The Beaten Path: The Performance Art of Michael Page

It’s difficult enough to be successful in life. To be original is about as close to impossible as you can get without Tom Cruise and some suspension wire.
In fact, if you want to be both, that tends to require some illusion or at least misdirecti…

It’s difficult enough to be successful in life. To be original is about as close to impossible as you can get without Tom Cruise and some suspension wire.

In fact, if you want to be both, that tends to require some illusion or at least misdirection. You need more than skill; you need a little pixie dust.

Michael Page might have that rare ability to fill both buckets. He hasn’t yet proved he can overcome top competition, but he might have the tools to get there.

“I think creativity is one of the most important things, to me, in fighting,” Page said in an interview with Bleacher Report. “I want to let people know who I am. I want people to enjoy what I do. To me, everything is about expression, about not being bound by fear of losing or your opponent.”

Page, 27, is 5-0 in his young MMA career. But the welterweight has five stoppage wins, all in the first round, with three by knockout. But that still doesn’t do it. One of his knockouts came by tornado kick. Another one happened in 10 seconds.

After winning just about everything there is to win as an amateur kickboxer in his native England and beyond, Page tried MMA. The talent was there. So were the physical tools—he stands 6’3” with a 77-inch reach and, according to him, doesn’t have to cut much weight from his default mass of 84 kilograms to reach the welterweight limit.

But the Michael Page precedent isn’t entirely set. Sure, there are the obvious antecedents like Anderson Silva and Anthony Pettis. Page isn’t as accomplished as those guys, but his MMA striking, in its own context, might be even more tornadic than the others. So might his in-cage persona, with the way he lowers his hands and even extends his neck, almost begging the other fighter to take a swing. And then the next instant, the other guy is flat on his back. He doesn’t mind doing the Ali shuffle or donning a pair of shades as he makes his way to the cage. 

That sort of thing gets you noticed, but it will earn you some detractors, too. Page understands that, and he recognizes that getting noticed is part of the deal. Far more soft-spoken in interviews than he is inside a cage, Page notes that his fights are a creative extension of his personality, not the personality itself.

“A lot of people think I’m disrespectful because of my fighting style,” Page said. “But I was raised on martial arts. I bow when I walk into the class, and I bow when I’m leaving class. Both of my parents were in that world, pushing me forward.”

That sense of creativity, though, goes beyond just a flashy interview or a bit of flamboyant footwork. You can see it in the fighting style, which is unabashedly based in his parents’ kung fu but is just so, well, unorthodox that it can’t be explained by a single influence.

Nor should it be. Page admits that he’ll watch Jackie Chan or other action movies, see a certain move and “my brain will just start working.” Kids are another source of his unorthodoxy.

“I love watching the juniors fight,” he said. “With the younger ones, there are no guidelines. They will try anything. But [older fighters] are safer, less creative. A certain move might be technically wrong, but maybe I can try it. Maybe it will work.”

But Page also is mindful of fans. He seems cognizant that some won’t consider him more than a flashy kickboxer until he takes on and beats a top wrestler. He seems aware that people don’t like him. Many fighters are quick to shrug such things off, assert that public opinion doesn’t worry them or retaliate against critics with a list of credentials. Page does neither, preferring to take a rather strange angle on the answer.

“Even the supporters, when they come up and say they know you’re going to win the fight, that adds pressure. What people say is powerful,” he said. “They don’t even realize they’re doing it sometimes; they’re just trying to support you. But it does add pressure. I just have to worry about myself. That helps.”

On Friday at Bellator 128, Page will take that dervish striking game and try to knock out another obstacle: Nah-Shon Burrell, a power puncher with brief stints in the UFC and Strikeforce. Page may be facing some ring rust, after he only fought twice in 2013 and once so far in 2014. An MCL injury was to blame for his 2013 absence. But he’s ready to go do it, and he wants to move forward.

“I don’t think I have too much more to prove to anybody,” Page said. “I just have to go and do me.”

