Bellator 135: Warren vs. Galvao Fight Card, TV Info, Predictions and More

On Friday night, the “Loro” is looking to have the last word. Marcos “Loro” Galvao will attempt to dethrone the self-proclaimed “Baddest Man on the Planet,” Joe Warren, in the main event of Bellator 135. The event takes place at the WinStar World Casin…

On Friday night, the “Loro” is looking to have the last word. Marcos “Loro” Galvao will attempt to dethrone the self-proclaimed “Baddest Man on the Planet,” Joe Warren, in the main event of Bellator 135. The event takes place at the WinStar World Casino in Thackerville, Oklahoma. Warren’s Bellator bantamweight title will be on the line in an intriguing rematch. 

In the co-main event, 135-pound contender and veteran LC Davis faces Hideo Tokoro in a fight that could position Davis to challenge the winner of the main event in the future. Davis has won both of his fights with Bellator and has the look of a fighter capable of competing with the best in his weight class within the promotion.

The viewing information, card and predictions are below.

 

Why Galvao Will Win

The Spanish-to-English translation for “loro is “parrot.” Continuing that theme, we’d have to describe the decision rendered in the fighters’ first meeting as a “robo.” That’s “robbery” in English.

Despite Galvao clearly outstriking his opponent and keeping the fight off the mat for most of the bout, the unanimous decision went to Warren. Spike TV and Bellator analyst Jimmy Smith called it “the worst decision” he’d seen with the promotion in the hype video below.

It was actually one of the worst MMA decisions I’ve seen with any promotion. Not only was the wrong guy awarded the victory, one judge proved he completely ignored the action by scoring it 30-27 in favor of Warren on one card.

As far as Friday’s rematch is concerned, Warren is a much better fighter now than he was then. He seems to have found the fountain of youth, as the 38-year-old champion is proving to be a legitimate title holder. He’s riding a five-fight win streak heading into Friday’s bout.

Galvao has been on a roll himself. He’s won three fights in a row, and he has to have some confidence he can get the best of the champion again. No matter how much Warren ignores what happened in the first fight and proclaims himself the superior fighter, he has to have real doubts that he can beat Galvao.

The key to this fight will be Galvao‘s takedown defense. If Warren can’t control the identity of the fight by making it a ground scrap, he’s going to find himself in peril again. I believe Galvao will effectively counter Warren’s attempts to wrestle and look to be more aggressive in stand-up when he sees the champion’s frustration.

With more effective and diverse striking, Galvao will win a split decision to become the Bellator bantamweight champion.

 

Why Davis Will Beat Tokoro

Hideo Tokoro has a wealth of experience, but he’s also tasted defeat 27 times in his career. At 32-27, he’s dangerously close to a .500 career winning percentage. In MMA or any combat sport, that’s not a good look.

Tokoro is primarily a submissions artist, but Davis’ physical strength and wrestling technique should be enough to ward off his opponent’s attempts to gain the advantage on the ground. Much of Davis’ career was fought at featherweight. He came down to bantamweight, and his record is 6-1 since making the switch.

Tokoro fought at 125 pounds previously, and the 37-year-old will be in the cage with a bigger, stronger athlete who is going to control the bout with his physicality. Davis will win via TKO.

 

Why Carmont Will Beat Viana

Francis “Limitless” Carmont reached his limit in the UFC. After three straight losses, he was released from the promotion and has landed with Bellator. He’s a dominant wrestler and a physical specimen. However, at times he lacks the aggressiveness and stand-up prowess to be effective.

Luckily for him, he’ll be in the cage with an opponent who isn’t on his level as a fighter.

Guilherme Viana has had just seven professional fights, but none in a major promotion. He’ll be mystified by Carmont‘s advanced grappling, and that should lead to a one-sided decision victory for Limitless.


