Johny Hendricks: I Have a Better H-Bomb Than Dan Henderson

Expected upcoming UFC welterweight challenger Johny Hendricks is brimming with confidence as he anxiously awaits a title bout with Georges St-Pierre, and his confidence was on full display in the latest edition of FUEL TV’s “Octo-Questions.”One of the …

Expected upcoming UFC welterweight challenger Johny Hendricks is brimming with confidence as he anxiously awaits a title bout with Georges St-Pierre, and his confidence was on full display in the latest edition of FUEL TV’s “Octo-Questions.”

One of the questions asked by interviewed Ariel Helwani was who has a better H-Bomb, Hendricks or former PRIDE and Strikeforce champ Dan Henderson. 

“Bigg Rigg’s” response may be a shocking to some: “Ohhh that’s a good one! Man, he’s been in it a little longer than I have, but I think I can catch him…so I’m gonna go with myself.”

Despite an 11-1 record at the time, Hendricks had little hype behind him until he knocked out former welterweight title challenger Jon Fitch in just 12 seconds at UFC 141 in December 2011. 

Since then, Hendricks has rattled off three more wins over stiff opposition in Josh Koscheck, Martin Kampmann and Carlos Condit, flooring Kampmann in under a minute with his now famed left hand. 

Dating back to March 2011, Hendricks has won six in a row, a welterweight streak second only to GSP (11 wins in a row). 

While Hendricks has had one of the best young careers an MMA fighter could ask for, it’s tough to compare him to a veteran knockout artist like Dan Henderson. 

Hendo, who will celebrate his 16-year anniversary in the sport when he fights Rashad Evans at UFC 161 this Saturday, has notched 13 knockouts in his 38-fight career.

Some of his most notable KO’s came against Wanderlei Silva, Michael Bisping and Fedor Emelianenko.

Also worth noting is that Hendo is feared for the big punches he lands with his right hand, as opposed to Hendricks’ big power coming from his left hand. 

Fight fans, let your voice be heard. Who has the better H-Bomb: Hendricks or Henderson?

 

John Heinis is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA Editor for eDraft.com and contributes MMA videos to The Young Turks Sports Show. 

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UFC Lightweight Josh Thomson Compares Gay Marriage To Incest and Polygamy

The testosterone-soaked world of MMA is not exactly at the vanguard when it comes to accepting alternative lifestyles. At least, if a few outspoken fighters are any indication.The latest to chime in is Josh Thomson, the former Strikeforce lightweight c…

The testosterone-soaked world of MMA is not exactly at the vanguard when it comes to accepting alternative lifestyles. At least, if a few outspoken fighters are any indication.

The latest to chime in is Josh Thomson, the former Strikeforce lightweight champion and recent addition to the UFC roster. On Wednesday, Thomson (20-5-1, 3-1 UFC) used his Twitter account to share his opinions on gay marriage, comparing the practice—apparently unfavorably—with polygamy.

 

Thomson continued discussing the practice, replying to a respondent thusly:

Also, on Monday, Thomson on his Facebook page compared gay marriage to incest and pedophilia, among other things (h/t Bloody Elbow):

Should siblings be allowed to marry siblings? My point is, where do you draw the line? I personally don’t care who you marry but I also am smart enough to know that it opens a gateway to men/women trying to marry young kids, siblings marrying eachother and people having multiple husbands an wives…Equality doesn’t stop with gay marriage, it just starts with it. Blacks an whites getting married is nothing like this. So your okay with R. Kelly trying To marry lil girls? People trying to marry their brother or sister? Animals? Etc? Those people want the same exact thing, to be happy. Are you gonna tell them no?

The Thomson tweets come not long after popular lightweight Nathan Diaz—who, interestingly, Thomson knocked out with a head kick in April in his return to the UFC Octagon—was suspended indefinitely by the UFC after he tweeted a gay slur. Diaz’s manager defended the fighter, saying Diaz didn’t use the term in an anti-gay context.

Earlier this spring, UFC heavyweight Matt Mitrione was suspended for two weeks after his rant on The MMA Hour broadcast about transgendered fighter Fallon Fox. 

Thomson, 34, returned to the UFC April 20 after a six-year stint with Strikeforce, which folded earlier this year. His knockout of Diaz at UFC on Fox 7 earned him Knockout of the Night honors and status as a lightweight to watch in the stacked division. 

