Mauricio ‘Shogun’ Rua Robbed at Gunpoint in Brazil

Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, a popular UFC light heavyweight and a former champion in both the UFC and the defunct Pride promotion, was reportedly robbed at gunpoint by a group of men in his native Brazil.
The story was reported Friday afternoon by Portugues…

Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, a popular UFC light heavyweight and a former champion in both the UFC and the defunct Pride promotion, was reportedly robbed at gunpoint by a group of men in his native Brazil.

The story was reported Friday afternoon by Portuguese-language MMA website PVT and later translated by Guilherme Cruz of MMAFighting:

According to the translated report, the four armed men left Rua on the side of a highway without a shirt, shoes or a car as the former light heavyweight champ drove back to his hotel room following a dinner with manager Eduardo Alonso and fellow UFC fighter Demian Maia.

“We were in Rio de Janeiro with Demian and we went to dinner with Mauricio at a restaurant,” Alonso said, according to the translation. “He was driving a friend’s car at Linha Vermelha and he was forced to stop by another guy with four men armed with rifles. … They took his clothes, money and his friend’s car. They said ‘I know who you are, you’re a fighter. Don’t try anything.’ It was a sad situation.”

Rua was subsequently forced to walk along the highway to safety. 

Shogun last fought in the UFC in March, when he lost by TKO to Dan Henderson at UFC Fight Night 38. Rua, 32, is 22-9 in his pro MMA career. He does not yet have his next fight scheduled. Five of his nine professional losses have come in his past eight fights.

Rua may be best known among hardcore fans for winning the Pride 2005 Middleweight Grand Prix, defeating Quinton Jackson, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Alistair Overeem and Ricardo Arona along the way.

In 2010, Rua defeated Lyoto Machida to capture the UFC light heavyweight title. However, he failed to defend the title even once, losing the belt in his next contest to Jon Jones, who has held the title ever since.

The Brazilian is popular for his exciting Muay Thai kickboxing style, though he has slowed in recent years. It is unclear what his future holds in the UFC, though he is still an active fighter. It is also unclear how or even if the robbery might affect Rua’s situation.

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Shogun Rua robbed at gunpoint by four men with rifles in Brazil

Mauricio Rua won’t forget his last trip to Rio de Janeiro.

The former UFC light heavyweight champion was in the “Marvelous City” with his sponsors earlier this month and decided to have dinner with his manager Eduardo Alonso, as well as fellow UFC fighter Demian Maia at Barra da Tijuca. Driving back to his hotel in Niteroi, a city located 25 miles away from Barra da Tijuca, “Shogun” was robbed by a four armed men.

“We were in Rio de Janeiro with Demain and we went to dinner with Mauricio at a restaurant,” Alonso told PVT. “At the end of the night, he left us at the hotel at Barra da Tijuca and drove back to Niteroi, where he was staying. He was driving a friend’s car at Linha Vermelha and he was forced to stop by another guy with four men armed with rifles.

“They took his clothes, money and his friend’s car. They said ‘I know who you are, you’re a fighter. Don’t try anything.’ It was a sad situation.”

Rua had to walk from Linha Vermelha, one of the most dangerous expressways of the city, during the night.

“They took everything, even his shirt,” he continued. “He was shoeless and shirtless. Imagine a guy at his size asking for a ride in the middle of the night. Nobody stopped to help him. He had to walk one mile to get to the police station. It was tense, but it’s all good now.”

Nothing worse happened to “Shogun,” as he provided assistance once he got to the police station.

The UFC light heavyweight, who recently underwent surgery for a broken nose, has no timetable for his return to the Octagon.

“We’re not sure when Mauricio will be cleared to fight,” Alonso said, “so we will wait and see if anything interesting happens.

“I really wanted to watch a fight between Shogun and Rogerio ‘Minotouro’ (Nogueira). There are cards in Japan and in Brazil in September and that would make sense, but now that they matched Rogerio against Anthony Johnson, I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Mauricio Rua won’t forget his last trip to Rio de Janeiro.