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After Younger Brother’s Abduction and Murder, L.C. Davis Keeps Grinding

On October 24, 2013, Ryan Cobbins left his home and headed toward the barbershop he’d been going to for well over two years, on 39th Street and Prospect Avenue in Kansas City. He had an 11 a.m. appointment scheduled at the shop. It was a regular thing …

On October 24, 2013, Ryan Cobbins left his home and headed toward the barbershop he’d been going to for well over two years, on 39th Street and Prospect Avenue in Kansas City. He had an 11 a.m. appointment scheduled at the shop. It was a regular thing for Cobbins; he got his hair braided there at least once or twice a month.

On this day, though, something went wrong. Cobbins disappeared, somehow vanishing into broad daylight. His Camaro was discovered days later in an apartment complex parking lot, but Cobbins was nowhere to be found.

On November 4, Kansas City police officially began looking into Cobbins as a missing persons case. They implored locals to call the KCPD Missing Persons hotline if they knew any information that could lead them to Cobbins.

Cobbins and his brother, the Bellator bantamweight L.C. Davis, grew up together. They did not have the most stable of childhoods, living in “pretty much every suburb” Kansas City had to offer. Their single mother moved them around constantly in her search for work. They eventually moved to live with their grandmother. When Davis was in high school, he left his little brother and his mom behind, moving in with his dad, feeling that his father could offer a more stable living environment. But he still came back on holidays and each summer. Even when Davis moved to Iowa, they stayed in touch, and Cobbins would visit when he could.

Everyone was confused when Cobbins disappeared, but they held out hope that he would return home or show up somewhere. Anywhere.

“I went about two months just hoping and praying that he would pop up alive somewhere,” Davis said. “It was terrible. Every day, you just wake up and pray that you’re going to find out good news.”

But the news was not good.

On January 1, 2014, a Kansas City codes inspector was checking on a series of abandoned houses. He found Cobbin’s body in one of the homes. He’d been tied up, with his wrists and ankles tied together, and he had been executed.

The case is still unsolved. Kansas City police have investigated Cobbins‘ death as a homicide from the beginning, and Davis said it is now a federal investigation with three or four states involved.

From the beginning, Davis took an active part in trying to find out what happened to his brother. None of it made sense, but Davis tried to piece it together as best he could. He made phone calls. He cased out every building and location he possibly could. He went to the last place his brother was seen. He went to the place his body was found. He talked to all of Cobbins‘ friends. He gave the investigating detectives every single name and number he could think of, of anyone who might be remotely tied to the disappearance.

He had a million scenarios running through his head about why, how, when. But he also felt he wasn’t getting the whole truth from the people he spoke to.

“One thing I do know: I know that some of his friends and the people he was acquainted with know more than what they are saying,” Davis said. “I know several of his so-called friends, I feel like they know more than they are saying. That’s really the only suspicion I have.”

Despite the total upheaval in his personal life, and despite the uncertainty, Davis continued to train. Shortly after his brother’s disappearance, but before they found his body, Davis had a title fight on December 14, 2013, for Victory Fighting Championship against Ryan Roberts. Clearly distracted and weighed down, Davis dropped a split decision. But he stayed in the gym, using it as an outlet to vent his anger.

In hindsight, Davis said, that was not the best idea. But he didn’t have any training partners willing to pull him aside and tell him that he needed to take some time off to deal with his emotions.

“I didn’t have that. In a way, I wish I would have. Or maybe that I’d taken a little break. I lost that fight, and it was the first fight I’d lost in several years,” Davis said. “I probably should not have taken that fight. And the other part of me is that I’m a fighter. I keep moving forward. I don’t like to feel sorry for myself. I feel like everyone has a story. Everyone has something bad happen to them. So I don’t have a pity party for myself. I just try to keep moving forward and keep doing the right things.”

Losing his brother was tough, but he had his wife and kids and extended family to fall back on. Mostly, Davis said, he felt bad for the two young daughters Cobbins left behind.

“And my mother is in prison, and she didn’t even get to come to his funeral,” Davis said. “Things like that made me hurt more than feeling sorry for myself.”