 
The Beaten Path is a series at Bleacher Report highlighting intriguing prospects in MMA. For the previous interview in the series, click here. All quotes obtained firsthand. Scott Harris covers MMA and other topics for Bleacher Report and other places. Follow him on Twitter if you feel so inclined.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Beaten Path: The Performance Art of Michael Page

It’s difficult enough to be successful. To be original is about as close to impossible as you can get without Tom Cruise and suspension wire.
You’ll definitely need some kind of trickery if you want to be both. You need more than skill; you need …

It’s difficult enough to be successful. To be original is about as close to impossible as you can get without Tom Cruise and suspension wire.

You’ll definitely need some kind of trickery if you want to be both. You need more than skill; you need a little pixie dust.

Michael Page, probably the most exciting fighter in the Bellator promotion, might be the rare professional to thread that needle. He hasn’t proven his mettle against top competition (and he’ll need to), but he might have the tools to do it. The welterweight from London, England will try to take another step when he fights Nah-Shon Burrell Friday at Bellator 128. 

“I think creativity is one of the most important things, to me, in fighting,” Page said in an interview with Bleacher Report. “I want to let people know who I am. I want people to enjoy what I do. To me, everything is about expression, about not being bound by fear of losing or your opponent.”

Page, 27, is undoubtedly skilled, bringing to bear a striking arsenal so difficult to predict that it’s, well, unpredictable. It’s also incredibly effective; he’s 5-0 with five stoppage wins, all in the first round, with three by knockout. But that still doesn’t capture it. One of the knockouts came by tornado kick. Another happened in 10 seconds.

At the same time, he takes heat for what many fans see as a taunting style inside the cage—a charge Page acknowledges but humbly deflects. It’s in direct contrast to his brash on-camera persona. And it makes you wonder which persona is closest to the real thing, and whether or to what extent such questions should matter when choosing which athletes to support.

Because of that striking, there’s no question Page is a safe bet to wow the socks off of anyone tuned to the proper channel. After winning just about everything there is to win as an amateur kickboxer, Page tried MMA. The talent was there. So were the physical tools—he stands 6’3” with a 77-inch reach and, he says, doesn’t have to cut much weight from his default mass of 84 kilograms to reach the welterweight limit.

But the Page precedent wasn’t entirely set and still isn’t. Sure, there are the obvious antecedents like Anderson Silva and Anthony Pettis. Page isn’t as accomplished as those guys, but his MMA striking, in its own context, might be even more tornadic than the others. His footwork and speed are excellent, but it’s the creativity that might really move the needle. There’s jumping. There is also spinning. Sometimes there is both at the same time.

It all happens in that universal, video game sort of way that anyone can cheer. It’s all based in his parents’ kung fu but can’t be traced to a single influence. That’s intentional, by the way. 

Page admits that he’ll watch Jackie Chan or other action movies, see a certain move and “my brain will just start working.” Another source of his unorthodoxy? The ultimate source of unorthodoxy: kids.

“I love watching the juniors fight,” he said. “With the younger ones, there are no guidelines. They will try anything. But [older fighters] are safer, less creative. A certain move might be technically wrong, but maybe I can try it. Maybe it will work.”

It’s not hard to see the dancing elements of fighting when Page is in the cage. And therein lies the foundation for those claims of arrogance, with the way he lowers his hands and extends his neck, begging the other fighter to take a swing before, in the next instant, that poor dude is flat on his back.  

That sort of thing gets you noticed, but it will earn you some detractors, too. While he recognizes that being noticed is part of the game, Page defends himself against critics by asserting that his fights are a creative extension of his personality, not the personality itself.

“A lot of people think I’m disrespectful because of my fighting style,” Page said. “But I was raised on martial arts. I bow when I walk into the class, and I bow when I’m leaving class. Both of my parents were in that world, pushing me forward.”

But Page also is mindful of fans. Many fighters are quick to shrug off public opinion or retaliate against critics with a list of credentials. Page stops short of doing so.

“Even the supporters, when they come up and say they know you’re going to win the fight, that adds pressure. What people say is powerful,” he said. “They don’t even realize they’re doing it sometimes; they’re just trying to support you. But it does add pressure. I just have to worry about myself. That helps.”

