Ed Ruth Talks Bellator Deal, UFC and Reebok, Jon Jones and Chasing Olympic Gold

Not many wrestlers have received this much buzz from MMA fans. At least not many amateur wrestlers.
But the community took note Monday when news came that Ed Ruth, a three-time NCAA wrestling champion, four-time All-American and 2016 Olympic medal…

Not many wrestlers have received this much buzz from MMA fans. At least not many amateur wrestlers.

But the community took note Monday when news came that Ed Ruth, a three-time NCAA wrestling champion, four-time All-American and 2016 Olympic medal hopeful, signed a contract with Bellator MMA (via MMAFighting.com).

It took note for several reasons. First, because regardless of what happens next year in the Rio de Janeiro Summer Olympics, Ruth—who originally announced just in March that he would pursue pro MMA—will be one of the sport’s two or three most decorated wrestlers the moment he sets foot in a cage. 

Second, because it is the latest in a series of bold strokes from new Bellator president Scott Coker that have placed the sport’s second-largest promotion within a whale migration’s distance of the UFC. That’s closer than anyone’s been in quite a while.

Third, because the announcement drafts behind in the immediate wake of backlash leveled at the UFC’s new tiered sponsorship deal, which some have theorized might make the promotion less lucrative for current fighters and less attractive to future ones.

 

The Bargaining Table

Ruth’s MMA debut is still as many as two years away. Though nothing is certain, Ruth is expected to not only make Team USA as a freestyle wrestler but bring home a medal in his luggage.

Until that process is complete, MMA training, at least the kind of MMA training you need to be an MMA fighter, is on hold. 

“I don’t want to be one foot out and one foot in on this,” he said in an exclusive interview with Bleacher Report. “Wrestling is coming along great. A lot of things in my style have changed up….I don’t feel like [MMA] is a distraction. It’s all training. Some things I do for MMA, working on footwork, boxing, angles, it all helps in wrestling.”

Even so, Ruth chose now as the time to go pro and sign with Bellator. He said one factor was the faith he had in Coker and in Bellator itself.

“There was good cooperation,” Ruth said. “I met with Scott Coker before everything was said and done. I feel like I’m a good judge of character. He’s the guy. The contract he had me sign will help me along the way.” 

 

Bellator Presses Its Advantages

Ever since Coker took the Bellator reins last summer, the promotion has been far friskier on several fronts as a competitor to the titanic UFC. Just last month, Phil Davis, with whom Ruth shares his Penn State alma matter, jumped ship from the UFC to Bellator. Novelty-rich fights like Tito Ortiz vs. Stephan Bonnar or the upcoming Kimbo Slice vs. Ken Shamrock have captured their share of eyeballs. And Ruth is just the latest prospect to be lured to Bellator.

Early May brought the specifics of the UFC’s uniform deal with Reebok. Under the agreement, UFC fighters are not allowed to wear any non-Reebok logo inside the cage, and are compensated on a tiered system for wearing the Reebok gear. However, since it was announced, the deal continues to draw fire from fighters and outside observers who claim that many competitors stand to earn substantially less under the new system.

Did this factor into Ruth’s decision to go with Bellator instead of the UFC?

“It definitely did,” Ruth said. “As much work as I want to put in and the number of people I want to reach, I felt I could do that best right now in Bellator. I don’t really understand the tier system [of the UFC-Reebok deal], but for so many people to be so upset, it just seemed like it wouldn’t be a great beginning for me…In Bellator, I can select my own sponsors.”

 

Friends Come in Sad, Strange, Strong Packages

Ruth said previously he would train at the prestigious Greg Jackson-Mike Winkeljohn camp once it was time to focus on MMA. But that camp lost, in a way, its star student recently when the UFC stripped Jon Jones of his light heavyweight title and suspended him indefinitely following his alleged involvement in a hit-and-run accident that left a pregnant woman with a fractured arm.

Ruth formed a relationship with Jones and others at the gym back in December, helping Jones prepare for his title defense against Daniel Cormier at UFC 182. It influenced his decision to pursue pro MMA anywhere, at Jackson’s or otherwise, and it gave him a clearer window into Jones’ troubles than a stranger might have. 

“I hate that it happened to him,” Ruth said of Jones. “He’s a great athlete and a great guy. I respected him, and I still do. I just hope it all works out for the best.”

But Ruth has another friend who directly benefited from Jones’ suspension. That would be Cormier, who lost his title shot to Jones at UFC 182 but gained a new shot by replacing the suspended Jones at UFC 187 to face Anthony Johnson for the now-vacant belt.

“DC reached out to me right after the NCAAs were over,” Ruth said. “I asked him for his opinion on [his career direction], and he told me what he thought. He’s always been 100 percent with me.” 

