Strikeforce Live Blog: Gegard Mousasi vs. Ovince St. Preux Updates

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Gegard Mousasi faces Ovince St. Preux at Strikeforce on December 17.This is the Strikeforce live blog for Gegard Mousasi vs. Ovince St. Preux, a light heavyweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce on Showtime event from the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego.

Mousasi (31-3-2) fought Keith Jardine to a draw at Strikeforce: Diaz vs. Daley in April. Next, he stopped Hiroshi Izumi in July to defend his DREAM light heavyweight belt. St. Preux (11-4) is undefeated in five bouts under the Strikeforce banner.

The live blog is below.




Round 1: St. Preux opens with a head kick. Mousasi catches it. Mousasi lands a body kick moments later. Lots of trading kicks early. St. Preux looks a bit uncomfortable in there, reacting to every feint. Mousasi flashing his usual serial killer deportment. A St. Preux kick gets caught and Mousasi takes him down. Mousasi in St. Preux’s half-guard. Mousasi with blows from the top. St. Preux lands a kick from the bottom as Mousasi’s standing, but Mousasi quickly moves to side control with plenty of time to work. St. Preux tries to scramble to his feet but Mousasi drags him back down. Mousasi looks for the kimura but St. Preux powers out and ends up on top with :45 left. Mousasi quickly reverses and hammers St. Preux with stikes from the top. Mousasi gets the crucifix and rains down shots but runs out of time before he can finish. A 10-9 round for Mousasi.

Round 2: St. Preux shoots in early for a takedown. Mousasi defends and takes him down instead. Not the start St. Preux was looking for after a rocky first. Mousasi’s in his half-guard. Elbows from the top. St. Preux has Mousasi’s right leg locked down but Mousasi is able to inflict plenty of blows from the position. For some reason, the ref stands them up with two minutes to go. St. Preux scores with a knee but Mousasi catches it. The two jockey for position and St. Preux drags him down with 1:20 left. He fell into side control, and this is his best chance of the fight. Mousasi gets back to his feet very quickly though, and St. Preux will regret that missed opportunity. Another easy 10-9 for Mousasi.

Round 3: Mousasi’s wrestling is much improved. He’s taken him down a few times and outworked him other times. And just as I type that, St. Preux uses a switch and takes Mousasi down and into side control with 3:40 left. St. Preux mounts for a moment and lands a few elbows. Mousasi waits for space and works free. Back to their feet and Mousasi blasts a double leg and takes St. Preux down. Mousasi slowly works from the position. OSP scrambles and Mousasi tries an arm bar, ends up on bottom when he works free. OSP throws offense with an elbow. OSP tries a D’arce at the final horn but it’s not going to be enough. It’s another round for Mousasi 10-9.

Winner: Gegard Mousasi via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

 

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Gegard Mousasi faces Ovince St. Preux at Strikeforce on December 17.This is the Strikeforce live blog for Gegard Mousasi vs. Ovince St. Preux, a light heavyweight bout on tonight’s Strikeforce on Showtime event from the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego.

Mousasi (31-3-2) fought Keith Jardine to a draw at Strikeforce: Diaz vs. Daley in April. Next, he stopped Hiroshi Izumi in July to defend his DREAM light heavyweight belt. St. Preux (11-4) is undefeated in five bouts under the Strikeforce banner.

The live blog is below.




Round 1: St. Preux opens with a head kick. Mousasi catches it. Mousasi lands a body kick moments later. Lots of trading kicks early. St. Preux looks a bit uncomfortable in there, reacting to every feint. Mousasi flashing his usual serial killer deportment. A St. Preux kick gets caught and Mousasi takes him down. Mousasi in St. Preux’s half-guard. Mousasi with blows from the top. St. Preux lands a kick from the bottom as Mousasi’s standing, but Mousasi quickly moves to side control with plenty of time to work. St. Preux tries to scramble to his feet but Mousasi drags him back down. Mousasi looks for the kimura but St. Preux powers out and ends up on top with :45 left. Mousasi quickly reverses and hammers St. Preux with stikes from the top. Mousasi gets the crucifix and rains down shots but runs out of time before he can finish. A 10-9 round for Mousasi.

