Dana White Interested in Acquiring Bellator’s Hector Lombard and Eddie Alvarez

The UFC has always been known for having some of the best talent in the entire sport.And it appears UFC president Dana White is keen on acquiring two more talented fighters to his roster in the near future.White hinted at the idea that the UFC would so…

The UFC has always been known for having some of the best talent in the entire sport.

And it appears UFC president Dana White is keen on acquiring two more talented fighters to his roster in the near future.

White hinted at the idea that the UFC would soon make a bid to sign Bellator FC stars Eddie Alvarez and Hector Lombard.

“I think Eddie Alvarez is a great fighter,” White told MMAJunkie.com. “You know us, man. We’re always looking to get the best fighters in the world in the UFC, and he’s one of them.” 

Both Alvarez and Lombard been successful for the promotion thus far. Lombard is the current middleweight champion, while Alvarez held the lightweight title until last November.

However their contracts are soon to expire, which leaves them with the allowance of pursuing the free-agent market. And with the UFC eager to make an offer to both fighters, the power and status of the company will play a significant role in luring them in. 

White spoke highly of both fighters, and it is certain he will be in constant pursuit of two of the promotion’s biggest stars.

“I like him,” White said of Lombard. “I like him a lot. So we’ll see what happens.”

The possible departure of both Alvarez and Lombard would be damaging for Bellator FC, which is set to begin their television deal with Spike TV in 2013.

Although the company does not hold a lot of star power on its roster, it has rather adapted to constructing tournaments and producing marketable fighters to attract audiences and add more appeal and credibility to their brand. 

It is likely that Bellator could always promote a new star in the absence of either fighter, but it seems like their trying to revolve the promotion heavily around Alvarez and Lombard.

Should the UFC acquire rights to both fighters, it will only expand the quality of the competition on its roster, ultimately making it the premier organization in the sport, but it would be detrimental to the future of Bellator.

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Bellator 66 Recap: Pay Eddie Alvarez, That Doesn’t Happen (enough) in MMA

Even if you weren’t glued to your Twitter account last night, you still had plenty of MMA news to keep yourself entertained. From a middleweight and lightweight tournament to a post-fight brawl to a referee ignoring a fighter’s cornermen throwing in the towel, there were plenty of things to talk about. All of these story lines came from Bellator 66 last night in Cleveland, Ohio.

While this season hasn’t been a stranger to dangerously late stoppages, last night’s main event, a rematch between former Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez and Shinya Aoki, provided one worthy of mention in our worst referee blunders roundtable. Alvarez dropped Aoki early, and although he initially seemed hesitant to jump into Aoki’s guard, Alvarez unloaded some heavy punches that almost immediately put Aoki out cold. When the referee in charge, Jerry Krzys, didn’t stop the fight Aoki’s cornermen threw their towel into the cage. Of course, everyone knows that “throwing in the towel” is just an expression for giving up, and not a sign that the fighter’s cornermen actually believe that the fight should be stopped, right? No? Well then someone should have explained that to Jerry Krzys, who allowed the fight to continue for a few more seconds before stopping the action.

After the fight, Alvarez had a very simple question for Bellator, and an equally simple follow up request: “Bjorn Rebney where you at? Show me the money.” Of course, if Bellator can’t- or isn’t willing to- comply with that request, something tells us that the UFC will.

Even if you weren’t glued to your Twitter account last night, you still had plenty of MMA news to keep yourself entertained. From a middleweight and lightweight tournament to a post-fight brawl to a referee ignoring a fighter’s cornermen throwing in the towel, there were plenty of things to talk about. All of these story lines came from Bellator 66 last night in Cleveland, Ohio.

While this season hasn’t been a stranger to dangerously late stoppages, last night’s main event, a rematch between former Bellator lightweight champion Eddie Alvarez and Shinya Aoki, provided one worthy of mention in our worst referee blunders roundtable. Alvarez dropped Aoki early, and although he initially seemed hesitant to jump into Aoki’s guard, Alvarez unloaded some heavy punches that almost immediately put Aoki out cold. When the referee in charge, Jerry Krzys, didn’t stop the fight Aoki’s cornermen threw their towel into the cage. Of course, everyone knows that “throwing in the towel” is just an expression for giving up, and not a sign that the fighter’s cornermen actually believe that the fight should be stopped, right? No? Well then someone should have explained that to Jerry Krzys, who allowed the fight to continue for a few more seconds before stopping the action.

After the fight, Alvarez had a very simple question for Bellator, and an equally simple follow up request:  ”Bjorn Rebney where you at? Show me the money.” Of course, if Bellator can’t- or isn’t willing to- comply with that request, something tells us that the UFC will.