On Friday, Page will probably feel some pressure. It’s only his second fight of 2014, on the heels of a 2013 that saw him fight only twice because of a knee injury (he says the injury is now behind him). He’ll have a lot to lose against Burrell, a power puncher with stints in the UFC and Strikeforce. Burrell has the punching power to end anyone’s night but lacks the wrestling pedigree that, if overcome, could convince critics Page can hang at the highest levels of MMA.

If nothing else, Page doesn’t have to convince anyone to watch.

“I don’t think I have too much more to prove to anybody,” Page said. “I just have to go and do me.”

 
The Beaten Path is a series at Bleacher Report highlighting intriguing prospects in MMA. For the previous interview in the series, click here. All quotes obtained firsthand. Scott Harris covers MMA and other topics for Bleacher Report and other places. Follow him on Twitter if you feel so inclined.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bellator Champ Eduardo Dantas: ‘If I Fight Anybody, I’ll Kill Them’

In the final days leading up to their bantamweight title unification bout Friday at Bellator 128, Joe Warren has done his best Chael Sonnen impersonation in an attempt to get under the skin of Eduardo Dantas.
Unfortunately for Warren, the Bellator MMA …

In the final days leading up to their bantamweight title unification bout Friday at Bellator 128, Joe Warren has done his best Chael Sonnen impersonation in an attempt to get under the skin of Eduardo Dantas.

Unfortunately for Warren, the Bellator MMA bantamweight champ seems just as comfortable engaging in a war of words as he does a slugfest in the cage.

In different interviews that were conducted Wednesday, Warren and Dantas threw verbal jabs at each other in what was either a genuine exchange of disdain or a late attempt to hype their fight, which will take place at the WinStar World Casino in Thackerville, Oklahoma.

Warren told Steven Marrocco of MMA Junkie that he believes the Brazilian has ducked him, and on Saturday, he’ll ultimately succumb to Warren’s “pressure.”

Eduardo Dantas is a champion who’s scared and runs away from competitors. I’ve been trying to fight this guy for a long time now. He’s a young kid. What do you expect? Champions stand in there and defend their belts. Champions don’t run. I just don’t know if he’ll be able to deal with the pressure I’m going to bring.

In an interview with Elias Cepeda of Cagewriter (via Yahoo), and apparently not in response to Warren’s comments, Dantas squashed the notion that he ever ran from the former NCAA Division I All-American wrestler.

“It doesn‘t make a big difference to me,” said the 25-year-old Dantas, who pulled out of his first scheduled bout with Warren at Bellator 118 due to a head injury. “Everyone knows I’m the champ. To me, Bellator gave him a belt because he’s famous, so they could take pictures with him holding it.” 

In true Sonnen-like spirit, the 37-year-old Warren elaborated on how his rivalry with Dantas has become a family matter:

My wife wants me to put this guy down bad. So this is going to be a family affair with me beating the s–t out of this guy. My wife doesn’t like the kid. She hates him, and my wife doesn’t hate anybody and respects everybody. Dantas really pissed her off by skipping out on our fight, talking about me being on steroids when I’m the cleanest man in the sport. He’s just scared! He’s a scared little kid. I’m getting in his head a little bit and it’s hurting him, and that’s the difference with age, being able to handle something with respect or not. The words I say to him come strictly out of annoyance. I’ve never had my wife tell me she wants somebody dead, and I told her ‘no problem.’

Dantas ended his interview with a bold message to Warren and any other bantamweight who plans to take his belt, saying: “It doesn‘t matter where guys fight. If I fight anybody, I kill them.”

In May, Warren scored a unanimous-decision win over Rafael Silva at Bellator 118 to claim the bantamweight interim belt. He won his first world title by knocking out Joe Soto in the second round at Bellator 27 in February 2010 for the featherweight title. 

Pat Curran took the featherweight strap from Warren with a third-round KO at Bellator 60 in March 2012.

Warren holds an overall record of 11-3, and his nine wins in Bellator MMA give him the most in the company’s history for any bantamweight.