The former UFC light heavyweight champion was in the “Marvelous City” with his sponsors earlier this month and decided to have dinner with his manager Eduardo Alonso, as well as fellow UFC fighter Demian Maia at Barra da Tijuca. Driving back to his hotel in Niteroi, a city located 25 miles away from Barra da Tijuca, “Shogun” was robbed by a four armed men.

“We were in Rio de Janeiro with Demain and we went to dinner with Mauricio at a restaurant,” Alonso told PVT. “At the end of the night, he left us at the hotel at Barra da Tijuca and drove back to Niteroi, where he was staying. He was driving a friend’s car at Linha Vermelha and he was forced to stop by another guy with four men armed with rifles.

“They took his clothes, money and his friend’s car. They said ‘I know who you are, you’re a fighter. Don’t try anything.’ It was a sad situation.”

Rua had to walk from Linha Vermelha, one of the most dangerous expressways of the city, during the night.

“They took everything, even his shirt,” he continued. “He was shoeless and shirtless. Imagine a guy at his size asking for a ride in the middle of the night. Nobody stopped to help him. He had to walk one mile to get to the police station. It was tense, but it’s all good now.”

Nothing worse happened to “Shogun,” as he provided assistance once he got to the police station.

The UFC light heavyweight, who recently underwent surgery for a broken nose, has no timetable for his return to the Octagon.

“We’re not sure when Mauricio will be cleared to fight,” Alonso said, “so we will wait and see if anything interesting happens.

“I really wanted to watch a fight between Shogun and Rogerio ‘Minotouro’ (Nogueira). There are cards in Japan and in Brazil in September and that would make sense, but now that they matched Rogerio against Anthony Johnson, I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Friday Links: Guida vs. Bermudez Booked, British Columbia Bans TRT, Laura Carmine’s Booty + More


(Dios mio! Mexican soap star Laura Carmine gets “Booty of the Day” honors on HolyTaco. More pics here.)

Clay Guida Draws Dennis Bermudez at FOX UFC Saturday in San Jose (FoxSports)

Healthy Tito Ortiz Says He Has ‘No Excuses’ (MMAFighting)

Do Fellow UFC Fighters Believe Jon Jones’ Tactics Make Him a Dirty Fighter? (MMAJunkie)

With UFC 174 on the Horizon, British Columbia Athletic Commission Bans TRT Exemptions in MMA (MMAMania)

MMA Instructor Brian Kuhn Kicks The Crap Out Of Burglar (HuffingtonPost)

“Low Budget Beasts” Is Your New Favorite Tumblr (PopHangover)

The 9 Types of Bros You Met in College (EveryJoe)

Jeff Van Gundy Keeps Talking Rihanna (TerezOwens)

The 50 Funniest Double Take Photos Ever (WorldWideInterweb)

Screen Junkies Show: Best Mutant Powers! (ScreenJunkies)

The Hardest Video Games to Complete (Ranker)

17 Things Only a Dude With a Big Penis Says (Guyism)


(Dios mio! Mexican soap star Laura Carmine gets “Booty of the Day” honors on HolyTaco. More pics here.)

Clay Guida Draws Dennis Bermudez at FOX UFC Saturday in San Jose (FoxSports)

Healthy Tito Ortiz Says He Has ‘No Excuses’ (MMAFighting)

Do Fellow UFC Fighters Believe Jon Jones’ Tactics Make Him a Dirty Fighter? (MMAJunkie)

With UFC 174 on the Horizon, British Columbia Athletic Commission Bans TRT Exemptions in MMA (MMAMania)

MMA Instructor Brian Kuhn Kicks The Crap Out Of Burglar (HuffingtonPost)

“Low Budget Beasts” Is Your New Favorite Tumblr (PopHangover)