Davis continued investigating his brother’s disappearance, and he calls the police investigators once a week, every week, to inquire if there are any new leads or developments in the case.

But he also continues to fight. He rebounded from the loss to Roberts by signing with Bellator and then reeling off wins over two consecutive opponents. This Friday, he faces Hideo Tokoro at Bellator 135 in Thackerville, Oklahoma.

Davis said that another win will put him one step closer to a title fight, but he knows a win alone may not be enough.

“I would like to jump the line by going out there and doing something spectacular,” Davis said.

And so he goes to the gym every day, pushing forward. He continues to pay close attention to the investigation into his brother’s death. He is hopeful that one of the days, they will find out what, exactly, happened to his brother that October day, and they’ll find out why it happened. But until then, he presses forward, doing the only thing he knows how, because that’s how he honors the memory of Ryan Cobbins.

“That’s what he would want me to do. He wouldn’t want me to sit around and be sad and give up on my fighting career and have a meltdown,” Davis said. “So all I can do is move forward. I think by grinding and moving forward, that’s how I cope with it.”

 

Jeremy Botter covers mixed martial arts for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter

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Court’s Reading of Contract Will Settle Bellator vs. Rampage Jackson Standoff

I have read the entirety of Bellator’s request for an injunction (obtained by Bleacher Report via a Freedom of Information Act request late last week) against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson.  I have opinions on the injunction, but those aren’t enough, and so I’ve turned to an expert. We’ll get to that in a little bit. First, […]

I have read the entirety of Bellator’s request for an injunction (obtained by Bleacher Report via a Freedom of Information Act request late last week) against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson.  I have opinions on the injunction, but those aren’t enough, and so I’ve turned to an expert. We’ll get to that in a little bit. First, […]

By Putting Fun First, Can Bellator Become a Carefree Alternative to the UFC?

A minute or two into last week’s Bellator 134, a guy strolled out from behind a retractable 20-foot video monitor and began noodling a version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” on electric guitar.
On stage behind him stood a lineup of the night&rsquo…

A minute or two into last week’s Bellator 134, a guy strolled out from behind a retractable 20-foot video monitor and began noodling a version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” on electric guitar.

On stage behind him stood a lineup of the night’s fighters, some of them taking his performance very seriously, some of them absolutely not. The monitors streamed pure Americana—shots of the Statue of Liberty, Mount Rushmore, a clip of wheat stalks swaying gently in a breeze.

Just as the guitarist wailed past the line about the perilous fight, cameras cut to a statuesque blonde woman in the front row wearing a black evening gown, one hand tucked somberly over her—uh—heart. At her right elbow, a guy with a full sleeve of tattoos slurped a cocktail out of a plastic cup and gleefully nodded along to the music.

Ninety seconds later, a bunch of fireworks went off indoors.

So, yeah, if you were wondering what Bellator MMA would look like during 2015, you didn’t have to wait long to find out. Friday night’s “British Invasion” fight card was the company’s biggest event of the year so far, and it set an appropriately bombastic tone for Bellator’s new direction—one it hopes finally leads to its big break.

And, you know what? This time it feels like the promotion is actually onto something. Perhaps by giving up on trying to be a low-rent version of the UFC—and by bringing some of the pomp and circumstance back to MMA—it can position itself as a real alternative.

Maybe even a fun one.

This change has been percolating for a while now. In June 2014, the promotion ditched wickedly unpopular showrunner Bjorn Rebney and brought in universally well-liked former Strikeforce executive Scott Coker.

Coker had a proven track record of making second-tier MMA companies work in an industry dominated by the UFC. He brought instant credibility, and his mere presence gave Bellator a fresh start. Almost immediately, he tossed out its restrictive, outdated tournament format and weekly TV time slot in favor of a more traditional (and more manageable) schedule.

Yet a few questions still lingered about exactly how a Coker-led Bellator would look and feel.

Now we know.

There will be fireworks.

There will be glitz, glamour and precious little intrusion from reality.