Round 2: St. Preux shoots in early for a takedown. Mousasi defends and takes him down instead. Not the start St. Preux was looking for after a rocky first. Mousasi’s in his half-guard. Elbows from the top. St. Preux has Mousasi’s right leg locked down but Mousasi is able to inflict plenty of blows from the position. For some reason, the ref stands them up with two minutes to go. St. Preux scores with a knee but Mousasi catches it. The two jockey for position and St. Preux drags him down with 1:20 left. He fell into side control, and this is his best chance of the fight. Mousasi gets back to his feet very quickly though, and St. Preux will regret that missed opportunity. Another easy 10-9 for Mousasi.

Round 3: Mousasi’s wrestling is much improved. He’s taken him down a few times and outworked him other times. And just as I type that, St. Preux uses a switch and takes Mousasi down and into side control with 3:40 left. St. Preux mounts for a moment and lands a few elbows. Mousasi waits for space and works free. Back to their feet and Mousasi blasts a double leg and takes St. Preux down. Mousasi slowly works from the position. OSP scrambles and Mousasi tries an arm bar, ends up on bottom when he works free. OSP throws offense with an elbow. OSP tries a D’arce at the final horn but it’s not going to be enough. It’s another round for Mousasi 10-9.

Winner: Gegard Mousasi via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

 

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Strikeforce Results: Melendez vs. Masvidal

Filed under: Strikeforce, ResultsMMA Fighting has Strikeforce results of Gilbert Melendez vs. Jorge Masvidal and the rest of Saturday’s Strikeforce on Showtime card happening at the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego.

Melendez will defend his Stri…

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Strikeforce results of Gilbert Melendez taking on Jorge Masvidal.MMA Fighting has Strikeforce results of Gilbert Melendez vs. Jorge Masvidal and the rest of Saturday’s Strikeforce on Showtime card happening at the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego.

Melendez will defend his Strikeforce lightweight belt against Masvidal. Meanwhile, Cris Cyborg is back in action as she defends her women’s 145-pound title against Hiroko Yamanaka.

Strikeforce results are below.




Showtime Bouts

Gilbert Melendez def. Jorge Masvidal via unanimous decision (live blog)
Cris “Cyborg” Santos def. Hiroko Yamanaka via first-round KO (live blog)
Gegard Mousasi def. Ovince St. Preux via unanimous decision (live blog)
K.J. Noons def. Billy Evangelista via unanimous decision (live blog)

Undercard
Caros Fodor def. Justin Wilcox via first-round knockout
Roger Bowling def. Jerron Peoples via first-round knockout
Devin Cole def. Gabriel Salinas-Jones via unanimous decision
Eddie Mendez def. Fernando Gonzalez via majority decision
Herman Terrado def. Chris Brown via submission (armbar)

 

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Seven Ways of Looking at Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal

Filed under: StrikeforceThe grand Strikeforce experiment will continue, whether fighters like it or not. Zuffa’s other organization takes its next step tonight in San Diego with Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal, and it’s already been a whirlwind week…

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Gilbert MelendezThe grand Strikeforce experiment will continue, whether fighters like it or not. Zuffa’s other organization takes its next step tonight in San Diego with Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal, and it’s already been a whirlwind week for the company that Scott Coker built. Below, a few questions, concerns, and comments heading into Saturday night’s event on Showtime.

I. That silence you hear? Yeah, that’s one reason why guys like Gilbert Melendez can’t wait to get out of Strikeforce and into the UFC. Fighters may not care how many articles get written about them in the lead-up to a fight, but they are still risking their health and whatever remains of their good looks in the cage on fight night, so they would prefer if people gave a damn. When it comes to Strikeforce these days, not many do. Maybe that’s why Melendez still talks openly about how much he’d like to move to the UFC, trying to paint this title defense against Jorge Masvidal as if it’s the last perfunctory step in the job application process for a UFC lightweight. Can you blame him? There’s no buzz for Saturday night’s event — not among media or fans. Dana White can “make it right” for Melendez by cutting him a check to compensate him for being stuck in Strikeforce, but he can’t make people care.