The 9 Types of Bros You Met in College (EveryJoe)

Jeff Van Gundy Keeps Talking Rihanna (TerezOwens)

The 50 Funniest Double Take Photos Ever (WorldWideInterweb)

Screen Junkies Show: Best Mutant Powers! (ScreenJunkies)

The Hardest Video Games to Complete (Ranker)

17 Things Only a Dude With a Big Penis Says (Guyism)

Dennis Bermudez vs. Clay Guida scheduled for UFC on FOX 12

Dennis Bermudez is getting the step up he was looking for.
The New York-native will meet Clay Guida (31-14) on the main card of UFC on FOX 12 on July 26 in San Jose, Calif. FOXSports.com first reported the featherweight fight news on Friday….

Dennis Bermudez is getting the step up he was looking for.

The New York-native will meet Clay Guida (31-14) on the main card of UFC on FOX 12 on July 26 in San Jose, Calif. FOXSports.com first reported the featherweight fight news on Friday.

Last week, Bermudez (13-3), a winner of his last six fights in a row, told MMAFighting.com that he wanted to fight Dustin Poirier next, but it appears as though the UFC has other plans for Poirier. And while this will mark the first time Bermudez has fought on a main card during his winning streak, he didn’t seem bothered by the fact he wasn’t dominating the MMA headlines.

“I was talking to my manager [Ryan Parsons] the other day and he said, ‘We need to create a buzz around you. It seems like when you’re fighting you get a bit of a buzz, but when you’re not fighting no one cares about you.

“I think I’m funny. I think I’m interesting. I try to do cool things and share it with my social media. I was kidding around [with Parson and suggested], Maybe I should get arrested? He was like, No, we don’t want to go that avenue.

“I’m not talking smack, not that I’m afraid. I’m trying to be more professional with the sport. I don’t want it to be like WWF. I just want to go in and fight. That’s what I want to be remembered for, a great fighter.”

Bermudez’s streak has consisted of wins over Pablo Garza, Tommy Hayden, Matt Grice, Max Holloway, Steven Siler and Jimy Hettes. He now faces the veteran Guida, who’s coming off a unanimous decision win over Tatsuya Kawajiri last month in Abu Dhabi, by far his most dominant win in years.

Already announced for the event, which will take place at the SAP Center, is Anthony Johnson vs. Antonio Rogerio Nogueira and Josh Thomson vs. Michael Johnson.

Rampage vs. King Mo Could Raise More Questions Than It Answers for Bellator

Amid all the chaos surrounding Bellator 120, there has been precious little time to consider Emanuel Newton.Odd, considering Newton is ostensibly the prize at the end of the fight company’s long, strange second try at pay-per-view. The winner of …

Amid all the chaos surrounding Bellator 120, there has been precious little time to consider Emanuel Newton.

Odd, considering Newton is ostensibly the prize at the end of the fight company’s long, strange second try at pay-per-view. The winner of Saturday night’s revamped main event between Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Muhammed Lawal will be crowned the Bellator Season 10 light heavyweight tournament winner and earn a shot at his 205-pound title.

At least, that’s what’s supposed to happen, in theory.

In practice, the aftermath of Jackson vs. Lawal might only present more vexing questions for an organization that so often seems short on answers.

For starters, Lawal already lost twice to Newton during the last 15 months; first, by a knockout-of-the-year quality spinning backfist in February of 2013 and then by fairly tepid unanimous decision in November. The tournament automatically provides a mechanism to engineer a third fight between the two, but good luck getting anyone aside from the promotion’s baseline 500,000 viewers to care.

Under normal circumstances that alone could be enough to prompt Bellator execs to secretly hope for a Jackson victory. He comes into this bout as more than a 2-1 favorite, according to BestFightOdds.com, and has proved himself to be one of the fight company’s only real ratings draws since jumping ship from the UFC last year.

Except for one minor detail—and this should give everybody a good laugh.

