Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum, 3 Fights Could Steal Show from Main Event

Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum, 3 Fights Could Steal Show from Main EventBleacher Report’s Chris Ternate:The Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix Tournament began with an early exit of the legendary Fedor Emelianenko and a devastating knockout of former…

Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum, 3 Fights Could Steal Show from Main Event

Bleacher Report’s Chris Ternate:

The Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix Tournament began with an early exit of the legendary Fedor Emelianenko and a devastating knockout of former UFC Heavyweight Champion Andrei Arlovski.

As a result, all the hype is swirling around the rematch between the man who bested Fedor Emelianenko, Fabricio Werdum and the current DREAM, Strikeforce and K-1 World Grand Prix Champion, Alistair Overeem.

Now, the tournament’s second half of opening round bouts begins with Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum.

However, here are three fights happening on the same card that could end up stealing the show from Overeem and Werdum.

Gambling Addiction Enabler — ‘Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum’ Edition


(“Overeem is my son. Scott Coker is my uncle. Gina Carano is my hot cousin. Josh Barnett is my sister’s meathead boyfriend.”)

Betting odds for the complete lineup of tomorrow night’s Strikeforce card were released yesterday, and looking over these numbers, it seems like the perfect opportunity to dig yourself out of the hole you put yourself in by following our previous gambling advice. Now, we don’t actually recommend the use of off-shore gambling sites these days, in light of the government’s recent eRaids, but hey, entertainment purposes and all, right? Check out the juiciest lines for Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum, courtesy of BestFightOdds.com, then listen very carefully to what we have to say…

Main Card (Showtime, 10 p.m.)
Alistair Overeem (-321) vs. Fabricio Werdum (+300)
Josh Barnett (-319) vs. Brett Rogers (+309)
K.J. Noons (-144) vs. Jorge Masvidal (+135)
Daniel Cormier (-300) vs. Jeff Monson (+325)
Valentijn Overeem (+111) vs. Chad Griggs (-122)


(“Overeem is my son. Scott Coker is my uncle. Gina Carano is my hot cousin. Josh Barnett is my sister’s meathead boyfriend.”)

Betting odds for the complete lineup of tomorrow night’s Strikeforce card were released yesterday, and looking over these numbers, it seems like the perfect opportunity to dig yourself out of the hole you put yourself in by following our previous gambling advice. Now, we don’t actually recommend the use of off-shore gambling sites these days, in light of the government’s recent eRaids, but hey, entertainment purposes and all, right? Check out the juiciest lines for Strikeforce: Overeem vs. Werdum, courtesy of BestFightOdds.com, then listen very carefully to what we have to say…

Main Card (Showtime, 10 p.m.)
Alistair Overeem (-321) vs. Fabricio Werdum (+300)
Josh Barnett (-319) vs. Brett Rogers (+309)
K.J. Noons (-144) vs. Jorge Masvidal (+135)
Daniel Cormier (-300) vs. Jeff Monson (+325)
Valentijn Overeem (+111) vs. Chad Griggs (-122)

Preliminary Card (HDNet, 8 p.m. ET)
Gesias Cavalcante (-115) vs. Justin Wilcox (+110)
Conor Heun (+120) vs. Magno Almeida (-130)
Nah-Shon Burrell (+275) vs. Joe Ray (-313)
Todd Moore (+260) vs. Mike Bronzoulis (-280)
Brian Melancon (-115) vs. Isaac Vallie-Flagg (+105)

The Main Event: Look, I hug Ubereem’s nuts as much as the next dude. I’m just saying, Werdum was a +430 underdog against Fedor Emelianenko, and he managed to end that fight in 69 seconds. (He was also good enough to submit Overeem five years ago, if that means anything to you.) Most likely, Overeem will be able keep the fight standing and have his way with Werdum — but there’s always the chance that Fabricio could catch the jacked Dutchman. And since he’d triple your investment, it’s worth a modest bet.

The Good ‘Dogs: A lot of them, actually — this is definitely a card that encourages risk. Besides the main event, you have Jeff Monson as a more-than-3-to-1 underdog against Daniel Cormier. Cormier is undefeated, and always impressive in his fights, but he’s a baby in the sport, and he’s never faced anybody even remotely close to Monson’s level of skill and experience. (Stupid fact: In the Snowman’s 53-fight career, he’s earned the same number of wins via north/south choke [7] as Cormier has total fights on his record.) The line is a little inflated, is what I’m saying.