So we know that Ruth will do it, we know where he will go, and we know why he made those decisions. For the most part, the MMA world might not hear from Ed Ruth again for a while. But that’s OK; there’s still a pretty good chance we’ll see him.

“Keep an eye out for Rio,” Ruth said. “Just watch. I’m gonna go out there, get that gold. Watch.”

All quotes obtained firsthand.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bellator’s Mike Richman: It’s About Going out There and Being Me

You could say the cut to get to 135 pounds is a tough one for Bellator bantamweight Mike Richman. You could also say it’s worth it. He’s made an impressive entrance into the division, with two emphatic first-round stoppages over Ed West and…

You could say the cut to get to 135 pounds is a tough one for Bellator bantamweight Mike Richman. You could also say it’s worth it. He’s made an impressive entrance into the division, with two emphatic first-round stoppages over Ed West and Nam Phan.

In a short time he’s made a dent in the weight class and faces former champion Eduardo Dantas in the co-main event of Bellator 137 Friday night on Spike. The bout should produce a No. 1 contender for new champion Marcos Galvao.

The former Marine makes the grueling cut to 135 pounds because he’s on a quest to become a champion. To Richman, being one of the best fighters in the world will be proof that all of the hard work was worthwhile.

Richman fights for a lot of reasons, and being the best is certainly one of them. He also fights for a living. He could have waited on the sidelines for Galvao to be ready to defend the title, but like most MMA fighters, Richman has to stay busy in order to make ends meet.

“Bellator offered me the title shot after I beat Nam Phan,” Richman told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview. “Once I realized that Galvao was going to fight (Joe) Warren first in late March, that means the winner probably won’t defend their title until late summer, maybe even September. That’s just too long of a layoff for me. I wouldn’t be able to afford it. I would have to work another job or whatever in between fights or something. I didn’t want that long of a layoff so I said to put me into a fight before then.

“I got bills to pay, man,” he said. “Some of these other dudes that wait forever, they must be making money where they can wait. I can’t wait that long. I got bills, I got kids. If I was a single man, living with a roommate or other fighters, I could have waited it out, but I’ve got more than that.”

Richman isn’t taking an easy fight by any means. Dantas is a product of Nova Uniao and holds a knockout win over the Bellator’s current bantamweight champion. Richman wants to face the toughest competition he can get his hands on, and right now that is Dantas.

He knows he’s facing a well-rounded opponent, and he is prepared for wherever the fight goes, saying, “Dantas is good everywhere, so I’m just training my game everywhere.”

Richman doesn’t get nervous in the days leading up to his fights. It’s not until those final moments on fight night that he starts to feel the butterflies.  

“I don’t feel nerves until maybe a fight before mine, I’ll get a little bit of nerves going. But during fight week, I don’t have nerves or anything. All I can think about is what I’m going to eat and drink after weigh-ins. That’s seriously all I can think about. But I don’t feel nerves until a fight or two before mine.”

Even in those moments right before his fight, he still doesn’t feel the same type of nerves that some fighters may. Whereas some fighters describe their work in the cage as “going to war,” Richman understands the true meaning of the term, saying, “I was an infantryman in the Marine Corps, and being deployed three times, the situations I was in were life-and-death situations. Those type of chemicals aren’t going off in your brain when you’re going out to fight.”

What does go through Richman’s mind when he goes out to fight is living up to his potential. Even more than victory, Richman values going out there and being his absolute best. He prides himself on being a prizefighter, and truly embraces the big stage, saying, “I look at it as being a high-level professional athlete. Someone who laced up his cleats to go out there and play in front of all the lights. I look at it like that.

“I get nerves performing at my best. I get nervous about not performing to my abilities. It has nothing to do with even winning or losing. It’s about going out there and being me, and showcasing my skills. That’s what I get nervous about.”

 

Mike Wellman is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report.  All quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.  

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bellator 137: Main Card Preview and Predictions

Bellator returns to Spike TV this weekend with its 137th showing. Headlined by a middleweight championship bout, Bellator will give you a four-fight main card with some good up-and-coming talent that should be entertaining.
Brandon Halsey makes his fir…

Bellator returns to Spike TV this weekend with its 137th showing. Headlined by a middleweight championship bout, Bellator will give you a four-fight main card with some good up-and-coming talent that should be entertaining.

Brandon Halsey makes his first title defense since beating Alexander Shlemenko for the title. His opponent is Kendall Grove, a UFC veteran and well-traveled fighter who is known for his great height and overall experience.

Also gracing the card are Eduardo Dantas, Mike Richman and a handful of other promising fighters.

