UFC on Fuel 1: Diego Sanchez on Drugs, Jesus, Tebow, and Punching His Pops

wasn’t his at all and lost a battle with drugs and alcohol.In the end, he lost the battle over his own soul.”I got sucked in real deep to the fame. The money. Even the drugs and alcohol,” Sanchez said in an interview with Bleacher Report. “I was one of…

wasn’t his at all and lost a battle with drugs and alcohol.

In the end, he lost the battle over his own soul.

“I got sucked in real deep to the fame. The money. Even the drugs and alcohol,” Sanchez said in an interview with Bleacher Report. “I was one of those stubborn people who had to learn the hard way.  For a long time, I was living my life my way and not God’s way. I wasn’t living it by His rules, I was living it by my own rules. And that didn’t get me anywhere. I got to the point where I had no hope.”

Finally, and perhaps worst of all for an athlete with a limited window for earning big money, he lost everything he had.

Already spending more than he could afford, Sanchez put his trust in the wrong people. An amazing athlete who has won “fight of the night” bonuses on five occasions, Sanchez had nothing to show for his almost 10 years in the cage.

“‘Go big or go home.’ I used to say that. I was addicted to that. The lifestyle, the fame.  The girls. The parties. And with that came a lot of people who didn’t really care about me. They were just leeches. Just very bad people. I had to learn a lot. I was very gullible.

“I trusted the wrong person with finances and the guy ended up breaking my bank. I lost my money in Ponzi schemes. If it wasn’t enough to be wasting a lot of it, one of my best friends totally done me dirty and wiped me out. After that happened to me, I was humbled. I moved to the mountains of New Mexico, got on the grind, and started training again.”

 

 

The Ghost of Johnny Tapia


Sanchez certainly wouldn’t have been the first fighter to fall into despair after a high profile loss. Some only make the journey back to sobriety after years of abuse—some never return at all.

Diego knows the stories. Especially the story of Johnny Tapia, a boxer who caught Sanchez’s eye as he watched his rise to prominence in his hometown of Albuquerque, New Mexico.

“I lived in a mobile home, a trailer park. We get together all the little kids, and I had this pair of boxing gloves I’d gotten from the flea market. We would throw down, man,” Sanchez remembered with a laugh. “I’d say ‘Johnny Tapia, Johnny Tapia’ and I’d impersonate him and hit myself in the face. I’ll never forget.”

Tapia fought like a pit bull. Coming forward with vicious punches, he would stand up straight and jut his chin out after he got nailed or between rounds, seemingly taunting the world—”is that all you’ve got?”

When Diego was just 12 years old, Tapia won his first world title right there in Albuquerque. Tapia was from the streets, a poor kid who lost both of his parents to murder. If he could make it, there was hope for anyone.

“When I got a little older, 12 or 13, my dad would come out and put the gloves on. He’d take it easy on me. But I had been practicing so much, I cracked him a good one one time,” Sanchez said, barely holding back a laugh, mimicking his shaken father. “He said ‘Hold on. Hold on. Let me sit down here for a second. You got me a good one.’ And I remember thinking ‘Yes!'”

They were good times, but darkness was just around the corner. If life was never simple for Diego Sanchez, that’s doubly true for Johnny Tapia.

He fell into drugs and the wild life, spending time in prison and in the hospital after a suicide attempt that followed consecutive losses to arch rival Paulie Ayala.

“Things were different for me than for Johnny.  Because I never got into cocaine. My thing was just marijuana and alcohol, the vanity of traveling and living the rock star life,” Sanchez said. “But I’ve pulled myself out of that hole. I’m fighting Jake Ellenberger, one of the best guys in the welterweight division. I’m keeping my dream alive, doing the best I can for me and my family. There’s always going to be challenges, and that’s life. But I’m 30 years old. I have a family now. I’m doing things a lot different.”

 

 

Reborn


Longtime fans will remember Diego from the first season of The Ultimate Fighter.

