Tonight’s Strikeforce event will feature the semi-finals of the heavyweight grand prix tournament with tournament newcomer Daniel Cormier fighting Antonio “Big Foot” Silva and Josh Barnett fighting Sergei Kharitonov. These four fight…
Tonight’s Strikeforce event will feature the semi-finals of the heavyweight grand prix tournament with tournament newcomer Daniel Cormier fighting Antonio “Big Foot” Silva and Josh Barnett fighting Sergei Kharitonov.
These four fighters each bring a very different style into the cage which should make for some interesting match-ups both tonight as well as when the winners finally meet again to determine the tournament champion.
Each fighter will be looking to implement his own gameplan tonight, utilizing his own skills and his opponents’ weaknesses to try to secure a victory in this very important tournament. But while the fights may end up on the ground at some point, we do know one thing—these guys are going to have to exchange some punches first.
So which of the four fighters remaining in this tournament has the best striking striking skills?
Let’s take a closer look at not only offensive, but also defensive striking skills of these four fighters.
Strikeforce hits Cincinnati, Ohio, tomorrow night, and they are bringing the semifinals of their heavyweight grand prix.It features Josh Barnett going up against Sergei Kharitonov and Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier.Barnett defeated Brett Rogers in th…
Strikeforce hits Cincinnati, Ohio, tomorrow night, and they are bringing the semifinals of their heavyweight grand prix.
It features Josh Barnett going up against Sergei Kharitonov and Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier.
Barnett defeated Brett Rogers in the opening round of the tournament while Kharitonov knocked out Andrei Arlovski in February on the same card.
Cormier comes into the fight fight as the biggest underdog after replacing Alistair Overeem. Silva got the biggest win of his career over Fedor Emelianenko in the first round of the tournament.
Other fights include Ronaldo Souza vs. Luke Rockhold in a middleweight championship bout and Roger Gracie vs. Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal in a light-heavyweight bout.
Complete weigh-in results:
MAIN CARD (Showtime)
Josh Barnett (261) vs. Sergei Kharitonov (256.5)
Daniel Cormier (247) vs. Antonio Silva (264.5)
Ronaldo Souza (185) vs. Luke Rockhold (185)
Roger Gracie (205) vs. Muhammed “King Mo” Lawal (205)
Maximo Blanco (155) vs. Pat Healy (155)
PRELIMINARY CARD (HDNet)
Mike Kyle (205) vs. Marcos Rogerio de Lima (205)
Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante (205) vs. Yoel Romero (205)
Jordan Mein (170) vs. Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos (170)
Alexis Davis (135) vs. Amanda Nunes (134.5)
Chris Mierzwiak (185) vs. Dominique Steele (184.5)
Filed under: StrikeforceCINCINNATI — When Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker first announced plans for a heavyweight Grand Prix, it seemed almost recklessly ambitious. Eight well known — and, in some cases, mercurial — heavyweights all vying against one an…
CINCINNATI — When Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker first announced plans for a heavyweight Grand Prix, it seemed almost recklessly ambitious. Eight well known — and, in some cases, mercurial — heavyweights all vying against one another in a single-elimination tournament to crown one king.
Only now the Strikeforce heavyweight champion has left the building. Alistair Overeem got dropped from the tournament and signed to the UFC, so the four fighters who are left behind have to figure out for themselves exactly what’s at stake when the Grand Prix lurches onward this Saturday night.
As Josh Barnett pointed out, the winner now gets “a nice, shiny belt,” so there’s that. But aside from the hardware, what else is at stake? The answer to that depends on who you ask.
For Antonio Silva, who was slated to get a crack at the Strikeforce heavyweight champ in the semifinal round before Overeem declared himself unfit for the September 10 date, the change of opponent was a letdown. Or at least, that’s how he felt until he considered it from Overeem’s perspective, he said.
“I was very sad and disappointed in the beginning, but today I think he did the right thing going to the UFC,” Silva said via a translator. Even without Overeem in the tournament, Silva said, winning out over a field that included fighters like Fedor Emelianenko and Sergei Kharitonov would be “a big accomplishment.”