Dantas (16-3) has prevailed in each of his six fights in Bellator MMA, including three wins in bantamweight title fights.

He won the belt when he submitted Zach Makovsky (arm-triangle choke) in the second round at Bellator 65 in April 2012. Four months later, Dantas got knocked out in the first round by Tyson Nam in his next bout at Shooto Brazil 33: Fight for BOPE II. 

Dantas bounced back and finished his next two opponents in the second round in Bellator MMA bantamweight title fights. He first knocked out Marcus Galvao at Bellator 89 in February 2013 and then submitted Anthony Leone (rear-naked choke) at Bellator 111 in March.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Royce Gracie Joins Bellator as Brand Ambassador — Wait, WHAT??


Well this is freakin’ bizarre. Bellator announced today that it has named UFC pioneer Royce Gracie as its official brand ambassador. As part of his role, Gracie “will host seminars, be involved in autograph and promotional appearances, as well as aiding in the International expansion of Bellator around the world.”

Gracie becomes the fourth UFC Hall of Famer to be hired by Bellator/Viacom in some capacity, following fighters Tito Ortiz and Stephan Bonnar*, and Fight Master/Gym Rescue personality** Randy Couture. Here’s the full press release via Bellator.com:

“The Godfather of MMA” Joins Bellator As Royce Gracie Becomes Promotional Brand Ambassador

Newport Beach, Calif. (October 8, 2014) – Known simply as the pioneer of mixed martial arts, Royce Gracie is widely considered the most influential and important figure the sport has seen. Engaging in some of the most memorable fights in MMA history during his time with the UFC and PRIDE Fighting Championships, Gracie has now joined Bellator as an official brand ambassador for the Viacom-owned promotion.

“I have known Scott for a long time and have always respected him as not only a promoter but as a martial artist who has always treated fighters with respect and truly understands their value,” Gracie said. “Bellator and Viacom want to give fans exciting fights and enable fighters to continue to grow and most importantly provide for their family, and it’s something I want to be a part of. UFC has done a great job over the past twenty years in building this sport and taking it globally and I’m glad to have been part of that, but Bellator is a growing organization I am honored to be a part of, and with the dedicated and talented people already associated with the company, we can further the growth of mixed marital arts as a sport worldwide.”


Well this is freakin’ bizarre. Bellator announced today that it has named UFC pioneer Royce Gracie as its official brand ambassador. As part of his role, Gracie “will host seminars, be involved in autograph and promotional appearances, as well as aiding in the International expansion of Bellator around the world.”

Gracie becomes the fourth UFC Hall of Famer to be hired by Bellator/Viacom in some capacity, following fighters Tito Ortiz and Stephan Bonnar*, and Fight Master/Gym Rescue personality** Randy Couture. Here’s the full press release via Bellator.com:

“The Godfather of MMA” Joins Bellator As Royce Gracie Becomes Promotional Brand Ambassador

Newport Beach, Calif. (October 8, 2014) – Known simply as the pioneer of mixed martial arts, Royce Gracie is widely considered the most influential and important figure the sport has seen. Engaging in some of the most memorable fights in MMA history during his time with the UFC and PRIDE Fighting Championships, Gracie has now joined Bellator as an official brand ambassador for the Viacom-owned promotion.

“I have known Scott for a long time and have always respected him as not only a promoter but as a martial artist who has always treated fighters with respect and truly understands their value,” Gracie said. “Bellator and Viacom want to give fans exciting fights and enable fighters to continue to grow and most importantly provide for their family, and it’s something I want to be a part of. UFC has done a great job over the past twenty years in building this sport and taking it globally and I’m glad to have been part of that, but Bellator is a growing organization I am honored to be a part of, and with the dedicated and talented people already associated with the company, we can further the growth of mixed marital arts as a sport worldwide.”

Gracie will immediately be involved with Bellator including promotion for Bellator 131, which is headlined by a light heavyweight showdown between Tito Ortiz and Stephan Bonnar, along with a Lightweight Title fight between Michael Chandler and Will Brooks on November 15. Moving forward Gracie will host seminars, be involved in autograph and promotional appearances, as well as aiding in the International expansion of Bellator around the world. Bellator and Gracie will also be involved in a co-branded merchandise line that will debut in 2015.