We got a sample of this transformation late last year, when Tito Ortiz wrested a tepid split-decision victory from Stephan Bonnar in the main event of Bellator 131. Their old-timers bout didn’t nab any rave reviews, but it turned out to be a significant ratings success on SpikeTV.

We got our first look at the revamped production values and video stage set at that event too. It was clear change was in the air.

Still, we had no idea. Not really.

Bellator’s new crazy-like-a-fox vibe didn’t fully reveal itself until last week, when the company announced that Ken Shamrock vs. Kimbo Slice would headline an event in June. That was the matchmaking equivalent of telling the bartender you’ll go ahead and have that third drink after all—and suddenly we knew Bellator was playing for keeps.

Shamrock vs. Slice is a goofy, unexpected fight at least seven years past its expiration date. Shamrock is 51 years old, and prior to this booking it was rumored he would take on a man billed as the “king of the Irish travelers” in a bare-knuckle boxing match. Slice, who is 41, hasn’t fought in MMA since his ill-fated UFC run ended in 2010. He was last seen cobbling together a low-level boxing career circa 2013.

The two were originally supposed to fight in the now-defunct EliteXC organization in 2008, and even then it seemed like kind of a bad idea. Hours before showtime, Shamrock pulled out with a cut, and Slice went on to suffer a 14-second knockout at the hands of replacement fighter Seth Petruzelli.

Now, Bellator will book the do-over nobody saw coming.

It’s crazy. It’s indefensible. It’s totally perfect.

We’re all going to make fun of Shamrock-Slice, and then we’re all going to watch. If it goes off as scheduled, it promises to be an even bigger cable TV hit than Ortiz-Bonnar, perhaps fully realizing the blueprint established by that fight. Make no mistake, no matter how many jokes are cracked or criticisms are lobbed at this fight, it’s a brilliant gambit by Bellator.

After years of staid obligation to pure sport, the company’s new regime is finally letting its hair down. It’s becoming the rebellious kid brother to the stuffy old UFC that it should have been all along.

The B-list organization has never had the best fighters (and probably never will), so it didn’t make sense for Bellator to cast itself as the hard-nosed home of “the toughest tournament in sports.” The UFC is now and will likely always be the industry standard.

So, why not just let the guys at Zuffa LLC shoulder the burden of being the world’s top MMA promotion? Let the UFC hold the somber drug-testing press conferences. Let the UFC try to conquer the world with its 50 shows per year and its digital streaming service.

(Ed. Note: And hey, before we run the UFC too far up the flagpole as the goose that lays only golden eggs, let’s also remember we’re talking about a company that booked a main event, pay-per-view bout between Matt Hughes and Royce Gracie as recently as 2006. Maybe there never were any “rules” to this game.)

If nothing else, Bellator can make some mischief.

With a little a bit of Viacom money to spend and a reliable broadcast home on SpikeTV, Coker and Co. find themselves with a good opportunity to become MMA’s carefree option.

No, you don’t have to watch Bellator every week. No, you don’t have to obsessively follow its official fighter rankings and argue about its pound-for-pound list. No, you don’t have to commit your entire evening to the Internet-only prelim fights. Not if you don’t want to.

With Bellator, you just have to set aside one weekend night once or twice a month when—without paying $60 for pay-per-view—you might catch a fun fight.

The beauty of it is that Bellator really does have some fighters who are worth watching. A couple million people might tune in to see Ortiz, Shamrock or Slice, and some of them might get hooked on Will Brooks, Liam McGeary or Douglas Lima. Perhaps you’ll even come back for some of its more serious but less colorful events, like March 27’s bantamweight title bout between Joe Warren and Marcos Galvao.

Maybe by suckering people into the tent a few times a year to watch its cadre of 2005-era superstars, Bellator can even prove to Viacom it can be a ratings boon and a financial success. If the parent company ever gets the notion it should open the purse stings to help out, well, all bets will be off.

The best part is, it appears Bellator is going to play all of this with a straight face. When it announced Shamrock-Slice, Coker labeled it “unfinished business” on Twitter as though this was something we were all supposed to take very seriously. It only added to the delightful spectacle.

