Wednesday Morning MMA Link Club

(M-Bone is Dougie’ing in his grave right now. Props: Ariel Helwani)

Some selected highlights from our friends around the MMA blogosphere. E-mail [email protected] for details on how your site can join the MMA Link Club…

– Team Gina Carano Updates Strikeforce on Health Condition via Vague Email (5thRound)

– Pete Sell Returns to Competition After Two-Year Absence, Wins Ring of Combat Welterweight Title (TheFightNerd)

– The New CEO of ProElite Explains to Us How the Company Plans to Be the Number Two MMA Organization in the World (MiddleEasy)

– Werdum and Gloom: The Politics of Pulling Guard (NBC Sports MMA)

– Chad Griggs vs. Daniel Cormier Could Be ‘Logical Next Step’ for Strikeforce (MMA Fighting)

– Ring Girls Round-Up: Ashleigh Marley (LowKick)

– 28 Reasons We’d Love to Have Dana White’s Job (BleacherReport.com/MMA)

– ‘UFC 132: Cruz vs. Faber 2’ Conference Call Highlights (Five Ounces of Pain)

– UFC 133: Jorge Rivera Is Too Old to Keep Getting Punched in the Head (MMA Mania)

– Fedor Emelianenko: ‘Two Mistakes In A Row Cannot Be Coincidence’ (MMA Convert)


(M-Bone is Dougie’ing in his grave right now. Props: Ariel Helwani)

Some selected highlights from our friends around the MMA blogosphere. E-mail [email protected] for details on how your site can join the MMA Link Club…

– Team Gina Carano Updates Strikeforce on Health Condition via Vague Email (5thRound)

– Pete Sell Returns to Competition After Two-Year Absence, Wins Ring of Combat Welterweight Title (TheFightNerd)

– The New CEO of ProElite Explains to Us How the Company Plans to Be the Number Two MMA Organization in the World (MiddleEasy)

– Werdum and Gloom: The Politics of Pulling Guard (NBC Sports MMA)

– Chad Griggs vs. Daniel Cormier Could Be ‘Logical Next Step’ for Strikeforce (MMA Fighting)

– Ring Girls Round-Up: Ashleigh Marley (LowKick)

– 28 Reasons We’d Love to Have Dana White’s Job (BleacherReport.com/MMA)

– ‘UFC 132: Cruz vs. Faber 2′ Conference Call Highlights (Five Ounces of Pain)

– UFC 133: Jorge Rivera Is Too Old to Keep Getting Punched in the Head (MMA Mania)

– Fedor Emelianenko: ‘Two Mistakes In A Row Cannot Be Coincidence’ (MMA Convert)

UFC on Versus 4 Preview: Is Dana White Spoon-Feeding TUF Alum Matt Mitrione?

Over the years we’ve seen a select few UFC fighters spoon-fed competition that wasn’t exactly up to their skill levels.Michael Bisping and Kim Dong-hyun immediately come to mind.Don’t get me wrong, the UFC is head and shoulders above boxing when i…

Over the years we’ve seen a select few UFC fighters spoon-fed competition that wasn’t exactly up to their skill levels.

Michael Bisping and Kim Dong-hyun immediately come to mind.

Don’t get me wrong, the UFC is head and shoulders above boxing when it comes to promoting competitive fights. And when a fighter is helping to grow the sport in another part of the world, it’s in the best interest of all involved that they continue to win.

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it, UFC fans in different countries get new heroes to cheer for and young future fighters get someone to aspire to.

But there have been a few cases of spoon-feeding in the UFC that has nothing to do with developing the sport globally. Some Ultimate Fighter contestants have had an easy go of it as well.

Diego Sanchez’ first five fights after winning TUF 1 (until Josh Koscheck publicly called him out) immediately comes to mind.

Now it looks like the latest Ultimate Fighter alum to be getting soft opposition just might be Matt Mitrione.

Mitrione will be stepping into the Octagon for the fifth time at UFC On Versus 4 this Saturday night, and once again he’s fighting a sub-par opponent.

This time Joe Silva decided that Christian Morecraft would be a safe match-up for “Meathead” to maintain his unbeaten streak and continue to bring in the football fan demographic into the UFC.

Just to compare. By the time Brock Lesnar got into the Octagon for the fifth time he was defending his title for the second time. Shane Carwin’s fifth fight in the Octagon was for the belt, and by the time Junior dos Santos had his fifth UFC fight he had already fought Cro Cop, Struve, Ivel and Werdum.