“To call Royce a legend would be an absolute understatement,” Bellator President Scott Coker said. “Royce and the Gracie family are directly responsible for making this sport what it is today*** and we are incredibly fortunate to have him be a part of the Bellator family. Royce will serve in many different capacities for Bellator and I look forward to our fighters, staff and most importantly, our fans, in having the chance to interact with one of the most iconic figures in sports.”

* Yes, Stephan Bonnar is a UFC hall of Famer.

** Yes, Randy Couture has a personality.

*** Shots fired!

Poaching the UFC’s first superstar might be the greatest troll-move that Bellator has ever pulled off. On the other hand, signing Gracie as any sort of MMA ambassador is weird, considering that he still insists jiu-jitsu is all you need, and he’s a bit of a loose cannon. Anyway, we look forward to the inevitable public burial from Dana White: “Who did Royce beat? Can you name one guy that Royce beat? He is literally the most overrated fighter of all time. He beat some karate teachers and he’s the greatest ever? He wouldn’t last one round with Ronda or Conner, etc., etc.”

Weekend Roundup: Ex-WSOF Champ *Throws* Fight, God-Awful Tattoos, UFC Overload & More


(Photo via Getty)

By Alex Giardini

The weekend is in the books, and although many of you were indulging in baseball playoffs and college football madness, there was plenty of MMA to equally boast and complain about. Apart from the always-vibrant regional circuit, which included MFC 41 and SFL 35 last Saturday night (watch a dude go through the cage door looking like he was on the wrong end of a Stone Cold Stunner right here), there were four major MMA shows taking place in 48 hours, two of which came from the same promotion that may or may not be ruining the sport with its inflated and overstressed schedule.

To top it all off, there were also a handful of stories outside the cage to boast about, some amusing and some downright miserable.

Here is the Cage Potato “Weekend Roundup,” and quite frankly, the only recap you need:


(Photo via Getty)

By Alex Giardini

The weekend is in the books, and although many of you were indulging in baseball playoffs and college football madness, there was plenty of MMA to equally boast and complain about. Apart from the always-vibrant regional circuit, which included MFC 41 and SFL 35 last Saturday night (watch a dude go through the cage door looking like he was on the wrong end of a Stone Cold Stunner right here), there were four major MMA shows taking place in 48 hours, two of which came from the same promotion that may or may not be ruining the sport with its inflated and overstressed schedule.

To top it all off, there were also a handful of stories outside the cage to boast about, some amusing and some downright miserable.

Here is the Cage Potato “Weekend Roundup,” and quite frankly, the only recap you need:

Bellator vs. Battlegrounds MMA 

It wasn’t exactly the showdown anyone anticipated, yet Bellator 127 went head-to-head against the hopeful Battlegrounds MMA, the upstart group that hired WWE legend Jim Ross and former UFC trash-talking guru Chael Sonnen to lead the way in the commentary booth for the return of the epic one-night tournament.

First, let’s get Bellator out of the way. These weekly Bellator shows will thankfully come to an end, and we can’t wait for Scott Coker to put on monthly shows better than the five UFC shows Zuffa runs per month, even though season 11 has owned so far.

In the main event, Daniel Straus blitzed past Justin Wilcox in under a minute, returning to winning ways after dropping his featherweight strap to Pat Curran back in March. Karo Parisyan’s comeback came to a stop at the hands of Fernando Gonzalez in a catchweight bout, after the latter dropped him and continued to deck him into oblivion. Another catchweight fight saw Rafael Silva defeat another UFC veteran, Rob Emerson, and Kendall Grove surprised the majority of his naysayers by choking out Christian M’Pumbu. Check out the highlights here.

As for Battlegrounds MMA, it was the perfect mix of sensation and shit show. The tournament format made a return, but we can sort of see why MMA can do without it. The show was a little long (not nearly as long as you-know-who), and with all due respect to the combatants participating, it would be hard to say the event would have acquired the same intrigue had it not been a one-night, eight-man welterweight tournament.