The evening’s co-main event saw a wild back-and-forth brawl between Bellator newcomer Andreas Spang and Brian Rogers. Rogers appeared to have Spang in trouble early, but slipped while attempting a head kick. Spang immediately took Rogers’ back and attempted a rear-naked choke, but Rogers fought his way out of it and attempted a choke of his own as the first round came to an end. Rogers continued to control the fight throughout the second round, yet got caught by Spang with a left hook that shut his lights out.


Props: IronForgesIron.com

After the fight, Spang was face-to-face with the other middleweight tournament finalist, Maiquel Falcao. As evident by the way that he pushed Brian Rogers at the weigh-ins before the fight, Andreas Spang does not like when other people get in his face. Spang responded to the way that bitch looked at me wrong with a shove (naturally). Falcao faked a punch before throwing a knee of his own as Bellator officials, including commentator Jimmy Smith, separated the middleweights. It wasn’t so much a brawl as an awkward post fight staredown gone wrong, but sometimes these things happen in MMA journalism.

Naturally, Maiquel Falcao made it past Vyacheslav Vasilevsky, although it was a far closer fight than most people anticipated it being. Vasilevsky started out strong, using his judo to keep Falcao on his back throughout the first round. However, Falcao managed to take down Vasilevsky towards the end of the second round, and owned the third round with his superior striking.

Elsewhere on the card, lightweights Rick Hawn and Brent Weedman advanced to the finals of this season’s lightweight tournament. Hawn outstruck Lloyd Woodard en route to a second round TKO, while Weedman defeated Thiago Michel Pereira Silva by split decision. Weedman winning on 4/20, eh? I’m sure I’d be the first person to make a joke about that, but I chose not to.

Full Results

Main Card:
Eddie Alvarez def. Shinya Aoki via first-round TKO
Andreas Spang def. Brian Rogers via second-round TKO
Maiquel Falco  def. Vyacheslav Vasilevsky via unanimous decision (29-28 x3)
Rick Hawn def. Lloyd Woodard via second-round TKO
Brent Weedman def. Thiago Michel Pereira Silva via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)

Preliminary Card:
Jessica Eye def. Anita Rodriguez via unanimous decision (30×27 x 3)
Julian Lane def. Joe Heiland via submission (guillotine)
Frank Caraballo def. Donny Walker via fourth-round KO
John Hawk def. Marcus Vanttinen via split decision (30-27, 28-29, 29-28)
Attila Vegh def. Dan Spohn via split decision (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)

Bellator 66: Can Eddie Alvarez Defeat Aoki in Rematch?

When Eddie Alvarez and Shinya Aoki first squared off it was Aoki who took home the victory with an inverted heel hook. Alvarez has gone 7-1 since with the only loss coming to Michael Chandler in a title-losing barnburner for Alvarez.  The former B…

When Eddie Alvarez and Shinya Aoki first squared off it was Aoki who took home the victory with an inverted heel hook. Alvarez has gone 7-1 since with the only loss coming to Michael Chandler in a title-losing barnburner for Alvarez. 

The former Bellator champion now sits at a crossroads. He can choose to enter another tournament and grind out three bouts to get back to Chandler, but it doubtful at this point that Eddie is going to consider going through the tournament process again. 

Alvarez has now booked a significant career-boosting kind of fight with the man who defeated him at K-1 Dynamite 2008. Shinya Aoki has been a tear as of late. The Tokyo-based submission fighter has now won seven fights in a row, five by submission, since his loss to Gilbert Melendez at Strikeforce Nashville in April 2010.

Aoki, however has shown a weakness to more powerful wrestlers, which was on display in his loss to Melendez in which he was manhandled and lost a one-sided decision. Eddie has a strong wrestling base like Gilbert does and this could be where he can win the bout.

The two major motivating factors that will drive Eddie Alvarez are his size and wrestling advantage coupled with his possible UFC offer that could material after a win of this caliber. 

1) I can remember it like it was yesterday. I walked down to Broadway Avenue to get some barbecue and a beer before the bout. The group included a good friend, my father, myself and my sister. Skyler and I went to the strip first to get some chow and a brew.  We got to the arena just before the first preliminary bout began.

It’s incredible that I remember anything else from this card besides the brawl at the end, but that is irrelevant to this story. The Aoki vs. Melendez bout was one the most anticipated of the evening, and it turned out to be a total domination that would have been a fast forward DVR moment waiting to happen. The point here is that the size and wrestling ability of Gilbert proved to be an Achilles heel for Aoki. Eddie can use similar advantages to smother Aoki and avoid getting a limb dislocated.