Jackson hinted this week to MMA Junkie.com’s Steven Marrocco that he might not agree to fight Newton.

“Why not let the young cats be the champion and have their belt?” the 35-year-old former UFC titlist said. “Emanuel and I have the same coach. That’s going to divide our gym. I really don’t care for the belt … I’d rather not fight him.”

Classic.

Only Rampage Jackson could enter a four-man tournament obviously designed to give him a good chance to win and a few days before the final round announce, you know what, forget it. He’s not going to do that thing he’s supposed to do. He really doesn’t “care” about the whole reason they had the tournament in the first place.

This should surprise exactly zero onlookers. Jackson, after all, has been making life difficult for MMA promoters since Lawal was still sporting black and orange and walking the quad back at Oklahoma State. When his relationship with the UFC short-circuited and he signed with Bellator, we all knew there could be trouble.

So, to recap: If Lawal wins, Bellator has a fight it probably can’t sell. If Jackson wins, it has one it might not be able to make at all.

What to do?

If Jackson emerges victorious, try to convince him to fight his teammate? That might work, but it might also put Bellator at odds with one of the most cantankerous fighters in the business. Once Jackson gets crosswise with an employer, it rarely ends well.

If Lawal takes it, suck it up and book a third fight with Newton? That might work, but it would feel fairly anticlimactic. Not sure it would lead to any more of the “big, significant pay-per-view events” Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney pined for on this week’s MMA Junkie Radio.

Perhaps there is another option. Perhaps neither Jackson nor Lawal ends up fighting Newton at all.

With the specter of Tito Ortiz still lurking around, would anybody really be surprised if Ortiz manages to sneak past middleweight Alexander Shlemenko and then winds up in the cage to challenge the Lawal/Jackson winner?

It wouldn’t be a perfect—or even advisable—plot twist, but if Ortiz is going to hang around attempting to fight in your MMA company, you have to do something with him, right?

The tournament has always been king in Bellator, but from the beginning this one has seemed a bit different. With just two rounds and two recognizable faces, it appeared tailor-made to produce a bout between Jackson and Lawal, rather than identify the next challenger for the title.

In that sense, Bellator may have already gotten what it wanted.

It would be a sad turn for Newton if either Lawal or Jackson gets booked elsewhere. It already feels like the 30-year-old champion is being summarily overshadowed in his own division, despite a 6-1 organizational record and two wins over one of this weekend’s main eventers.

But this is the fight game, where feelings and even the rules often finish second to the bottom line.

Perhaps the biggest question for Bellator coming out of this show will be to stick closely to its tournament format and move forward with an underwhelming title bout, or to chase a bigger matchup and leave Newton dancing by himself

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Alexis Dufresne: ‘Being in the UFC means I can punch b**ches in the face and not go to jail’

Sarah Moras will make her UFC debut on July 6 in Las Vegas, Nev,, at The Ultimate Fighter 19 Finale card, but the unbeaten Team Quest product Alexis Dufresne won’t let the TUF star get away with the win.

Dufresne enters the UFC for the first time with a perfect MMA record with five stoppage victories, including a 45-second knockout over Strikeforce veteran Kim Couture. Dufresne, who was forced out of a UFC bout with Amanda Nunes due to a rib injury, feels ready to shine.

“I’m 100 percent and ready to fight,” she told MMAFighting.com. “Good luck to her, she will need it.

“Being nervous makes stupid mistakes happen. Being in the UFC means I can punch b**ches in the face and not go to jail.”

Moras lost to TUF 18 winner Julianna Pena on the reality show, but Dufresne admits she hasn’t watched her fights. And she doesn’t plan to do it.

“I don’t watch videos of my opponents,” she said. “My coaches do that, I don’t care. I feel like it’s a good game plan just fighting her. Wherever she wants to take the fight, she will be outmatched.

“It’s always good to train with the top athletes (at Team Quest). Getting beat up every day is good.”