Similarly, the well-traveled Valentijn Overeem is a slight underdog against rising prospect Chad Griggs, when I’d put Alistair’s bro as a slight favorite. But the opposite is true in Cavalcante vs. Wilcox. Despite JZ’s previous history of top-ten-ranked excellence, he’s really struggled to make an impact in the last three years, while Wilcox has been on a tear. Cash on the Silverback could pay off.

Keep Away: Josh Barnett as a 3-1 fave over Brett Rogers sounds about right to me; there’s not enough edge for a straight bet, so save him for the parlay. I also think KJ Noons makes sense as a solid favorite over Jorge Masvidal, but I’d like to see how Noons looks back at lightweight for at least one fight before I start putting money on him.

The Guy You’ve Never Heard Of: Magno Almeida is a 9-1 submission ace who has ended seven of his fights in the first round. Due to injuries and bad matchups, his opponent Conor Heun hasn’t won a fight in nearly three years, and hasn’t been inside the cage since losing a decision to KJ Noons last June. Give the new kid a shot.

Official CagePotato Parlay #1 (novice): $10 on A. Overeem + Barnett + Wilcox + Almeida returns a $46.48 profit at BetUS.

Official CagePotato Parlay #2 (advanced): $10 on Werdum + Barnett + V. Overeem + Monson + Noons returns a $589.63 profit.

Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum Video of Their First Fight from 2006

Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum Video of Their First Fight from 2006When Strikeforce, Dream and K-1 champion Alistair Overeem faces Fabricio Werdum on Saturday in Dallas, it will not be the first time the two have met in an MMA bout.Back in 2006, …

Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum Video of Their First Fight from 2006

When Strikeforce, Dream and K-1 champion Alistair Overeem faces Fabricio Werdum on Saturday in Dallas, it will not be the first time the two have met in an MMA bout.

Back in 2006, before Overeem became “Ubereem” and prior to Werdum ending Fedor Emelianenko‘s unbeaten streak, the two met at the 2006 Openweight Pride Grand Prix tournament.

Werdum would use a kimura to submit Overeem in the second round of that bout.

When the two face each other in the quarterfinals of the Strikeforce World Grand Prix Heavyweight Tournament on Saturday, Overeem will be looking to avenge that loss, while Werdum will look to add another victim to his list.

The main card will be broadcast on Showtime beginning at 10 p.m. ET on Saturday, June 18. The winner of the bout will move on to face Antonio Silva in the semifinals of the tournament.

Click here to see video of the fight

Werdum Calls Him ‘My Son,’ but Overeem Says Rematch a ‘New Fight’

DALLAS – To Fabricio Werdum, it’s just a joke. To Alistair Overeem, it’s just plain confusing. But when Werdum calls Overeem his “son,” it’s not because he sees a family resemblance in the Dutch behemoth. It’s because he remembers very well what happen…

DALLAS – To Fabricio Werdum, it’s just a joke. To Alistair Overeem, it’s just plain confusing. But when Werdum calls Overeem his “son,” it’s not because he sees a family resemblance in the Dutch behemoth. It’s because he remembers very well what happened the first time they met in a 2006 fight in Japan’s Pride Fighting organization, when Werdum won via submission.

“It’s like, if we play Xbox and I beat you five times: you’re my son,” Werdum told MMA Fighting earlier this week. “It’s not because I’m an arrogant guy. It’s joking around.”

A joke, but at the same time the message is clear: I beat you once, and I can do it again.

Overeem, however, might not be getting that message.

“I still don’t know what that means, so it doesn’t bother me at all,” the Strikeforce heavyweight champion said. “He can talk whatever he wants.”

It’s been five years since Werdum won the first meeting, and a lot has changed. For starters, Overeem grew an entirely different body. Back then he was “a light heavyweight fighting a heavyweight,” he said. He weighed about 220 pounds and had nowhere near the power or the experience that he has today.

The Overeem that strolled into Thursday afternoon’s media workouts looked like a man who would have used the Overeem of five years ago as a Q-tip. Everything on him is the size of something else. His arms are the size of a normal person’s thighs. His thighs are the size of a normal person’s Labrador retriever. If asked to identify the man who lost to Werdum that in Osaka, many of the spectators who were ringside that night would probably point to the present day Overeem and say it looked like a miniature version of that guy.

For Saturday night’s Strikeforce Grand Prix quarterfinal match, Overeem estimates he’ll be about 260 pounds. As his recent K-1 title indicates, he’ll also be a much better striker than the one Werdum faced in Japan, so the result from the first fight might as well be thrown out altogether, at least in his mind.

“[Werdum] doesn’t have a mental advantage,” said Overeem. “He might think that, but for me, it’s not there. I see this as a new fight. He’s grown as a fighter, but so have I.”