A restless spirit, Sanchez would sit outside in a thunderstorm, attempting to capture chi from the universe. “Wacky” was the word commonly used—but more than a little lovable. Those days are long gone.

“I’ve gone through some stages. When I was younger, I was really open,” Sanchez said. “I was very curious about the world. I got interested in energy from yoga. Yoga and meditation…Then I did Tony Robbins, where I walked the burning hot coals for 20 feet without burning the soles of my feet…When I hit rock bottom, when I needed to grow up and be a man, to make real decisions, I dedicated myself to Jesus Christ. I’m walking that walk now.  I don’t need no Tony Robbins. I don’t need no chi. I’ve got the blood of Jesus Christ flowing in my veins.”

The energy is still there, merely redirected to a more serious life as he fights with renewed purpose. Now the fight isn’t merely taking place in the cage. It’s a fight for souls.

“Now, my main job is the ministry. I speak at churches. I’m involved in the youth programs,” Sanchez said. “I get in front of the church and speak, do little sermons. I share my testimony. That’s where my heart is. The platform God has given me is the UFC. And fighting. All the fans that I’ve accumulated over the years.”

And what would a UFC title mean to this one-man mission?

“It would be tremendous. It would be like Tim Tebow winning the Super Bowl,” Sanchez said, before athlete mode took over. “But I’m just taking it one fight at a time. I’ll take it one fight at a time. And I know a win over Jake Ellenberger (Wednesday night at 8 p.m. EST on Fuel TV) will put me in a good place. I’ve got to climb to get to the top like everybody else.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

5 Ways to Improve the UFC

The UFC puts on a tremendous show. No one disputes that. It’s non stop action from the opening fight right up until the main event.The truth is, once you fall under the spell of mixed martial arts, it’s very hard to look at other sports the same way. I…

The UFC puts on a tremendous show. No one disputes that. It’s non stop action from the opening fight right up until the main event.

The truth is, once you fall under the spell of mixed martial arts, it’s very hard to look at other sports the same way. I used to watch SportsCenter multiple times a day. At night, you’d find my TV locked on TNT or the Deuce, watching basketball to the point I knew the players in the garbage West Coast conferences like the WAC.

The UFC changed all of that. Who can watch a guy bouncing a ball or one fat redneck hurling a ball at another fat redneck who will attempt to hit it with a stick? Those are kids’ games.

The UFC has guys fighting. Locked in a steel cage! With very limited rules to protect them from being maimed. It’s the perfect sport for kids raised on violent video games and the music of Ice Cube.

Well, almost perfect. There are some changes I would make to take a good thing and make it even better. How would I propel the UFC into the hearts and minds of the world’s sports fans?

Strap in and find out.

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UFC 143 Results: Was Carlos Condit’s Run from Nick Diaz Bad for the Sport?

Nick Diaz didn’t have the heart to discuss the decision after last night’s grueling five-round title fight with Carlos Condit. He had left it in the cage. So, when the cards were read, when insanity reigned and Condit ended the night with his hand rais…

Nick Diaz didn’t have the heart to discuss the decision after last night’s grueling five-round title fight with Carlos Condit. He had left it in the cage. So, when the cards were read, when insanity reigned and Condit ended the night with his hand raised, Diaz had no patience left for this cruel, mad world.

“I think I’m done with this MMA,” Diaz said. “I don’t need this s***.”

Condit took home the UFC’s interim welterweight title on his bicycle. Scratch that. Condit won a track meet last night. He ran from Diaz for five rounds, sometimes literally, with arms pumping as he sprinted across the cage to reset and begin the race again.

Other times, it was metaphorically, circling, always circling, never still as he potshotted Diaz with leg kicks and avoided his incessant pressure.

Make no mistake—Condit’s performance was masterful. Diaz is a fighting machine, an angry man who pursues you to the bitter end. At that end, he was still coming after Condit like it was the first round. Carlos matched Diaz’s cardio and passion with his own. It was amazing to behold. But it’s hard to call what Condit did “fighting.”