On the heels of the Mitrione incident, the UFC released a fighter code of conduct, which states that “discipline may be imposed” if it is determined that a fighter engaged in “derogatory or offensive conduct…about a person’s ethnic background, heritage, color, race, national origin, age, religion, disability, gender or sexual orientation.” 

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Chael Sonnen Talks Testosterone: ‘Yes, I Took It To Get an Edge’

The argument about testosterone replacement therapy and its use in MMA continues to be a popular subject, and it inadvertently took center stage during a recent interview with Chael Sonnen when he appeared on the Jim Rome Show that will air on Showtim…

The argument about testosterone replacement therapy and its use in MMA continues to be a popular subject, and it inadvertently took center stage during a recent interview with Chael Sonnen when he appeared on the Jim Rome Show that will air on Showtime Wednesday night.

Sonnen was part of a panel speaking about performance-enhancing drugs and the recent discoveries made by Major League Baseball and suspensions that may be handed down regardless of positive drug tests being administered and returned.

During the discussion, Rome put the spotlight on Sonnen. In 2010 following his fight with Anderson Silva at UFC 117, the Oregon native tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone. 

Rome asked Sonnen point blank: “Were you looking to get an edge, were you trying to cheat, and did you get caught?”

In response, Sonnen said he wasn’t cheating and fully admitted he did it to gain an advantage, but also denied testing positive for elevated levels of testosterone for his infraction in 2010.

“That is inaccurate.  I didn’t have high levels (of testosterone), I had a separated T to E (testosterone to epitestosterone) ratio, which is not illegal,” Sonnen stated.  “I was in trouble for the disclosure issue and they gave me six months. 

“Testosterone’s not illegal, which we all found out. It’s perfectly legal.  I followed all the rules as I understood them and yes, I took it to get an edge.  I would never take anything if I didn’t think it would help me.”

In September 2010, California State Athletic Commission Executive Director George Dodd revealed in a statement that in a postfight drug test, Sonnen‘s “test came back with a high T/E (testosterone-to-estrogen) level, which is indicative of anabolic steroid use.”

The levels were ultimately revealed in testing released to the media as a 16.9-to-1 ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone.  Normal ratio levels of testosterone in men come in at 1-to-1, while the acceptable levels by the World Anti-Doping Agency reach as high as 4-to-1.  State athletic commissions such as Nevada will even allow up to a 6-to-1 level before considering it a failed test. 

Sonnen‘s levels were clearly over all of those limits at the time.

Still, Sonnen‘s statement to Rome was partially true because in a December 2010 hearing with the commission, the focus became less about his elevated testosterone levels and more about his lack of disclosure that he was prescribed testosterone replacement therapy by a physician to battle a condition known as hypogonadism.

Sonnen failed to properly apply and receive permission to use testosterone injections leading up to his fight, and that was really the major subject dealt with when he appeared before the commission.

Ultimately, the commission opted to suspend Sonnen for six months at the time for his failure to disclose the use of the treatments.

Sonnen continued speaking about the use of testosterone and reiterated that it’s not an illegal substance and that he never tested out of range.  He claims now it was just false reporting that did him in.

“It’s a legal substance versus a banned substance. Don’t say performance enhancing, that’s what this is, we don’t take things to bring us down,” Sonnen stated.  “That’s called malpractice in this country.  All medication is meant to enhance us in America. 

“I took testosterone that was perfectly legal, and I did not have elevated levels.  I wasn’t even accused of that.  The media did that to me.”

Unfortunately for Sonnen this time around, the facts released by the California State Athletic Commission tell a different story.

Regardless, Sonnen‘s larger point was concerning substances being taken by all athletes competing in professional sports—nothing is being taken without trying to one-up the opposition.

The full episode with Sonnen appearing on the Jim Rome Show airs on Wednesday night on Showtime starting at 9 p.m. ET/PT.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Winner of Jon Fitch vs. Josh Burkman Will Battle for Title in Their Next Fight

The first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight champion won’t be crowned at the show coming up this Friday from Las Vegas, but the winner of the main event, either Jon Fitch or Josh Burkman, will challenge for the belt in their next fight. World …

The first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight champion won’t be crowned at the show coming up this Friday from Las Vegas, but the winner of the main event, either Jon Fitch or Josh Burkman, will challenge for the belt in their next fight.