For Werdum, the differences are less physical than technical. Back in 2006 he hardly did any stand-up training, he said, “just jiu-jitsu.” Now he’s had time to improve his own striking, though he acknowledges that he probably has to get the fight to the floor in order to win. As for Overeem’s increased size? Werdum is hoping that will be as much a hindrance as a help in the rematch.

“Now he’s a bigger guy, so that means he has to carry more muscles and more weight,” he said. “Probably he’s going to get tired faster.”

That is, if the fight lasts that long.

Overeem has spent just a shade over five combined minutes in the ring in his last three fights, so taking this wrecking ball into the later rounds might be harder than it sounds. That might explain why Overeem is as heavy as a 5-1 favorite according to some oddsmakers. Werdum isn’t exactly known for his takedown skills, and if he has to stand in front of the man who recently earned the right to call himself the world’s best kickboxer, even he doesn’t seem terribly optimistic.

Then again, Werdum’s fight with Fedor Emelianenko was supposed to be equally as hopeless, and look how that turned out. He went in as a heavy underdog, and emerged with one more fighter he can now call his son.

As Werdum reminded reporters on Thursday, that upset happened just about this time last year.

“June,” the Brazilian said with a smile. “It’s my month.”

 

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Strikeforce Overeem vs. Werdum: B/R MMA Predictions

The Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix continues on Saturday, June 18 with a sensational main event between Alistair Overeem and Fabricio Werdum.  This is a rematch from a 2006 Pride fight where Werdum submitted Overeem with a kimura, but “T…

The Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix continues on Saturday, June 18 with a sensational main event between Alistair Overeem and Fabricio Werdum

This is a rematch from a 2006 Pride fight where Werdum submitted Overeem with a kimura, but “The Reem” has went on the record several times saying that the result will be a very different one this time around.

The winner here will solidify themselves as a top 10 heavyweight in MMA, answering the question: is Alistair Overeem truly “Alistair Overrated,” or did Werdum just get lucky when he submitted Fedor Emelianenko?

Also on the card, Josh Barnett will be taking on the hard hitting Brett Rogers.  This will be Barnett’s first fight in the states since October of 2006.

“The Baby-Faced Assassin” has expressed a ton of confidence heading into this one, indicating that his name deserves to be in the company of elite heavyweight fighters.

Rogers, a large underdog in the tournament, would love to ruin Barnett’s comeback and unexpectedly advance to the semifinals.

A lightweight bout that has been largely overlooked by fans and analysts alike is K.J. Noons versus Jorge Masvidal.

This fight is being regarded as an unofficial number one contender bout for the Strikeforce lightweight title, currently held by Gracie Jiu Jitsu’s own Gilbert Melendez.

The remaining fights on the main card will showcase wrestling standout Daniel Cormier taking on submission specialist Jeff Monsoon, and veteran Valentijn Overeem taking on up and comer Chad Griggs.

This week, the B/R panel will consist of MMA featured columnists Dale De Souza (1-5), Sean Smith, and me, John Heinis (7-10). 

MMA event analysts extraordinaire Dana Becker (6-10) and Jeffrey McKinney (5-5), will also be weighing in on the heavily anticipated Strikeforce event.       

Let’s take a look at how the B/R staff feels this card will play out. 

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Alistair Overeem, Sergei Kharitonov and Team Golden Glory, Bas Boon Comments

Team Golden Glory is a group of Mixed Martial Artists and Kick Boxers based in Breda, Holland, with satellite gyms in other parts of the world as well. It is home to Strikeforce, Dream and K1 heavyweight champion Alistair Overeem, brothe…

Team Golden Glory is a group of Mixed Martial Artists and Kick Boxers based in Breda, Holland, with satellite gyms in other parts of the world as well.

It is home to Strikeforce, Dream and K1 heavyweight champion Alistair Overeem, brother Valentijn, Sergei Kharitonov and many other fighters.

North American fans who recently began following mixed martial arts may be scratching their heads when they hear about Golden Glory because most of the team has been fighting in the European and Japanese fight promotions since its inception in 1999.

With Alistair Overeem’s participation in the Strikeforce Heavyweight tournament along with his brother Valentijn who is an alternate, Russian born heavyweight Sergei Kharitonov a semi-finalist and John-Olav Einemo’s debut in the UFC this past weekend—Golden Glory is making a push into the North American market.

The co-owner of Team Golden Glory took some time out of his busy schedule to talk about Golden Glory’s beginnings, the fighters who make up the team and the focus going forward.

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