2) Eddie’s other major motivation in this bout will be the fact that he may be fighting for a UFC contract. He could likely get a pretty nice deal even if he loses, but it would greatly benefit his athletic stock if he wins this rematch tonight. Alvarez will use his wrestling and ground and pound to wear the smaller man out and will likely end up with a decision victory.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Reminder: The Eddie Alvarez vs. Shinya Aoki Rematch Is Going Down Tomorrow at Bellator 66

(Aoki vs. Alvarez 1, 12/31/08)

Cripes, is it April 19th already? We didn’t burn a lot of calories discussing this fight, but the long-awaited rematch between former Bellator lightweight champ Eddie Alvarez and DREAM lightweight champ Shinya Aoki is happening tomorrow night at the I-X Center in Cleveland, as the main event of Bellator 66.

Aoki and Alvarez originally met at Dynamite!! 2008, with Aoki wrenching out a heel-hook victory in just 92 seconds. Now he’s agreed to meet his old foe on American soil, which is very sportsmanlike of him — but keep in mind that the last time he gave an American a rematch on their own turf he got dominated by Gilbert Melendez. Aoki has won all seven of his fights since that loss to El Niño, while Alvarez is coming off his submission loss to Michael Chandler in their Fight of the Year candidate at Bellator 58.

Bellator 66 will also feature the semi-finals of their season 6 lightweight and middleweight tournaments, and get this: We’ll be streaming the Bellator 66 prelims on CagePotato.com tomorrow starting at 7 p.m. ET. So be sure to come back for that, and check out the full event lineup after the jump…


(Aoki vs. Alvarez 1, 12/31/08)

Cripes, is it April 19th already? We didn’t burn a lot of calories discussing this fight, but the long-awaited rematch between former Bellator lightweight champ Eddie Alvarez and DREAM lightweight champ Shinya Aoki is happening tomorrow night at the I-X Center in Cleveland, as the main event of Bellator 66.

Aoki and Alvarez originally met at Dynamite!! 2008, with Aoki wrenching out a heel-hook victory in just 92 seconds. Now he’s agreed to meet his old foe on American soil, which is very sportsmanlike of him — but keep in mind that the last time he gave an American a rematch on their own turf he got dominated by Gilbert Melendez. Aoki has won all seven of his fights since that loss to El Niño, while Alvarez is coming off his submission loss to Michael Chandler in their Fight of the Year candidate at Bellator 58.

Bellator 66 will also feature the semi-finals of their season 6 lightweight and middleweight tournaments, and get this: We’ll be streaming the Bellator 66 prelims on CagePotato.com tomorrow starting at 7 p.m. ET. So be sure to come back for that, and check out the full event lineup after the jump…

MAIN CARD (MTV2)
Eddie Alvarez vs. Shinya Aoki (lightweight non-tournament fight)
Brian Rogers vs. Andreas Spang (middleweight semifinal)
Maiquel Falcao vs. Vyacheslav Vasilevsky (middleweight semifinal)
Rick Hawn vs. Lloyd Woodard (lightweight semifinal)
Thiago Michel Pereira Silva vs. Brent Weedman (lightweight semifinal)

PRELIMINARY CARD (CagePotato.com, Spike.com)
Jessica Eye vs. Anita Rodriguez (131 pounds)
Frank Carabello vs. Donny Walker (BW)
Tyler Combs vs. Jason Dent (LW)
Dan Spohn vs. Attila Vegh (LHW)
John Hawk vs. Marcus Vanttinen (LHW)
Joe Heiland vs. Julian Lane (LW)

Eddie Alvarez Talks Shinya Aoki and Future in Bellator

Matthew Roth: This weekend you’re facing Shinya Aoki. It’s a rematch from a fight you guys had in DREAM. What’s different in your career right now that makes this a winnable fight for you?Eddie Alvarez: It’s three years ago. Three years ago I was just …

Matthew Roth: This weekend you’re facing Shinya Aoki. It’s a rematch from a fight you guys had in DREAM. What’s different in your career right now that makes this a winnable fight for you?

Eddie Alvarez: It’s three years ago. Three years ago I was just finding myself in the division. I don’t feel like I was confident. I was too insecure in my own abilities and what I was capable of, and mentally I was immature. I didn’t know if I could compete with the top guys.

My beliefs in myself and what I was capable of wasn’t exactly there, and I feel like that’s a huge part of fighting. Not only that, but my skill set has grown tremendously.