World Series of Fighting Vice President and matchmaker Ali Abdel-Aziz, in an interview with MMA‘s Great Debate Radio for Bleacher Report that will air on Thursday, broke the news that the winner of the bout between Jon Fitch and Josh Burkman will then move onto a welterweight title shot later this year.

“The winner of this fight, Burkman or Fitch, is getting a title shot,” Abdel-Aziz stated. “It doesn’t matter who, but the winner will get a title shot.”

Many wondered when the featured fight was announced if the title would already be up for grabs or not.  Fitch signed with World Series of Fighting just days after he was released from the UFC, and Burkman is currently riding a four-fight win streak, including two victories in the World Series of Fighting cage.

While both fighters bring veteran experience to the table, Abdel-Aziz felt it was premature to put the title up for grabs with Fitch in his first bout under the World Series of Fighting banner.

“Fitch is always going to be a champion, Burkman deserves to become a champion, and the best man is going to be fighting for the title and have the opportunity to have the world title,” Abdel-Aziz explained.  “A lot of people wanted this to be a title fight, and I didn’t want (to) disrespect Burkman in any kind of way, but I think Jon Fitch has got to get his feet wet with the promotion before even talking about titles.”

Fitch enters the fight off of a loss to Demian Maia in his last trip to the UFC Octagon but hopes to bounce back and pick up his second win over Burkman when they meet this weekend. Fitch first defeated Burkman while both fighters were in the UFC back in 2006.

Now Fitch and Burkman will be competing with the knowledge that the winner will move on to fight for the World Series of Fighting gold later this year.

The current agenda for the upstart promotion is for their fourth show to take place in August, followed by cards in September, October and December. It’s over the next two shows that Abdel-Aziz plans to crown the other No. 1 contender in the welterweight division.

“The winner is probably going to have to sit for a little bit while I put on some other fights,” Abdel-Aziz said.  “We’ll see what happens when they fight each other, and the best guy who fits will fight Fitch or Burkman.”

Two up-and-coming welterweight prospects will have their chance to impress this weekend when Tyson Steele meets Steve Carl in the co-main event of the World Series of Fighting 2 card.

More welterweight bouts will also be added to the August and September shows, and when the dust settles, the promotion will pit the most impressive fighter in that list against either Fitch or Burkman for the first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight title.

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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Alexis Davis Poised to Become the Biggest Threat to Ronda Rousey’s Title Reign

Ever since the UFC announced that women’s fighters were coming to compete in the Octagon, the bouts that have taken place in the division have all felt like something special was happening. For years and years, UFC President Dana White said that women’…

Ever since the UFC announced that women’s fighters were coming to compete in the Octagon, the bouts that have taken place in the division have all felt like something special was happening.

For years and years, UFC President Dana White said that women’s fighting just wasn’t evolved yet and didn’t have enough stars to promote an entire division in his organization.  White gladly ate his words with the emergence of current women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey, and now with the entire division thriving, it appears women’s MMA is here to stay in the UFC.

From Rousey‘s debut against Liz Carmouche, to the epic back-and-forth battle between Cat Zingano and Miesha Tate, to the debut of former Olympic silver medalist Sara McMann—the women have arrived in a big, big way.

UFC 161 fighter Alexis Davis has been watching this show the entire time because she was one of the first fighters the promotion signed after entering the women’s MMA fray.  She was front and center for Rousey‘s debut win while headlining a pay-per-view card, and this weekend, she will be part of the first international UFC event with women on the main card.

As much as the spotlight has been shone down on the women’s fighters, Davis refuses to look at her upcoming bout against Rosi Sexton as anything more than just another trip to the cage. 

“This just feels like another fight,” Davis told Bleacher Report.  “Even when they sent us out to watch (Ronda) Rousey and (Liz) Carmouche, and we got to go behind the scenes, I felt like I was back at Strikeforce.  It could be different by the time I get there, but I don’t think the nerves will get to me quite as much.”

The attention and the reception of women’s fighting in the UFC has been nothing less than positive.  Each bout has almost been treated like a main event of its own, and there always seems to be something extra on the line every time a woman steps foot in the Octagon.