Ricardo “Pantcho” Feliciano, Dufresne’s jiu-jitsu coach at Team Quest, watched Moras’ fights and is confident that the unbeaten bantamweight will make some noise in the Octagon.

“She has been training hard for this opportunity,” he said. “She will be 100 percent ready and focused to do a great UFC debut. She’s here to stay. She hasn’t fought in the UFC so she’s not very known yet, but with her aggressive and technical style she won’t be forgotten.

“She’s training everything here at Team Quest,” he continued. “She’s working on her wrestling, MMA and stand up game, but her ground game is her best weapon, no doubt about it.”

Dufresne doesn’t think Alexis Davis has what it takes to dethrone Ronda Rousey at UFC 175, but she won’t think about the champion yet.

“I focus on the fight in front of me and move on from there,” she said.

Dufresne won gold medals at multiple jiu-jitsu tournaments as a blue, purple and brown belt, including IBBJF World and Pan-American Championships. She says that “nobody has a perfect weapon” to beat anyone in this sport, but believes she “can be the UFC champion.”

“Pantcho” admits she has work to do before thinking about beating a grappling wizard like Rousey, but is confident that a UFC title will go to Team Quest in the future.

“That’s the reason why I’ve been working hard to get her in the UFC,” he said. “She’s really tough and has a lot to learn, and with patience and training, she will be the UFC champion.”

Sarah Moras will make her UFC debut on July 6 in Las Vegas, Nev,, at The Ultimate Fighter 19 Finale card, but the unbeaten Team Quest product Alexis Dufresne won’t let the TUF star get away with the win.

Dufresne enters the UFC for the first time with a perfect MMA record with five stoppage victories, including a 45-second knockout over Strikeforce veteran Kim Couture. Dufresne, who was forced out of a UFC bout with Amanda Nunes due to a rib injury, feels ready to shine.

“I’m 100 percent and ready to fight,” she told MMAFighting.com. “Good luck to her, she will need it.

“Being nervous makes stupid mistakes happen. Being in the UFC means I can punch b**ches in the face and not go to jail.”

Moras lost to TUF 18 winner Julianna Pena on the reality show, but Dufresne admits she hasn’t watched her fights. And she doesn’t plan to do it.

“I don’t watch videos of my opponents,” she said. “My coaches do that, I don’t care. I feel like it’s a good game plan just fighting her. Wherever she wants to take the fight, she will be outmatched.

“It’s always good to train with the top athletes (at Team Quest). Getting beat up every day is good.”

Ricardo “Pantcho” Feliciano, Dufresne’s jiu-jitsu coach at Team Quest, watched Moras’ fights and is confident that the unbeaten bantamweight will make some noise in the Octagon.

“She has been training hard for this opportunity,” he said. “She will be 100 percent ready and focused to do a great UFC debut. She’s here to stay. She hasn’t fought in the UFC so she’s not very known yet, but with her aggressive and technical style she won’t be forgotten.

“She’s training everything here at Team Quest,” he continued. “She’s working on her wrestling, MMA and stand up game, but her ground game is her best weapon, no doubt about it.”

Dufresne doesn’t think Alexis Davis has what it takes to dethrone Ronda Rousey at UFC 175, but she won’t think about the champion yet.

“I focus on the fight in front of me and move on from there,” she said.

Dufresne won gold medals at multiple jiu-jitsu tournaments as a blue, purple and brown belt, including IBBJF World and Pan-American Championships. She says that “nobody has a perfect weapon” to beat anyone in this sport, but believes she “can be the UFC champion.”

“Pantcho” admits she has work to do before thinking about beating a grappling wizard like Rousey, but is confident that a UFC title will go to Team Quest in the future.

“That’s the reason why I’ve been working hard to get her in the UFC,” he said. “She’s really tough and has a lot to learn, and with patience and training, she will be the UFC champion.”