I’m out here in Florida with some of the best trainers and fighters in the world, and I couldn’t be more prepared for the rematch. I’ve done my homework and everything I need to do, and I’m ready to go out there on Friday and get the W.

Matthew Roth: This is interesting because you were supposed to face him a little sooner during the DREAM lightweight tournament, but you had the eye injury from your fight with Kawajiri. Were you bummed out in any way that you couldn’t fight him during the tournament and that you had to fight him afterwards at Dynamite!! 2008?

Eddie Alvarez: To fight on Dynamite!! on New Year’s Eve, it’s the biggest event in history in MMA, so just to have the opportunity to fight on Dynamite!! is great. Do I think I would have had a better chance at beating him the night of the tournament? Yes.

The night of the tournament he fought Caol Uno all the way to decision, and he had him in a triangle for like the whole fight so he was tired. I was definitely the most well-conditioned fighter in that tournament at that time.

I only had a seven-minute fight with Kawajiri before the finals. I felt like I was more well-equiped and well-prepared to win that night. I went back at Dynamite!! and I didn’t show up like I should have, and I got caught. I lost focus for a second and I got caught. My hat’s off to him.

Some nights aren’t yours, and Friday night will be mine. That night was his, and he can have it. That was three years ago, and I think it will be different. 

Matthew Roth: He’s mostly known as a submission fighter, but he has weak wrestling. Do you think that works to your advantage if you can keep the fight standing?

Eddie Alvarez: Yeah, absolutely. Keep the fight standing or wherever the fight goes, he’s good at creating scrambles to get the fight to the ground. He’s one of the best lightweights in the world because he knows how to use his strength. He gets the fight to go where the odds are in his favor.

You can’t lose focus against a guy like this. We worked on that. We’re prepared and ready to go. I’m excited and can’t wait til Friday. 

Matthew Roth: For a lot of American fans, their introduction to Aoki was the fight with Gilbert Melendez. Do you think think they know how good he actually his, or do you think they see him as the guy who got smashed by Melendez?

Eddie Alvarez: I have no clue. I think the hardcore fans know who he is and what he’s capable of. I think your everyday fans only know him as the Japanese guy who Gilbert Melendez beat up. All your hardcore fans know how dangerous of an opponent he can be.

Even Gilbert knows how dangerous of an opponent he can be. If you look at the fight, Gilbert fought very cautious to get the win. Everyone knows he’s a dangerous guy if you let him fight his fight. 

Matthew Roth: Alright, so regarding Bellator…What’s the biggest difference with Spike’s involvement now compared to past media partners such as ESPN Deportes and Fox Sports? 

Eddie Alvarez: I don’t know any difference. I don’t pay attention to that too much. I have the same relationship I had since the beginning with Bjorn Rebney. We have a good relationship. I don’t know any difference.

I’m sure they’re coming up with a ton of great ideas and a ton of great things for 2013, but right now everything is basically the same on my part. My life doesn’t involve promotions and all of this stuff outside of training in the gym and my family. That’s all I’m really concerned with.

I wouldn’t even be able to answer that question properly because I don’t pay enough attention to that. 

Matthew Roth: There were rumors in the late winter/early spring that you were signing with the UFC following the Aoki fight. Did those rumors affect your relationship with Bjorn at all or not really?

Eddie Alvarez: No, those were ridiculous. For someone to even say that I was signing with the UFC makes no sense. People can say what they want to say. I’ve had people tell me I’m great, and I’ve had people tell me that I absolutely suck. I’ve had people tell me the craziest stuff.

You can’t believe what people say. You just kinda have to live your life, man, and go about your day and do what you do. People say crazy things. That doesn’t even make sense.

I’m obligated to a contract that I’ve had with Bellator for the past three years, and I’m a man of my word, and I’ll stick to what I signed. It’s impossible for something like that to happen. It’s just hearsay. 

Matthew Roth: Now, from your perspective, you’ve fought in Japan and in Bellator. What’s the big difference between fighting in the United States vs. Japan? And maybe in the promotions as well?

Eddie Alvarez: The biggest difference is the knowledge. Fans [in Japan] have a deeper knowledge of MMA and what it takes such as the conditioning aspect, the courage…the fans seem to have a better grip on MMA in general. The fact that sometimes good fighters lose, they understand it. They get that. They know that champions lose in MMA. It’s not like boxing where you’re 50-0; that’s unheard of.

Fans here in America still don’t grasp that. They’re getting better at it, but they still don’t grasp the fact that in MMA there’s so many different ways to lose that champions lose all the time in MMA. No one is unbeatable.