Carlos Condit came to win an athletic contest. Nick Diaz came to fight. The difference was distinct and startling. Condit sprinted the UFC right down a slope so slippery, it might as well be made of banana peels.

The sport was built on two men coming together in the cage, head-to-head, and trying to do each other harm. Condit violated the implicit contract the UFC has with its fans. His performance looked more like a defensive boxer, the kind boxing “purists” love and fans hate. Carlos Condit was Ronald “Winky” Wright or Josh Clottey last night. And that’s not a good thing.

The UFC is at an interesting place in its history. The television contract with Fox opens up the sport to all kinds of new fans. What is MMA, they might ask? If they watched last night, it’s just a modern version of boxing, a game and not a fight.

Cage fighting is at its best when the action is raw, when passion merges with calculation in a beautiful symphony of violence. No one watches the UFC for sprinting, circling and avoiding the fight. You don’t watch the UFC for “smart.” It’s a lesson the promotion may learn the hard way as a thousand Condits descend to turn something pure and amazing into just another game.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The UFC Gladiator: Saying Goodbye to a True MMA Icon

He seemed a strange choice for a sport looking to shed its reputation for brutality. Yet there he was before every UFC event, donning his armor and preparing himself for battle. Did the UFC Gladiator evoke thoughts of “human cockfighting”? Of the arena…

He seemed a strange choice for a sport looking to shed its reputation for brutality. Yet there he was before every UFC event, donning his armor and preparing himself for battle. Did the UFC Gladiator evoke thoughts of “human cockfighting”? Of the arenas in Rome where men too often fought to the death? Of excess, depravity, cruelty?

Of course he did. But there he was, nonetheless, paired with Stemme’s song “Face the Pain,” a constant before every UFC broadcast for more than a decade. When you saw him girding his loins for the fight of his life, surely your blood starting pumping a little faster. If you didn’t feel a little rush, well, it’s time to go back to watching tennis. The UFC Gladiator meant things were about to get raw.

No more. Starting tomorrow, the UFC will debut a new opening for their cage fighting events. It will no doubt be slick and modern, will no doubt pay homage to the great athletes who have graced the Octagon with their presence during the Zuffa era.

It won’t be the same.

Sure, sometimes you hated the Gladiator. If you ever bought a UFC event on DVD, you know full well the pain of watching that introduction in toto every time you popped the disc in. There was no skipping the UFC Gladiator. He was there whether you wanted him or not. 

I write this with no tears in my eyes. We knew it was coming. It was announced last year when we learned the little sport that could was going prime time, network style.

“We’re gonna change everything, graphics, show openings for pay-per-views and fight nights,” Dana White said. “We’re going to enhance the look and feel. The gladiator opening is going away.”

It’s important to embrace progress. The UFC is looking to capture a brand new audience of fans. To them, the Gladiator is likely a relic. It’s cheesy. It’s undoubtedly homoerotic. And yet, it’s a bridge to our past, to the days when the UFC was more spectacle than sport.

People who have seen it say the new intro is amazing. That it will get you ready to watch the greatest sport on earth. I’m sure it will. The UFC never does anything half way. But I’ll miss the Gladiator. Godspeed, my iconic friend. And good luck.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC on FOX 3: Updated Card Shows the UFC Is Learning from Their Mistakes

Last weekend, UFC fans were treated to a card on FOX that featured two fights with major title implications and a third bout that set up a future contender in the middleweight division. While bouts with top talents such as Rashad Evans, Chael Sonnen an…

Last weekend, UFC fans were treated to a card on FOX that featured two fights with major title implications and a third bout that set up a future contender in the middleweight division.

While bouts with top talents such as Rashad Evans, Chael Sonnen and Michael Bisping seemed like a good idea to feature on network television, the card itself was a disappointment.