Matt Mitrione is fighting a guy who would be 0-2 in the Octagon if he hadn’t punched Sean McCorkle in the groin before slapping on a standing guillotine choke.

So now we have to watch a fight where an up-and-comer is a negative-260 favorite. How does this do anything to elevate Mitrione in the UFC heavyweight rankings?

It doesn’t.

What a Mitrione win does do is get a dozen or so pro football player’s faces in the stands so that the nationally televised cameras can close in on them between fights.

I don’t think it will happen, but I’m cheering for the Morecraft upset in this one, just for principal’s sake.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

MMA: The 11 Most Compelling "What Ifs" in the Sport’s History

Despite the relatively short history of modern mixed martial arts there have been many crucial points at which the fate of the sport—as well as the fate of the athletes within the sport—was decided.From events taking place before the UFC wa…

Despite the relatively short history of modern mixed martial arts there have been many crucial points at which the fate of the sport—as well as the fate of the athletes within the sport—was decided.

From events taking place before the UFC was created up until more modern times, there have always been junctions where the swelling popularity of MMA could have taken a turn for the worse or been catapulted even further into popularity or some other calamitous/favorable could have happened.

What are these “what if” moments embedded throughout MMA history? What alternate reality would have unfolded if the historical choices/circumstances did not occur?

Read and find out!

Begin Slideshow

Tito Ortiz Begged UFC For One More Shot After They Suggested Retirement Following UFC 121 Loss to Matt Hamill


(The exact moment Tito’s fighting career jumped the shark.)

It’s amazing that with the UFC’s longtime policy of cutting fighters who lose three fights in a row, that Tito Ortiz, who is 0-3-1 in his past four fights hasn’t been fired yet. One would assume that “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy” was being kept around because of his past merits and pay-per-view sales, but apparently his job isn’t as secure as we assumed.

According to Ortiz, the UFC was ready to let him go after his UFC 121 loss to Matt Hamill, but instead urged the former UFC light heavyweight champion to follow in the footsteps of longtime nemesis Chuck Liddell and retire to save them the trouble of sending him to the unemployment line. Tito says he basically begged Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta for one more kick at the cat and they begrudgingly agreed, throwing him in against a young lion in Ryan Bader at UFC 132.

“Dana White and Joe Silva [the UFC’s matchmaker] told me they wanted me to retire, but I knew I still had the fight inside me.  I pretty much begged for my job, to show how much I want to fight, but I still have it in my heart to compete, to fight,” he told the UK Telegraph. I told them I want to still fight against the top guys, I want to put on a show. I’ve just turned 36, but when they put me against the top guys, I think I can still compete.”


(The exact moment Tito’s fighting career jumped the shark.)

It’s amazing that with the UFC’s longtime policy of cutting fighters who lose three fights in a row, that Tito Ortiz, who is 0-3-1 in his past four fights hasn’t been fired yet. One would assume that “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy” was being kept around because of his past merits and pay-per-view sales, but apparently his job isn’t as secure as we assumed.

According to Ortiz, the UFC was ready to let him go after his UFC 121 loss to Matt Hamill, but instead urged the former UFC light heavyweight champion to follow in the footsteps of longtime nemesis Chuck Liddell and retire to save them the trouble of sending him to the unemployment line. Tito says he basically begged Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta for one more kick at the cat and they begrudgingly agreed, throwing him in against a young lion in Ryan Bader at UFC 132.

“Dana White and Joe Silva [the UFC’s matchmaker] told me they wanted me to retire, but I knew I still had the fight inside me.  I pretty much begged for my job, to show how much I want to fight, but I still have it in my heart to compete, to fight,” he told the UK Telegraph. I told them I want to still fight against the top guys, I want to put on a show. I’ve just turned 36, but when they put me against the top guys, I think I can still compete.”

Ortiz feels that his record, that hasn’t seen a win added to the win column in nearly five years is deceiving, because he came close to winning against a few of the guys who beat him the past few years.

“Too bad people don’t pay attention to the major details. I’ve competed against the top guys and gone on to win world championships. I’m not getting submitted or knocked out…I’m making little mistakes where I should be submitting guys. I thought I beat Forrest Griffin 2 to 1 the second time.  But it was what it was.”