I think people don’t account for the conditioning aspect. They just want us to beat each other up at a super-high pace for like 25 minutes. They don’t understand the kind of conditioning it takes to do what we do. I think it’s evolving and people understand it more than what they did five years ago, and eventually they’ll get to the point that they have the same sort of knowledge of the sport as the Japanese fans. 

Matthew Roth: You brought up that champions fall and rebound, so I want to talk about the Mike Chandler fight for a second. Looking back on that fight, what do you think you could have done differently to walk away with the W?

Eddie Alvarez: I think I over-thought things. I definitely over-thought things. I was concerned with a lot of things that I shouldn’t have been concerned about and should have fought my fight better.

I feel like I worked too much defensively, rather than fighting my fight and doing what I do strong. I was too concerned with the wrestling and defenses rather than worrying about what I’m strong at and imposing my will. I lost focus for a second, and Mike was able to make me pay for it.

I feel like I had a bad night of fighting, and I made a few mistakes, and Mike was ready to fight. He came after me, and he was able to capitalize on the mistakes. I learned a lot from that fight. I grew tremendously in the past five or six months because of that fight.

It was bad when it happened, but if it didn’t then I wouldn’t have ever made the adjustments that I needed to. I never would have improved. 

Matthew Roth: Was there any talk of an immediate rematch, or was it basically if you want to fight him again you have to go through another tournament? 

Eddie Alvarez: If I wanted to fight him again I had to go through a tournament. I was the only one who was talking about a rematch. I asked Bjorn for a rematch and was quickly denied. I would have to go through another tournament, and in order to do another tournament, I would have to sign another contract which possibly could have been another three years.

I wasn’t comfortable with doing that at the time, and I’ve been asking for the Aoki fight for a couple years now, so if I can’t get one rematch I’ll take the other.

Matthew Roth: Now is the Aoki fight…for a lot of fighters, it seems like getting losses back is really important. Is that important to you, getting the W in a fight that you lost?

Eddie Alvarez: Yeah, it’s very important. It was my first loss at lightweight. It’s a testament to how much you’ve improved as a fighter and to see where you’re at. It’s a good way to gauge how much you’ve improved by fighting the same opponent again. 

Matthew Roth: Finally, you recently made the decision to train down in Florida with the Blackzilians and with Ricardo Almeida in Jersey. What were the factors that led you to leave the Fight Factory in Philly?

Eddie Alvarez: Every once in a while I still train with guys from the Fight Factory when I’m back in Philadelphia. For myself, for my future, for my career, I thought it was a better move to come go down to Florida. First and foremost, I’m here by myself in isolation, which means I can focus better.

There’s not a lot of guys in Philadelphia that train full-time, so during the day I’m by myself a lot. That never happens down here. You get a lot of attention all day long from other pro fighters and trainers. In Philadelphia that was hard to get.

It was hard to find guys who fight full-time or trainers who were able to dedicate their time to it because the money isn’t there yet in Philadelphia. Hopefully at some point it does, and I’ll be able to train full-time in my hometown.

Matthew Roth: Thank you very much; was there anything I missed that you want to say?

Eddie Alvarez: I’d just like to thank the Blackzilians and all my training partners. Ricardo Almeida and the whole group that I train with over there and in Philadelphia.

Most of all my wife for being such a great woman, taking care of the kids while I’m out here in Florida which allows me to stay focused and get ready for one of the biggest fights in my career. And also Authentic Sports Management for being so awesome. 

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5 Reasons You Must Pay Attention to Bellator

It’s official at this point that Bellator Fighting Championships is relevant, exciting and constantly improving its presentation, image and stock of top-notch talent. Bellator is the unofficial second biggest mixed martial arts promotion on the planet,…

It’s official at this point that Bellator Fighting Championships is relevant, exciting and constantly improving its presentation, image and stock of top-notch talent. Bellator is the unofficial second biggest mixed martial arts promotion on the planet, and there is plenty of reasons to want to watch.

Bellator hasn’t gotten the greatest ratings on MTV2 lately, but all of that should change in 2013 when the organization will be broadcast on Spike TV. Bellator provides a tournament format that harkens back to the old UFC days and features homegrown talent from all corners of the globe.

One of the facets that has made it less appealing is that their champions often sit on the shelf for long periods of time waiting for the tournaments to play out. Although now it seems that will be less of an issue with tournaments happening at greater frequency. And with the total, unrelenting support of CEO Bjorn Rebney, Bellator is poised to take it to the next level along with the UFC, and help bring the sport of mixed martial arts into the mainstream once and for all.

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