The bottom line is, it’s been awhile since we had an MMA promotion that didn’t sometimes feel like work to follow. It’s been awhile since we had one that didn’t continually demand more and more of its fans’ time and money. It’s been awhile since we had one that just wanted to have fun.

If Bellator can be that company, then it will have already won a major battle.

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Bellator Files Lawsuit Against Rampage, Puts UFC Return in Jeopardy

Bellator isn’t letting Quinton “Rampage” Jackson go without a fight. A statement was released to Bleacher Report on Monday detailing a lawsuit that has been filed against the MMA legend for signing with the UFC and breaching his exclusive six-fight contract with Bellator: Today, Bellator MMA was compelled to go to court to stop Quinton […]

Bellator isn’t letting Quinton “Rampage” Jackson go without a fight. A statement was released to Bleacher Report on Monday detailing a lawsuit that has been filed against the MMA legend for signing with the UFC and breaching his exclusive six-fight contract with Bellator: Today, Bellator MMA was compelled to go to court to stop Quinton […]

Scott Coker Discusses the Future of Bellator MMA

Since becoming President of Bellator MMA in June of last year, Scott Coker has been hard at work bringing about several changes to the Viacom-owned mixed martial arts promotion. He immediately nixed the tournament format, and made his intentions clear …

Since becoming President of Bellator MMA in June of last year, Scott Coker has been hard at work bringing about several changes to the Viacom-owned mixed martial arts promotion. He immediately nixed the tournament format, and made his intentions clear to seek out every single potential free agent in MMA. The promotion has added several new entertaining elements to their shows, and seems to be firing on all cylinders.

In the past, Coker has proven to be one of the very best promoters out there when it comes to building new stars. The Strikeforce: Challengers series produced several Strikeforce and UFC stars, Ronda Rousey and Daniel Cormier being just a few. He’s got the track record of making the most with the tools he has at his disposal. Bellator has claimed to be able to afford any free agent in the market, including Brock Lesnar.

Speaking with B/R MMA, Coker outlined his vision for Bellator’s future, and what kinds of fights we can expect as the year progresses, saying:

A year from now, I think we’ll still be doing our monthly shows. We’ll have some world title fights on those shows, and some big fights. Next year I think we’ll be doing six big ‘tentpole’ shows instead of four. I see this growing. We’re going to continue to grow our roster…You’ll see some fun fights. You’ll see some ‘hardcore’ fan fights, and some really entertaining fights. To me, that is where Bellator is headed. November 15th we kind of put our stake in the ground. That was us saying ‘This is the new Bellator.’

The November 15th event drew record television ratings, with 2 million people tuning in for the Tito Ortiz vs. Stephan Bonnar fight. The fight itself was a dud, but the animosity between Bonnar and Ortiz was real and the antics were enough to get people to watch.

Coker plans on continuing to seek out fights and fighters that will draw a lot of eyeballs, as evidenced by the Ken Shamrock vs. Kimbo Slice fight booked for later this year. On top of matchmaking friendly to hardcores and casual fans, Bellator is putting more effort into their production outside of the cage, with video packages and unique entrances.  

The Pride-style fighter parade at the top of the broadcast for Bellator 134 and the video entrance ramp further signify that Bellator is trying to evolve its product. The promotion is also planning on putting on a show outside of the United States before the end of 2015.

One of the most memorable things Coker put together in Strikeforce was the 2011 Heavyweight Grand Prix Tournament, which featured eight of the biggest heavyweight names outside of the UFC. Six of the nine heavyweights that ended up competing in the GP are now in the UFC. Coker outlined his vision to eventually bring a tournament back to the Bellator cage, saying:

We will do something, probably next year. If we do [a tournament], it will maybe be in one night. It may be a four-man tournament, or maybe an eight-man tournament.  But whatever you see, it will be in quick succession.

 

Michael Wellman is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report MMA and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted

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