Winnipeg, Canada. It was a fight he needed to win in order to avoid his third-straight loss, which is usually the kiss of death in the UFC.

“When you are fighting on that bubble, it’s no fun,” Evans admitted. “You don’t want to be on that proverbial bubble of losing three fights. Dropping three fights in MMA, it gets hard to bring that momentum back. Being able to bring my momentum back…haven’t had a win or looked good…fighting someone like Dan Henderson, of his caliber and getting a win over someone like him—a legend—it was good.”

When Evans smiled as Bruce Buffer announced him as the winner that night, you could see it was a relief and how much it meant to him. On top of already dealing with a two-fight losing streak, the No.4-ranked light heavyweight has been dealing with a divorce and spending time away from his children.

Revealing that personal information to the media before UFC 161 was also cathartic for him.

“It was definitely important, that’s why I brought it up,” Evans explained. “Most times, people only see one aspect of a fighter. People forget that fighters, celebrities, we’re real people too. We have real problems like everybody else. Just because you admire what we do, it does not mean that we don’t have problems like you.”

Another problem Evans has been facing in recent months is the criticism of his “Blackzilian” fight camp. “We didn’t seem so hot, and we had a lot of hype coming with us, so you have to take the good with the bad,” he said.

Evans was speaking objectively. But, you could hear in his voice the pride that he has in himself and his Blackzilian teammates. “There is another side to it as well,” Evans said as he continued on the topic.

“When you have that much attention, you have to perform at an extremely high level all the time,” he admitted. “If not, then you are going to get that criticism. I think the criticism is what drove us, and what propelled us. I think that what doesn’t break you makes you stronger. And I think that the criticism is something that made us stronger.”

With the win over Henderson at UFC 161, and Vitor Belfort’s recent KO victory over Luke Rockhold, criticism of the Blackzilian camp has already started to subside. Spong winning the Glory 9 light-heavyweight Slam will certainly bring more positive attention toward the heavily-scrutinized camp.

Evans went over a year between victories, losing back-to-back fights for the first time in his career. Some have claimed that the fighter—who was once known for being cocky—has lost his swag.

“I wouldn’t say the swag is gone,” Evans said. “I still feel it and stuff like that. For the most part, I just let the fight happen, and I go with my emotions. I can’t go out there and try to be a certain way. When it happens, it happens. I just go with the flow and whatever I feel, I feel.”

“People say my swag is gone, he lost this, he lost that, but when I was doing it they had nothing but bad things to say about it,” Evans said.

He’s correct. He was criticized while he was a contestant on the second season of The Ultimate Fighter by UFC Hall of Famer Matt Hughes, along with many others for his in-cage antics and showing other fighters up.

“I try not to worry about what people say. I just do what I feel,” Evans admitted. “If I go out there and feel like it and that’s how I feel and I express myself doing it then that’s great, but I can’t worry too much about what people say because, like I said before, they were saying I show off and I’m too cocky and now I don’t do it and now I lost my swag.”

Evans comes across as a person who is very self-aware. He has a pulse on what works for him and what doesn’t. Being able to admit to his personal issues and avoiding a dangerous third loss in a row may put him back on the track to getting another crack at Jon Jones’ belt.

He is still the only fighter to go the distance with the current light-heavyweight champion. Being ranked in the top four of the division, it’s not out of the realm of possibility that another victory could get him back in line for a championship rematch.

What would he do differently the second time?

“Stick to my game plan and, more importantly, go out there and fight using my best attributes,” Evans said. “Sometimes we seem to make a fight much more complicated than it really needs to be. Really what it breaks down to is imposing your will on your opponent. Jon Jones is very talented and he is an extremely difficult opponent to match,” he continued. “You try to match him on every single one of his strengths, you will have your head filled for days and you’re not going to be able to do it. So you just have to go out there and fight your fight. Try to impose your will, and that’s the only way you are going to win a fight.”

Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.  All quotes were obtained first hand unless otherwise noted.

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Tyrone Spong Wins Glory 9 Light Heavyweight Slam with 16-Second TKO in Final

Tyrone Spong wants to be the best ever.  He proved on Saturday night that he is among the elite in all of combat sports. By defeating the No. 1, No. 2 and No. 4-ranked Glory light heavyweights in the same night, he won the Glory 9 Light Heavyweigh…

Tyrone Spong wants to be the best ever.  He proved on Saturday night that he is among the elite in all of combat sports. By defeating the No. 1, No. 2 and No. 4-ranked Glory light heavyweights in the same night, he won the Glory 9 Light Heavyweight Slam and earned $200,000 in the process.