But for others, like Barnett, the tournament title doesn’t add all that much to an already high-stakes pursuit.
“I don’t know about anyone else, but for me it’s the same thing that’s always at stake, and that’s my own personal pride,” Barnett said. “I’m not walking out there to get my [expletive] beat by anybody. The way I see it, it always comes down to, so you think you can kick my [expletive], huh? Then let’s go. I don’t think you can, but I want you to try. I want to crush everything about you. I want you to come in there so full of life and thinking about all these things that are going to happen for you, all these doors that are going to open and your life is going to get better, then I’m going to step on it, crush it, destroy it, and leave you in a smoldering heap with all your dreams dead.”
You know, he deadpanned, the kind of thing that “me and the Dalai Lama have talked about a lot.”
For Daniel Cormier, the Grand Prix alternate who took Overeem’s spot, simply being in the tournament is still something of a surprise.
“I didn’t think I’d have the chance to fight in the tournament,” Cormier said. “I looked it as such a big thing, a big event, that I would never have imagined anybody being out of the tournament. I thought they’d do anything in their power to stay in the tournament.”
Of course, for Cormier the tournament still offers plenty of upside. He’s the least experienced fighter in the field, and a win over any of the big names left in the bracket would instantly elevate his status.
For more seasoned competitors like Barnett and Kharitonov, there might be more to lose than gain. These are uncertain times for all Strikeforce fighters in general, and that’s no less true for the Grand Prix participants. Of the four men to lose in the quarterfinal round, only one — Fabricio Werdum — is still employed by the organization.
Just as no one knows what the winner of the tournament will have actually won (aside from that shiny belt), it’s similarly unclear what will become of those who fall short. That’s why the best approach might be the one Kharitonov is taking.
“I’m here to win,” he said through a translator. “That’s what matters the most.”
Semifinal action continues in the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix live from Cincinnati, Ohio, at the US Bank Arena on Saturday, September 10.The winner between Josh Barnett and Sergei Kharitonov will challenge the victor of Antonio Silva and Daniel …
Semifinal action continues in the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix live from Cincinnati, Ohio, at the US Bank Arena on Saturday, September 10.
The winner between Josh Barnett and Sergei Kharitonov will challenge the victor of Antonio Silva and Daniel Cormier in the championship match.
Additional action includes a middleweight championship fight between current champion Ronaldo Souza and challenger Luke Rockhold.
In light heavyweight action, former Strikeforce champion Muhammed Lawal will enter the cage against jiu-jitsu wizard Daniel Gracie, as he drops down from the heavyweight division.
Rounding out the night’s main card action, Pat Healy takes on Maximo Blanco in the lightweight division.
Please follow along as I dissect and predict each victor.
Enjoy the fights.
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MMAFighting was on the scene yesterday for the “Barnett vs. Kharitonov” press conference, and released the above highlight video. Skip to the 1:33 mark to see Daniel Cormier give away his gameplan against Antonio Silva; lots of laughs there. Later, King Mo says what everybody’s thinking: “I was hoping more people [would be] out here, more media, and more questions, but really I guess y’all don’t care about us that much. I’m just keeping it real. Me and Roger [Gracie] gonna put on a good fight, it’s gonna be a good card. I think people are gonna miss out on it because everybody’s worried about other issues instead of the fights this weekend. I’m just being real.”
Also on the card, Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza defends his middleweight belt against Luke Rockhold — who hasn’t competed since February 2010 due to injuries — and Maximo Blanco makes his promotional debut against Pat Healy. The complete lineup is after the jump.
MMAFighting was on the scene yesterday for the “Barnett vs. Kharitonov” press conference, and released the above highlight video. Skip to the 1:33 mark to see Daniel Cormier give away his gameplan against Antonio Silva; lots of laughs there. Later, King Mo says what everybody’s thinking: “I was hoping more people [would be] out here, more media, and more questions, but really I guess y’all don’t care about us that much. I’m just keeping it real. Me and Roger [Gracie] gonna put on a good fight, it’s gonna be a good card. I think people are gonna miss out on it because everybody’s worried about other issues instead of the fights this weekend. I’m just being real.”