II. Money might help to make it right, but only for so long. Sure, Melendez’s desire to get to the UFC is partially motivated by financial concerns, and that’s the part White can help with. But don’t underestimate the role of ego here. Melendez wants to get paid, but he also wants to know that he’s testing himself against the best in the world, and on the biggest stage in the sport. He’s not getting the chance to do that right now, and he knows it. Nothing against Masvidal, but a win over him doesn’t do much to boost Melendez’s status in the lightweight rankings. It’s a fight where he has far more to lose than gain, in other words. The longer he stays in Strikeforce, the more of those he’s likely to have.

III. So what is Strikeforce, now that it’s not going away any time soon?
Stephen Espinoza of Showtime Sports insisted on this week’s media call that “Strikeforce is not a secondary brand. …This is a top-tier organization.” If that were even close to true, however, you probably wouldn’t need to say it. People would just look at the fighters and the fights, and then they’d know. But what we see when we look at Strikeforce is an organization with a few very good fighters and a diminishing cast of also-rans to match them up against. It’s true that Melendez isn’t a second-tier fighter, but what does it matter if Strikeforce can’t find first-tier opponents for him? It’s like White has said about the UFC for years, usually when he wants to disparage the accomplishments of someone like Fedor Emelianenko: the UFC is the place where the best fight the best several times a year. Strikeforce might have some great champions, but they aren’t fighting the best right now. Melendez could make his case as one of the world’s best lightweights, but Jorge Masvidal can’t. Luke Rockhold is an excellent middleweight, but Keith Jardine isn’t a middleweight at all yet, much less a top contender in the division. It would be utterly unthinkable for Jardine to get a crack at Anderson Silva’s middleweight title. But in Strikeforce? Sure, why not. That probably tells us everything we need to know about whether this is a top-tier organization.

IV. Cris “Cyborg” Santos had to wait a year and a half to get another fight in Strikeforce. If she rolls right over Hiroko Yamanaka the way most people are expecting her to, how long will she have to wait for the next one? The answer to that question probably depends on whether she could realistically cut to 135 pounds or not. There simply aren’t enough opponents to keep her on a steady diet of challengers at 145 pounds, but you take one look at her frame and it’s hard to see where the excess pounds would come from. At the same time, if she stays put she’s not going to have much to do.

V. For a guy who hasn’t lost in nearly two years, Gegard Mousasi sure needs a win in a bad way.
He’s 3-0-1 since dropping the title to Mo Lawal, but all three of those victories have come in Dream, against fairly unimpressive competition. He should have stomped an aging journeyman like Jardine, but instead ended up with a disappointing draw. If Mousasi is going to live up to his initial promise, he needs to start putting some wins together against opponents who matter. Beating up-and-comer Ovince St. Preux would be a good start, but it would only be a start. That’s what makes this such a tough fight for Mousasi. He has to win. OSP just needs to look good and stay competitive.

VI. Now that Zuffa runs Strikeforce, is KJ Noons in danger of getting cut if he loses his third straight fight?
It’s hard to believe that the guy who was Nick Diaz’s nemesis and Gilbert Melendez’s would-be challenger now finds himself on a two-fight losing streak. In fairness, the first was a decision loss to Diaz, and there’s no shame in that — especially when you’re fighting out of your natural weight class to begin with. But then Noons dropped a decision to Masvidal in a bout he was favored in, so he now finds himself in a must-win situation against Billy Evangelista. Or does he? While the UFC might not have much use for serial losers, Strikeforce needs anyone with a name and even a modicum of drawing power. Noons still has both, so maybe that would be enough to justify holding on to him even if he loses. At least that’s one way Strikeforce’s peculiar status could actually work for fighters rather than against them.

VII. Justin Wilcox and Roger Bowling make you wonder: is it better to star on Challengers, or fight in the shadows of the Strikeforce prelims? For the last few years Strikeforce has used the Challengers shows to highlight up-and-comers (and occasionally down-and-outers), while using the prelims of its other events to sell a few tickets with local draws. But now that Challengers is disappearing, it seems as though guys like Wilcox and Bowling will get stuck on Strikeforce prelims instead, which seems both good and bad. For one thing, Challengers wasn’t ever a ratings winner, and the association had a certain negative connotation, like being on the JV squad. On the other hand, at least Challengers fights were on TV. At least they were the show, rather than the unaired show before the show. They might have thought they were playing to a tiny audience before, but now they’re really knocking down trees in a lonely forest. If you put on a great fight and nobody sees it, does it really make a sound?