There was some worry when White said that the promotion was getting into women’s MMA solely because of Rousey‘s star power and skill in the cage that the other fighters would basically act as a feeder system into her title fights.  Davis says the hype surrounding women’s MMA in the UFC has been nothing less than fantastic, and it hasn’t circled around only one fighter thus far.

“It seems like the norm now.  It’s not like, ‘Oh my God! Women are on the card!’  Now, the UFC’s done a really good job of pushing it,” Davis said.  “Now, every couple cards, they are going to have a women’s fight.  So I don’t think there’s quite as much pressure as there was before.  We’re great fighters, and we just have to do our thing.  Whether we’re fighting for the UFC or we’re fighting for Invicta or an amateur fight, we put on great fights regardless.

“A lot of us were worried that it was going to be the Ronda show, and it hasn’t.  They push all of their fighters, anyone who has a fight coming up.  Like sending me out to the press conference, that was a great experience for me to get my name out there and just exposing women’s fighters.  It’s kind of exploded these last few months.”

For her upcoming fight at UFC 161, Davis will be on the main card when she takes on Sexton, and while there’s no title shot on the line, she’s approaching this as a chance for the spotlight to fall on her shoulders.

Since losing to Sarah Kaufman in one of the best fights of 2012, Davis has turned into a machine, submitting her last two opponents in impressive fashion. She’s hitting her stride at the exact right time, and title shot or not, she’s out to prove she’s the biggest threat to Rousey‘s title.

“I’m happy where I am.  I may not be fighting for the title next, but I’ve just got to keep going on the path that I’m on and I’m sure I’ll get there,” Davis said.  “It’s a great opportunity, and there are so many women who are dying to be in the position I’m in, so I’m just going to kind of focus on the fight at hand, and show them why I should be the No. 1 contender.

“Rousey is at the top of the food chain.  It’s going to happen eventually.  She’s still new, still new in the UFC, so eventually it’s going to happen that someone’s going to dethrone her.  Obviously, I’d love to have that opportunity.”

Davis knows that beating Sexton is just the first step towards a title shot.  With Rousey locked up filming The Ultimate Fighter and with her next bout scheduled against Miesha Tate likely to take place in December, the women’s bantamweight title won’t be defended again until at least a few months into 2014.

The pedigree is there, however, for Davis to be the fighter the UFC needs to truly challenge Rousey in the cage.  Davis is a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt with serious ground credentials to not only stop Rousey‘s signature armbar attack but possibly put the champion away with a submission of her own.

The time waiting for a title shot just means Davis has the chance to prepare, get better and become the fighter most poised to rip that belt away from Rousey‘s waist.

“The longer people wait to fight me,” Davis commented, “the worse it’s going to be.”

Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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PETA Offers Online MMA Game Featuring UFC Stars

PETA is showing a vigilante streak, calling on fighters to dispense justice. The animal rights group has released a free online game that allows players to run amok through a variety of settings where animals are being abused, dispatching cruel scienti…

PETA is showing a vigilante streak, calling on fighters to dispense justice. The animal rights group has released a free online game that allows players to run amok through a variety of settings where animals are being abused, dispatching cruel scientists and evil military personnel along the way.

The avatars that players control to get the job done? Why, none other than a trio of vegetarian MMA stars. After all, who better to handle a job like this than men who fight for a living and carry a fondness for animals?

The game can be accessed via MMA Underground.

Players can select one of Aaron Simpson, Georgi Karakhanyan or Jake Shields to progress through the game, defeating foes and freeing animals being prepared for experimentation. 

After the successful completion of each level, the player receives a reward. For beating the game using Jake Shields, you get an interview with Shields, a desktop background and a couple of informative videos.

I don’t know whether the rewards vary based on which character you select.

The final reward a triumphant player receives is having “Cheerleader Arianny” express her gratitude for your efforts, a gratitude that Cheerleader Arianny‘s live counterpart may just share.

“The PETA video game is an absolutely incredible, innovative, unique way to reach people that might not be aware of the cruelty that these animals endure,” says Celeste. “Gamers that probably wouldn’t go to the PETA website are now becoming aware of things that are happening every day.”

The game is reminiscent of a mid 90s arcade, so if you are in the mood for that, give it a whirl.

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