Also on the card, Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza defends his middleweight belt against Luke Rockhold — who hasn’t competed since February 2010 due to injuries — and Maximo Blanco makes his promotional debut against Pat Healy. The complete lineup is after the jump.
Main Card (Showtime, 10:30 p.m. ET/PT)
Josh Barnett vs. Sergei Kharitonov
Antonio Silva vs. Daniel Cormier
Ronaldo Souza vs. Luke Rockhold
Muhammed Lawal vs. Roger Gracie
Pat Healy vs. Maximo Blanco
Preliminary Card (HDNet, 8 p.m. ET/PT)
Mike Kyle vs. Marcos Rogerio de Lima
Rafael Cavalcante vs. Yoel Romero Palacio
Evangelista Santos vs. Jordan Mein
Alexis Davis vs. Amanda Nunes
Dominique Steele vs. Chris Mierzwiak
Filed under: StrikeforceCINCINNATI — Like any good fighter beef, they can’t agree on how it all got started. If you ask Josh Barnett, he’ll say he was complimenting Antonio Silva’s performance against Fedor Emelianenko, then woke up the next morning t…
CINCINNATI — Like any good fighter beef, they can’t agree on how it all got started. If you ask Josh Barnett, he’ll say he was complimenting Antonio Silva‘s performance against Fedor Emelianenko, then woke up the next morning to read reports of Silva bashing him in the press. If you ask “Bigfoot” Silva, he’ll say he had only a mild dislike for Barnett until he crossed the line by commenting on Silva’s acromegaly.
“In the beginning I found him to be an anti-social guy,” Silva said through a translator. “I talk to everybody, shake everybody’s hand, and he wasn’t like that. After I commented on that, he moved into commenting on my condition, and that’s not something he should do.”
Barnett’s response?
“I didn’t know gigantism made you so sensitive.”
Of the four fighters left in the Strikeforce heavyweight Grand Prix, Silva and Barnett are the only two who seem to have any personal animosity against one another. A little strange, considering they’re not even fighting each other. Not yet, anyway.
Barnett will take on Sergei Kharitonov in the semifinal round of the tournament on Saturday night, while Silva has a date with Alistair Overeem’s replacement, former U.S. Olympic wrestler Daniel Cormier. So how did these two even end up in this minor feud, when they couldn’t possibly meet until the finals?
“What it came down to was, he didn’t know me enough to know whether I was friendly or unfriendly, and he just started going off,” Barnett said, tracing the beef’s genesis to a post-fight press conference after the opening round of the tournament in New Jersey.
“Ten minutes before he got to the podium I was talking about how much he’d improved as a fighter and how tough he was, so on and so forth,” Barnett said. “Then the next day I read the internet news and I’m going, what? He was saying I hate Brazilians, saying I’m a jerk, saying all sorts of stuff when he doesn’t know me. But hey, I’m one to mess with somebody, so I said, sorry I’m not trying to be your best friend.”
Barnett has predicted a win for Cormier on Saturday night, citing the smaller man’s wrestling skills as a difference-maker. Even Silva admits he had to change everything about his preparation when his opponent changed from Overeem, a bulky kickboxer, to Cormier, a smaller, more agile wrestler.
“Things changed completely. My plan [for Overeem] was to take him down and get on top of him. Now my game plan is to stay standing or impose my jiu-jitsu. It really changed things.”
On the other side of the bracket, Silva said Barnett is in for a tough night, though he gives him the slight edge over Kharitonov.
“They’re two great fighters and it’s going to be a great fight, but I’m rooting for [Barnett]. I want to fight him. I bet he’s not thinking like that. I bet he’s hoping that he doesn’t have to face me in the finals.”
In a way, Barnett admitted, he’s almost right.
“I could go on about this,” Barnett said. “I don’t care about fighting him or anybody. Already I’ve given him too much press.”