Unfortunately for Ortiz, close only matters when you’re talking horseshoes, curling or hand grenades and this is fighting where constantly telling people you could have won your fights or that you were robbed makes you look like an excuse maker. He recalls that when he lost the fight to Hamill and he received the call to retire from the UFC he figured he would be seeing Ashton Kutcher burst through the door a moment later, but then reality set in that it was no joke.

“The UFC called me after that fight and said ‘we want you to retire’. I was shocked, I thought they were kidding around. I took it as they didn’t want to pay me, to give me what I’m worth. I’m competing against the top guys and I’m not getting dominated. So, next month, I’ll be fighting one of the top guys in the world again, ranked in the top 3, and I’m going to show how much I’m really worth.”

So if he gets manhandled by Bader like he did by Hamill, does that mean the UFC can give him a Costco gift certificate and a can of Xyience?

 

 

UFC 132: Tito Ortiz Begged for Fight Against Bader After Asked to Retire

In the Ultimate Fighting Championship, if a fighter’s losses begin to pile up, he will most likely be shown the door. For most fighters, three losses is enough to earn you a pink slip and a spot in the unemployment line. However, this is not the case f…

In the Ultimate Fighting Championship, if a fighter’s losses begin to pile up, he will most likely be shown the door.

For most fighters, three losses is enough to earn you a pink slip and a spot in the unemployment line.

However, this is not the case for former light heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz.

Ortiz, clearly past his prime, has not won any of his previous five fights. His last victory came back in October of 2006 when he defeated Ken Shamrock to end their bitter rivalry.

Four of those five fights came against fighters who would wear UFC gold at one point in their career in Rashad Evans, Chuck Liddell, Lyoto Machida, and Forrest Griffin.

Only Liddell has the privilege of saying he finished the Huntington Beach Bad Boy.

Ortiz’s most recent fight was against collegiate wrestler and student of his Matt Hamill at UFC 121.

This was a fight that Ortiz could have won. However, he underestimated Hamill’s wrestling skills, which lead to an underwhelming performance on Ortiz’s part and another unanimous decision loss.

According to ESPN.com, after the fight, Ortiz was asked to call it quits.

“The UFC called me after that fight and said ‘we want you to retire’. I was shocked,” said Ortiz.

“I thought they were kidding around. I took it as they didn’t want to pay me, to give me what I’m worth.”

Ortiz would go on to say that he pleaded with both UFC matchmaker Joe Silva and president Dana White for one more chance to show that he was healthy and could still compete at the highest level.

“I pretty much begged for my job, to show how much I want to fight, but I still have it in my heart to compete, to fight. I told them I want to still fight against the top guys, I want to put on a show.”

As mentioned earlier, Ortiz has battled with some of the top fighters in the light heavyweight division and to his credit, he has not been dominated.

But, a fighter who hasn’t won in almost five years and is still employed with the UFC is unheard of in the fight world.

Ortiz has been one of the main reason’s for the UFC’s growth over the years as a sport, but a legend status can only go so far, just ask Chuck Liddell.

Dana White has stated several times that a loss to Ryan Bader at UFC 132 will spell the end of the line for the 36-year old former champ.

With so much on the line, Ortiz seems ready to go.

“Next month I’ll be fighting one of the top guys in the world again, ranked in the top three, and I’m going to show how much I’m really worth. I’ve put in a great eight weeks in camp for Ryan Bader. I’m healthy and ready to compete.”

 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Photos: In His Youth, Dana White Was Fond of Novelty Sunglasses, Prince Valiant Haircuts

Dana White young childhood photos pics kid UFC MMA funny photos

Props to TheGarv for digging up these ’70s/’80s-era photos of UFC president Dana White. Obviously the money shot is that pic in the top right, in which a young DW does his best to smile through the pain of a Prince Valiant haircut and some obvious facial trauma. “Damn you, hair,” we imagine Young Dana saying. “I wish you would disappear…forever!” And now you know the rest of the story.

Previously: Even as a Baby, Brock Lesnar Would Swallow You Without Chewing

Dana White young childhood photos pics kid UFC MMA funny photos

Props to TheGarv for digging up these ’70s/’80s-era photos of UFC president Dana White. Obviously the money shot is that pic in the top right, in which a young DW does his best to smile through the pain of a Prince Valiant haircut and some obvious facial trauma. “Damn you, hair,” we imagine Young Dana saying. “I wish you would disappear…forever!” And now you know the rest of the story.

Previously: Even as a Baby, Brock Lesnar Would Swallow You Without Chewing