 

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Ovince St. Preux: I’m Not Scared of Going Toe-to-Toe With Gegard Mousasi


(Photo via Strikeforce.com)

By Anton Gurevich

This weekend, Ovince St. Preux will step inside the Strikeforce cage to face the former Light Heavyweight Champion Gegard Mousasi as part of the stacked Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal fight card in San Diego, California. Representing Knoxville Martial Arts Academy, 11-4 St. Preux will look to prove a point about his future as one of the best 205’ers on the planet.

Twenty-eight year old Ovince St. Preux turned his career around after fighting six times (!) in 2010, improving his MMA record from 3-4 to a more appropriate 9-4. In 2011, St. Preux recorded two important victories against Abongo Humphrey and Joe Cason that eventually solidified his place on the Light Heavyweight landscape.

Speaking in an interview to LowKick.com, St. Preux gave Gegard Mousasi the credit for being the biggest name he ever faced inside the cage or ring. The Haiti-born fighter expects a well-rounded game from Mousasi, who he considers as one of the 10 best Light Heavyweights in MMA.

Check out this interview on Lowkick.Blitzcorner.com!


(Photo via Strikeforce.com)

By Anton Gurevich

This weekend, Ovince St. Preux will step inside the Strikeforce cage to face the former Light Heavyweight Champion Gegard Mousasi as part of the stacked Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal fight card in San Diego, California. Representing Knoxville Martial Arts Academy, 11-4 St. Preux will look to prove a point about his future as one of the best 205′ers on the planet.

Twenty-eight year old Ovince St. Preux turned his career around after fighting six times (!) in 2010, improving his MMA record from 3-4 to a more appropriate 9-4. In 2011, St. Preux recorded two important victories against Abongo Humphrey and Joe Cason that eventually solidified his place on the Light Heavyweight landscape.

Speaking in an interview to LowKick.com, St. Preux gave Gegard Mousasi the credit for being the biggest name he ever faced inside the cage or ring. The Haiti-born fighter expects a well-rounded game from Mousasi, who he considers as one of the 10 best Light Heavyweights in MMA.

Check out this interview on Lowkick.Blitzcorner.com!

Ovince St. Preux a Confident Underdog Against Ex-Strikeforce Champ Mousasi

Filed under: Strikeforce, MMA Fighting ExclusiveThe opportunity that changed Ovince St. Preux’s future wasn’t supposed to ever happen. Back in the early spring of 2010, when Strikeforce was putting together its soon-to-be infamous Strikeforce: Nashvill…

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The opportunity that changed Ovince St. Preux‘s future wasn’t supposed to ever happen. Back in the early spring of 2010, when Strikeforce was putting together its soon-to-be infamous Strikeforce: Nashville event, the promotion was looking for local talent to fill out the undercard.

At the time, St. Preux was a relative rookie in the sport, having competed for just over a year. It’s safe to say that back then, he wasn’t exactly a prodigy. With a record of 4-4, he also wasn’t lighting up the radar of major MMA talent seekers. In fact, when St. Preux’s name was floated for the card, Strikeforce execs were against it. It was only the tenacious and repeated calls from some of his coaching staff to the Strikeforce office that ultimately landed him on the event, and St. Preux has taken the opportunity and sprinted with it.

Since that moment, he has yet to lose. Now 11-4 and with five Strikeforce wins under his belt, St. Preux makes the leap to title contender, fighting former light-heavyweight champ Gegard Mousasi in the co-main event of Saturday’s Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal event.

But how did he get from there to here? How does one start off a career winning just three of his first seven bouts, then suddenly find a new gear and dominate everyone put in front of him?

St. Preux said it was a few simple adjustments that changed everything. The former University of Tennessee football player recommitted himself to strength and conditioning, focusing on correcting stamina issues that he says plagued him early on. He also changed his eating habits, and when the time came, he seized his moments.

At Strikeforce: Nashville, he ended up romping in a 47-second TKO. A couple of months later, he scored an 8-second knockout of former UFC fighter Jason Day. With every win, he learned something about himself.

“Some of those fights let me know know where I was,” he told MMA Fighting. “I wouldn’t say I doubted myself, but when you have a lot of people telling you that you’re good, sometimes you ask yourself, ‘Am I that good?’ So when you actually go out against those opponents and take care of business, you go, ‘OK, I think I could push myself a little more.'”