Since most of you care about the commentary team, they were a lot better than Mike Goldberg & Joe Rogan, Jon Anik & Brian Stann/Kenny Florian, generic English guy & Dan Hardy, and even Michael Schiavello & Pat Miletech. Both Ross and Sonnen offered something different in the booth, ranging from the “American Gangster’s” steroid jokes and ranking a ring girl, to Ross’ dry humor and still intact punch lines.

The unlikely winner of the whole shebang was Roan Corneiro, defeating three men in one night (including two finishes), and then stripped of $15,000 by the Oklahoma Athletic Commission for “showing up late” to a medical. Since the grand prize was a whopping $50,000, earning just $35,000 to topple three foes in one night is pretty atrocious. Other notable tournament highlights include Cody McKenzie making weight by donating a pint of blood and then losing to Brock Larson by submission, Joe Ray mauled Luigi Fioravanti, and Trey Houston upset Jesse Taylor with a slick first-round armbar.

UFC Sweden Actually Turned Out To Be A Good Show

UFC in the afternoon is a little odd. Depending on which coast you reside on, you have limited time when waking up in someone’s bed that you don’t recognize, and realize you’re about three ferry rides away from your home. Some of us would just keep chilling, but you know, their partner can turn out to be Leo Johnson.

Anyway, Twitter, the best social media app on the fucking planet, blew up with so-called MMA journalists and enthusiasts making fun of those watching the UFC Sweden prelims around noon without being paid for it. We tend to agree.

The UFC Fight Night 53 main card was pretty damn entertaining, mainly because all the Swedes and their affiliates lost. Rick Story shocked by emphatically defeating the overhyped Gunnar Nelson, and then completely blew his post-fight interview by not calling someone out. The co-main event saw Max Holloway knock out Akira Corassani, and the Wiki-less Ilir Latifi also fell to Jan Blachowicz due to a mean kick to the body. The action opened up with Mike Wilkinson upsetting Niklas Backstrom with a nasty knockout. The best part was when the latter walked up to Dan Hardy in the midst of talking to the Englishman and simply said, “that’s fucked up, man …(something else)…”

Donald Cerrone & Hapless Canuck Get Inked

After promising his boss he wouldn’t wakeboard or commit to other crazy shit on fight week, UFC lightweight Donald Cerrone got some pretty interesting ink on his foot. To be honest, there should be more instances of a blonde Bettie Page riding a rocket-penis in the sport.

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WoW the feet hurt!! Would way rather take 30 unanswered uppercuts to the face lol @benguntattoo

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If you thought that was bad, check out this moronic UFC-loving sap getting UFC Halifax inked on his freaking forearm, complete with the iconic Chuck Liddell pose.

Seriously, dude, don’t ever read CagePotato again. You’re banned.

UFC Halifax Was Longer Than The Ten Commandments

Speaking about UFC Halifax, who doesn’t love the UFC doubleheader?

UFC made its debut in Nova Scotia this past Saturday night with UFC Fight Night 54, showcasing the fight card on multiple backup platforms after FOX Sports 1 flipped them the bird and said, “we’re finishing baseball first, Mitch Gagnon.”

The event was pretty lackluster in general, minus Rory MacDonald’s official coming out party as the real Patrick Bateman. He finished Tarec Saffiedine in the third round via knockout, and there’s a good chance he’s next in line for the welterweight championship. Also on the card, Miesha Tate’s boyfriend lost to Raphael Assuncao in the co-main event.

As for the rest of the main card, check Wikipedia. If Dana isn’t doing post-fight scrums anymore, we aren’t either.

War Machine Is Back On Twitter

War Machine, real name John … you know what? Fuck War Machine. Up next …

UFC Newcomer Creates Go Fund Me Page

Every time the fighter pay issue is brought up in the media, the UFC brass (primarily) completely shuts down the remarks, citing backstage bonuses, unknown contract clauses, and general media stupidity to fight their cause.