So with that, let’s take a look at the card and make some predictions.

Begin Slideshow

Melvin Guillard Signs Bellator Deal Four Days After Being Released by WSOF

Melvin Guillard, a popular if mercurial lightweight who fought 22 times for the UFC, has signed a long-term deal with the Bellator MMA promotion.
Bellator officials announced the deal Monday in a news release emailed to reporters, and the news has subs…

Melvin Guillard, a popular if mercurial lightweight who fought 22 times for the UFC, has signed a long-term deal with the Bellator MMA promotion.

Bellator officials announced the deal Monday in a news release emailed to reporters, and the news has subsequently been covered by multiple news outlets, including MMAJunkie.com.

The deal was described as a “multi-year, multi-fight deal.” Additional details were not disclosed, though Malki Kawa, who is the brother of Guillard manager Abe Kawa, said in an interview Monday on The MMA Hour broadcast that Guillard‘s Bellator deal was actually better than previous UFC deals.

Guillard (32-14-2-2) is well known for his 21 knockout victories and a prolific fight career that belies his 32 years of age. The New Orleans native has long been admired for his talent, but underperformance in big moments and problems outside the cage have repeatedly kept a good career from being great.

After he went winless in four of five bouts in the UFC, the company released Guillard in the spring of 2014. The World Series of Fighting promotion was quick to sign him, pitting Guillard against its best lightweights. But Guillard was reluctant to reciprocate the enthusiasm.

Guillard missed weight by two pounds before his WSOF debut, a TKO win over JZ Cavalcante. Before his title fight with blue-chip prospect Justin Gaethje, Guillard said he considered himself an “A-list fighter, fighting in the B league.” He missed weight by four pounds for the contest and went on to lose by decision.

The final straw appeared to fall just a month ago, when WSOF President Ray Sefo announced Guillard‘s removal from the WSOF 20 card after Guillard and his camp failed to submit basic pre-fight information, such as medical test results.

That was a pretty clear sign Guillard was no longer interested in working with WSOF. WSOF made the feeling mutual when it released him on April 30.

Bellator has several lightweights who might be interesting tests for Guillard, including champion Will Brooks, Michael Chandler and Patricky Freire.

It’s probably safe to suspect that Guillard still views himself as an elite, UFC-level fighter. Earlier in April, before his WSOF release, he said in an interview with Submission Radio that he “might even pit stop in Bellator.”

If he wishes to return to the UFC, it stands to reason he’ll need to do more than use Bellator as another way station. He’ll need notch some good wins, which have been rare for Guillard in recent years. The last time he won two consecutive fights, the year was 2011.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Interview: Ken Shamrock Talks Kimbo Slice, Bare Knuckle Boxing, Personal Protection, and His Ministry — Part 1

By Zach Heim, with Chad Blessinger 

Ken Shamrock is a busy man these days. 2015 finds the “World’s Most Dangerous Man” involved in a Bellator main event against Kimbo Slice, a professional bare knuckle fight, a ministry for God, stock trading, and at least four other business and professional ventures. He is busier than ever building a future for himself off of 30 years of hard work, and lucky for us, we managed to get a few minutes with Shamrock to discuss a variety of topics.

CagePotato: You were supposed to fight Kimbo Slice a long time back until a last-minute cut over your eye forced you to bow out. Tell us about that experience.

The post Interview: Ken Shamrock Talks Kimbo Slice, Bare Knuckle Boxing, Personal Protection, and His Ministry — Part 1 appeared first on Cagepotato.

By Zach Heim, with Chad Blessinger 

Ken Shamrock is a busy man these days. 2015 finds the “World’s Most Dangerous Man” involved in a Bellator main event against Kimbo Slice, a professional bare knuckle fight, a ministry for God, stock trading, and at least four other business and professional ventures. He is busier than ever building a future for himself off of 30 years of hard work, and lucky for us, we managed to get a few minutes with Shamrock to discuss a variety of topics.

CagePotato: You were supposed to fight Kimbo Slice a long time back until a last-minute cut over your eye forced you to bow out. Tell us about that experience.

Ken Shamrock: Yeah, there’s a lot to it. My father had went into a coma and I spent about three weeks at the hospital with him while I was training for this fight. I got on a plane because he told me I needed to go take care of business. So I get on a plane and I fly down to do the fight. The night before the fight they called and told me he went into a coma or they put him on a machine or whatever…they had to keep him on life support. They asked what I wanted to do. So I said don’t do anything until I get back. So there was a lot of stuff going on, along with some different business stuff that was happening.