St. Preux’s confidence grew further with wins over hard-hitting strikers Antwain Britt and Benji Radach, and when he added a win over Abongo Humphrey for his seventh win in 11 months, it seemed that St. Preux was on his way to contention. But first he got a strangely matched bout with debuting Joe Cason.

St. Preux didn’t allow himself any disappointment at what most saw as a step back from a matchup perspective, and ran through Cason in just 72 seconds. That set up his current match with Mousasi.

“It’s just a situation that worked out perfectly for me,” he said. “I don’t feel like I have anything to lose. I don’t have my back against the wall. It’s a situation where I’m the underdog for this fight anyway.”

Not that he feels like an underdog. St. Preux acknowledges that Mousasi is the better striker and even the better submission fighter, but he feels the edge is his when it comes to wrestling. Above that, he feels he’s simply a better fighter than Mousasi.

“People will be surprised that I say that, but we’ll see what happens after the fight,” he said. “We’ll see if they’re still surprised after the fight.

“He’s one of those top fighters,” he continued. “He’s 31-3, he’s the type of fighter who has a lot of will, he’s a tough guy. So it’s not like I’m going in there thinking I’m going to cakewalk all over him. I’m going in there like it’s an adventure. I’m definitely going to go in there and make sure I use all my skills to the best of my ability.”

The Strikeforce light-heavyweight championship is currently vacant, left behind by Dan Henderson when he moved over to the UFC. The winner of the St. Preux-Mousasi fight seems a logical choice for one-half of a future title bout. Though that hasn’t been guaranteed, those are likely the stakes he’s playing for.

That’s a pretty good second act for a guy who grew up wanting to play in the NFL. After exhausting his eligibility at UT, St. Preux briefly tried to wedge his way into pro training camps, but wasn’t able to find a situation that offered him a legitimate opportunity to make a roster.

“I always say ‘I never quit football; football quit me,'” he said.

St. Preux still has his roots down in Tennessee, training at the Knoxville Martial Arts Academy, just 15 miles from Neyland Stadium, the home of UT’s football Volunteers. But he sprinkles in occasional work with Team Quest in Temecula, California, and arrived in the state a week earlier than necessary in order to get in some time there before facing Mousasi.

And make no mistake about it, this is the fight he wanted. After his last win over Cason, when Strikeforce announcer Mauro Ranallo asked St. Preux what might be next for him, Mousasi’s name was the first thing out of his mouth.

“Everything kind of worked out my way, and now I’ve got to capitalize on it,” he said. “I’ve just got to do my job and keep on winning.”

In the last two years, that’s all he’s done. And on Saturday, he can continue the unlikely story of going from a losing record to the verge of a major championship.

 

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Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal Complete Main Card B/R Staff Predictions

Strikeforce comes to the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego, Calif., with a solid card featuring two championship bouts, including the return of top pound-for-pound female fighter Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos.Lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez’s ti…

Strikeforce comes to the Valley View Casino Center in San Diego, Calif., with a solid card featuring two championship bouts, including the return of top pound-for-pound female fighter Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos.

Lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez’s title defense against top contender Jorge Masvidal will serve as the main attraction.

Currently on a five-fight win streak, Melendez looks to defend his title for a third consecutive time, but Masvidal, who is coming off back-to-back wins over K.J. Noons and Billy Evangelista, won’t be an easy mark.

This bout could very well be Melendez’s audition for a UFC contract. He would certainly be a major addition to the lightweight roster, considering most publications have him listed at No. 3 in the 155-pound rankings.

In the co-main event, Strikeforce women’s featherweight champion Cyborg makes her long-awaited return against Japanese striker Hiroko Yamanaka.

A contractual dispute with Strikeforce has kept Cyborg out of action for well over a year. She’ll have her work cut out for her against Yamanaka, who is typically listed at No. 2 in the female featherweight rankings.

Bleacher Report MMA featured columnists John Heinis, Dwight Wakabayashi, Brian Benchimol-Lopez and yours truly, Jordy McElroy, will break down and give our predictions on Saturday night’s event.

The time has come once again for you to feast on some manly induced knowledge in preparation for the upcoming fights. Snatch a cold beverage out the fridge and get comfortable. It’s prediction time.

Begin Slideshow