The abundance of star power was overshadowed by the fact that the fights themselves were, for lack of a better word, uneventful.

To some fans, this made no difference. Sure, the card didn’t feature any three-round wars or impressive finishes, but it was quality MMA featuring some of the best in their respective weight classes, and while the bouts seemed to be lacking in action, a knowledgeable fan realized how tough all the competitors in the cage were.

Chael Sonnen’s victory over Michael Bisping is a perfect example of this.

The fight won’t be earning any Fight of the Year honors when award season comes around, but it was a true battle of attrition with a ton of exhausting work against the cage and two of the best fighters at 185 lbs. stifling each other’s offense at every turn.

While the fans that watch every event and follow the sport religiously realized that it was an excellent fight, the casual viewer flipping through channels would have found the bout to be about as entertaining as watching paint dry.

The main event between Rashad Evans and Phil Davis was no better, as a clearly outclassed Davis looked lost and disoriented throughout the bout, which Evans dominated.

While the event was a success from a ratings standpoint and gained some hype for two of the biggest upcoming fights of 2012, it failed from an entertainment perspective, at least for casual fans.

There will be no such problems when the UFC returns to network television in May.

A bout between Jim Miller and Nate Diaz was announced late last month, but its position on the card was unknown until this week, when it was announced as the main event of the evening.

While neither Miller nor Diaz are as recognizable as Evans or Sonnen, the two are never in a boring fight, and fans are already preparing themselves for one of the best fights of the year.

And to be honest, unless the UFC decides to throw Georges St-Pierre, Anderson Silva or Jon Jones on FOX, no one in the organization has a big enough following to truly impact ratings anyway.

Throwing hard-hitting heavyweights Pat Barry and Lavar Johnson on the main card is furthering the UFC’s approach from important fights on FOX being substituted for entertaining ones.

Barry and Johnson are both middle-of-the-pack heavyweights at best and are more likely to end up on the prelims than headline a card anytime soon, but both men have no problem laying it on the line and putting on a show for the fans every time they step into the cage.

Barry seems to earn a fight night bonus every time he puts on his gloves, and Johnson showed off is tremendous power when he destroyed the previously iron-chinned Joey Beltran on the preliminary card last weekend.

In the long run, this bout is going to help the UFC far more than it will either of the fighters involved, as it has the potential to be one of those fights that forces people to pick up the phone and call their friends, a’la Forrest Griffin vs. Stephan Bonnar in 2005.

The fights for the UFC’s second foray onto FOX weren’t boring, but what they lacked in entertainment is going to be more than made up for the next time the UFC shows up on prime-time.

Even with just two main card bouts announced, Zuffa has already made sure that UFC on FOX 3 will be a hell of a show.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

10 Reasons MMA Needs Brock Lesnar More Than Brock Lesnar Needs MMA

Brock Lesnar’s MMA career may have been short, but it sure was sweet. The former collegiate wrestling champion made a big splash in the MMA scene following a successful career in professional wrestling. Lesnar used his celebrity status to obtain the UF…

Brock Lesnar‘s MMA career may have been short, but it sure was sweet.

The former collegiate wrestling champion made a big splash in the MMA scene following a successful career in professional wrestling.

Lesnar used his celebrity status to obtain the UFC Heavyweight strap in just his fourth MMA fight.

As quick as his rise was, so too was his downfall. Highlighted by some serious beatings at the hands of Cain Velasquez and Alistair Overeem, Lesnar retired from MMA following his UFC 141 loss.

With his retirement, Lesnar left a huge void not only in the heavyweight division, but in all of MMA and the UFC as well. Dana White may not say it publicly, but there’s no doubt he’d love to have Lesnar back under the UFC banner.

The only problem with that is MMA needs Lesnar more than he needs MMA. Look beyond his poor showings in his final three fights and realize what Lesnar brought to MMA was much more than what occurred once the cage door closed.

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