I grabbed a friend of mine and moved everything out of the hotel room. I was in a suite, so I had an area just to roll around to get my head back in to where it needed to be, a light roll, nothing heavy. I just caught his head the wrong way, it cut me, went to the hospital got it triple stitched/double stitched. I asked the doctor, “Can you clear me?” and he said, “If they let you fight, I’ll let you fight.” I went to the arena, got into the locker room and the [Florida] Commission came in, the promoters came in and I clearly told them I would fight. Of course, the Commission ixnayed it, [saying] you know we can’t take the risk. I told them if it [the cut] opens up or breaks they can stop the fight, it’s on me. No big deal, just let it roll, the fights not going to go very long. There’s no way he’s going to last very long. But if it does open up, you can stop me. I’m ok with that. Well, they said no. The fight didn’t happen.

Now what really made me angry was that when they wouldn’t let the fight happen, all the sudden all these different types of stupid comments started coming into play. Kimbo and his team being a part of that and what really upset me the most was the fact that I had made a sacrifice to go out and do this fight. My father had a problem and they put him on life support, things didn’t work out the way they should have but yet I still hear these stupid comments about why I wouldn’t fight, how come I didn’t fight, I got cut, I cut myself, I’m afraid, all these things coming from the Kimbo camp. It just boiled in me and there was not much I could do about it. I always kept it in my mind that if I ever had the opportunity to get into a ring and fight him in mma, I’d be waiting for him.

Neither of you have fought an MMA fight in 5 years and it has been reported the Missouri Commission is going to ask you to do some additional medical testing. Has any of that begun and what exactly does that entail?

They are going to want extra testing, which to me is, you know, whatever, it is what it is. I don’t know why, I thought we got past this stuff, you know, years and years ago with prejudices against women, against colors, against gender, sexual preferences — all these things. We are supposed to have grown as a nation but we continue to keep pulling people aside for whatever the reason the may be because they may be older or they speak different or whatever the reason is. It seems they can’t let it go. Why in the world would you test somebody who is clearly passing all the regulations they are supposed to pass as a regular fighter? Why does it have to be extensive testing because you are 50 years old or your forty years old? Either you pass, or you don’t pass. I don’t understand what their sanctioning reasons are for. It’s either you pass or you don’t pass. If you pass, you fight. I don’t care what age you are.

I think Kimbo showed a lot about himself when he fought Petruzelli the night they wouldn’t let you fight. Seth knocked him out in, what, 15 seconds or something like that?

I don’t get some of these comments that people are making about “Well if he stands up, he’s gonna lose,” and “If he can’t take him down, he’s going to lose.” I’m thinking, “Who are these people, where is their education?”

Not a lot of people knew much about Seth Petruzelli before that fight, which I suppose made his win all the more shocking. 

To me it’s ridiculous. I don’t think Kimbo’s going to handle me, whether it’s stand-up or on the ground. We know [he can’t handle me] on the ground, but even stand-up I just; I watched his boxing. He hand picks his guys, and even then you see [his weaknesses]. Like I said, you know, I’m not going to take him lightly. I’m going to prepare like this is the best fight in the world. But like I said, in the back of my mind, I don’t see a problem here either stand-up or on the ground.

What is the current status of the Lion’s Den? How many gyms are there? What is going on with that part of your career?

I still have Team Lion’s Den. In fact, it is my son, myself, and I will be fighting under Team Lions Den in this fight coming up. My son still fights under it. I have three boys. They fight under it. All my family fights under it. That’s as far as it goes. Right now Team Lion’s Den is basically a ministry outreach program. (It’s) my non-profit organization where I walk out and I help youth and do motivational speaking. I transferred that in that direction but the Team Lion’s Den is definitely not dead now. It’s just that right at this point in time I’m just so focused on really doing more work for my ministry and work for young athletes who are amateurs who are trying to turn pro. I don’t want to, obviously, but them under a team flag or anything like that. I just want to help these guys make good decisions on their own for their own career.

Stay tuned for Part 2 of this interview, which will be up tomorrow.

The post Interview: Ken Shamrock Talks Kimbo Slice, Bare Knuckle Boxing, Personal Protection, and His Ministry — Part 1 appeared first on Cagepotato.

UFC Light Heavyweight Phil Davis SIgns with Bellator MMA (Updated)

Phil Davis could soon find out if the grass is greener on the other side of the fence. The free-agent light heavyweight contender is reportedly “very close” to signing a new multifight deal with Bellator MMA. MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani broke the news on Wednesday, stating an official announcement could soon follow: “According to sources […]

Phil Davis could soon find out if the grass is greener on the other side of the fence. The free-agent light heavyweight contender is reportedly “very close” to signing a new multifight deal with Bellator MMA. MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani broke the news on Wednesday, stating an official announcement could soon follow: “According to sources […]