In this instance, Nina Ansaroff, who makes her Octagon debut against Juliana Lima in a women’s strawweight bout at UFC Fight Night 56 in Brazil, has created a “Go Fund Me” page upon entering her first fight for the promotion hopeful of “world fucking domination.”

This has to be one of the saddest instances of fighter pay in the goddamn world. Not only did Cat Zingano’s paycheck raise a few eyebrows last week, but also that’s just another example of how flawed the pay system is. Ansaroff is an Invicta FC veteran, riding a five-fight winning streak, and fought both Carla Esparza and Barb Honchak early on in her career. As it stands, the fighter has raised $960, with a projected goal of $5,000.

There are many ways to spin this, but I guess we can just give it a rest and say it’s business, right?

Josh Burkman Threw WSOF Title Fight, But Not Really, Laughs In Ben Askren’s Avatar

Josh Burkman returns to the Octagon after six years away, facing the power-punching Hector Lombard at UFC 182. He left his post at WSOF, and his not-so-cryptic tweets were rather interesting.

The “People’s Warrior” claimed he threw his welterweight title fight against Steve Carl back in October 2012, just to get back into the UFC’s grace. It was a little hard to believe since the scrap was a back-and-forth battle that saw Burkman go out due to a triangle choke.

After some back-and-forth clowning with Ben Askren on Twitter, Burkman reiterated that he would never throw a fight, and was simply tooling the current One FC welterweight champion (as per his chat with MMA Fighting).

Actually, promotions do release champions.

That reminds me … was Burkman dating Arianny when that whole thing with the pictures …. uh, nevermind

Bellator 127 Results and GIFs: Straus Buries Wilcox, Gonzalez Decimates Parisyan

Bellator 127 was arguably the weakest card on paper of the season so far. Still, it had some decent fights on it and some good action. For a free fight card, it was certainly worth the watch.

Of note on the prelims, Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou defeated an overmatched jobber in Malik Merad. Here’s a GIF of the finish (this GIF and others in the post via Zombie Prophet/Fansided):

Bellator 127 was arguably the weakest card on paper of the season so far. Still, it had some decent fights on it and some good action. For a free fight card, it was certainly worth the watch.

Of note on the prelims, Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou defeated an overmatched jobber in Malik Merad. Here’s a GIF of the finish (this GIF and others in the post via Zombie Prophet/Fansided):

In the main card opener, Christian M’Pumbu faced Kendall Grove. This was M’Pumbu’s first fight at middleweight and it went poorly. The first round was five minutes of wall-and-stall for the most part. In the second, Grove managed to get M’Pumbu’s back during a quick scramble and sunk in a rear naked choke.

The next match featured Rafael Silva against Rob Emerson. Silva laid and prayed his way to a decision win. There was nothing notable or impressive about this fight save for Emerson’s uncanny resemblance to Doug Marshall.

Karo Parisyan met Fernando Gonzalez in the co-main event. This fight wasn’t competitive. Gonzalez hurt a sluggish Parisyan early with a hook and then landed some brutal follow-up ground and pound over the course of the next minute to put Parisyan away.

Then came the main event. Justin Wilcox fought Daniel Straus. This one didn’t last long. Straus clipped Wilcox early with a left hand, face-planting him. After a few more punches, the fight was called.

Here are the complete results:

Main Card

Daniel Straus def. Justin Wilcox via KO (punches), round 1, 0:50.
Fernando Gonzalez def. Karo Parisyan via TKO (punches), round 1, 1:43.
Rafael Silva def. Rob Emerson via unanimous decision (30-27 x3)
Kendall Grove def. Christian M’Pumbu via submission (rear naked choke), round 2, 4:14.

Preliminary Card

Ray Sloan def. Nick Moghaddam via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28 x2)
Saad Awad def. Sergio Rios via unanimous decision (30-26, 30-27 x 2)
Thierry Sokoudjou def. Malik Merad via TKO, round 2, 4:04.
Keith Berry def. Joe Pacheco via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)
Ricky Rainey def. Johnny Cisneros via KO, first round, 3:18.
Justin Baesman def. Johnny Mercurio via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28).