Everyone in attendance at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City witnessed Spong make kickboxing history, even if a couple of his chapters ended quickly.  A semifinal unanimous-decision victory was bookended by two first-round knockouts that totaled 47 seconds.

The “King of the Ring” improved to 89-5-0 with 59 career knockouts.  However, Spong’s night was almost over before it began.  In the opening seconds of his first fight, Michael Duut caught the veteran kickboxer off guard with a right cross, dropping him immediately.

The punch must have angered him.  After getting up and regaining his wits, he finished off the Dutchman with a wicked right hand, ending Duut’s night just 31 seconds into the first round and bringing the Manhattan crowd to its feet.

“I was pissed off,” Spong admitted to Bleacher Report after the fight’s conclusion.  “I wasn’t hurt bad, it was more of a slip, but he caught me with a good shot, no doubt about it.  I was still sleeping a little bit in the first round.  He gave me a wake-up call.”

The Blackzilians team member faced his toughest challenge in the semifinal round against Filip Verlinden.  Spong had the advantage of ending his first fight in less than a minute, while the Belgian fighter had to earn a hard-fought majority-decision win over Steve McKinnon.

The 27-year-old Spong showed his ring smarts and patience in this fight.  Verlinden was a game opponent and fought valiantly, but Spong controlled the action.  He was never in significant danger, landed more effective strikes and won by 30-27 on all three judges’ scorecards for a unanimous-decision win.

Spong complimented Verlinden.  “He’s a smart fighter, very intelligent.  He saw in the first fight that it was dangerous to stand or to try to trade with me.  He did a good job. I had to fight smart too and technical to get the W, so I did.”

In the opposing bracket, Danyo Ilunga—a protégé of Remy Bonjasky—defeated Tunisian standout Mourad Bouzidi by majority decision in his quarterfinal matchup. The four-time world champion from Germany punched his ticket to the finals by winning a unanimous decision over Road to Glory USA tournament winner Dustin Jacoby in the semifinals.

Spong knocked out Bonjasky at Glory 5 in London in March, so the student Ilunga could have been looking for revenge in this tournament final, but the “King of the Ring” put a quick stop to that story, winning by TKO in just 16 seconds.

The ending didn’t come without controversy, as many in attendance thought referee Minitel Izo Gaudi had prematurely stopped the contest.  Spong connected with a big right hand that wobbled Ilunga.  When he followed up with two left hooks and a left to the body, the referee jumped in to intervene, waving off the contest.

“I think it was a smart stoppage,” Spong stated.  “The referee is here to protect the fighters.”

Bleacher Report spoke with some of the Glory officials after the controversial stoppage and learned that there is no “standing eight count” in their promotion.  Therefore, the referee could only step in to stop the fight—he couldn’t start a count on Ilunga as if it were a knockdown.  

He must have seen something in Ilunga’s body language to make him halt the bout to prevent the fighter from taking further damage.

The fans most likely didn‘t know about the rule, as they booed and complained about the early stoppage, leaving the only blemish on an otherwise solid night of fights.  Spong was empathetic toward the crowd’s reaction:

“I can understand that the fans want to see more, but I could’ve knocked him out badly and caused some serious damage.  I think it was a fair stoppage.  If he didn’t stop it he was going to get knocked out.”

Winning the tournament on the first night he has ever fought in America—let alone New York City—meant a lot to Spong.

“I’m real happy.  It’s a childhood dream coming true.  I’m a big boxing fan, all the big fights happen here in New York.  For this small guy who grew up in Amsterdam and who was born in Suriname, I’m just real happy to be able to be part of this first event here and win in an impressive way.  And just make a statement, and promote the sport here in America.  I hope it continues to go like this and get even bigger.”

While Spong may have won the light heavyweight slam, he is the No. 4 heavyweight in Glory.  What weight class will he contend at next?

“I’ll fight money weight,” Spong stated, perhaps coining a new weight class all to his own.  “I’ll fight every weight, light heavyweight, heavyweight, super heavyweight, I don’t care.”

The Dutch-Surinamese fighter’s next bout will be in MMA at World Series of Fighting 4 in August.  His goal on Saturday was to win three fights.  He revealed that his next goal is to fight in three different combat sports.

“After the MMA fight, we are going for a boxing fight.”

Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.  All quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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