Tatsuya Kawajiri has seen a lot during his MMA career, and not just in a “he’s been around a long time” sense.
Since 2001, Kawajiri has twice seen lighter weight classes nearly die out only to roar back to the forefront of the sport. He has seen Japane…
TatsuyaKawajiri has seen a lot during his MMA career, and not just in a “he’s been around a long time” sense.
Since 2001, Kawajiri has twice seen lighter weight classes nearly die out only to roar back to the forefront of the sport. He has seen Japanese MMA rise to the top and fall by the wayside. He has risked life and limb for a few hundred fans at a local hall, and in front of thousands at the Saitama Super Arena.
Only recently has he seen what it is like to fight in the UFC, but it’s something he’s enjoying so far. A veteran of MMA organizations Shooto, Pride, Dream, Strikeforce and One, Kawajiri‘s UFC debut was a long time coming, but it is where he belongs.
“I saw K-1 fights at the Tokyo Dome,” he told Bleacher Report. “That inspired me to go into martial arts…I went to this kickboxing gym in my home state first and HayatoSakurai was there and told me to come check out his fights. So I bought a ticket to see a fight between Sakurai and JutaroNakao…when I heard the sound of the ground and pound I realized maybe I should go into MMA.”
Around the time Kawajiri was preparing for his MMA debut with Shooto, a major shakeup was occurring in the sport. The UFC, the biggest MMA promotion in the United States, was sticking a toe into fights at 155 pounds, a weight class previously exclusive to Japan.
When Kawajiri started training to begin his MMA career, the UFC exclusively featured heavyweight and light-heavyweight weight classes. As they expanded into lower weight classes, though, they scooped up Shooto‘s 154-pound champion, CaolUno.
“When Uno and Jens Pulver did that title match, I started to recognize the UFC as the biggest competitor in America,” he said. “Even though I was fighting in Japan, and for fighters in that country, the UFC was always a big competitor…a rival.”
Kawajiri, in time, would win the Shooto 154-pound title. While that was a huge accomplishment, MMA’s terrain had changed by the time he reached that summit.
“When I began doing MMA, I definitely felt, for the light weight classes, Shooto was the best place in the world…but by the time I became Shooto world champion, Pride began…so I couldn’t be called the best in the world fighting there.”
Kawajiri moved on to become a steady presence on Pride’s Bushido cards, and it was there he became an identifiable name with many mixed martial arts fans. He won over the masses with one fight, which he is quick to label as his his proudest moment.
“I feel the fight between me and TakanoriGomi established a place in the sport for lighter weight classes. That got the fans’ attention to the lighter weight classes. Even though I lost, I am so glad to have been a part of that fight.”
Pride would eventually be absorbed by the UFC, but Kawajiri wouldn’t make the leap to the UFC along with Wanderlei Silva and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. From there, he would become one of Dream’s top fighters. After the Pride successor closed shop, he would finally make his way to the UFC.
He made his debut at UFC Fight Night 34, demolishing fellow newcomer Sean Soriano. The dominant win and name value quickly moved Kawajiri up in the UFC rankings, but he is in prime position to jump into the title picture with a win if he can beat Clay Guida at UFC Fight Night 39.
“I am at my best now in every way: striking, grappling, physically…I am looking at myself as a 35-year-old man who is in here and still surviving,” he said. “This is my last chance…the UFC is the most suitable place for me to pursue my dream.”
His dream, naturally, is the UFC belt, and he is looking to keep moving toward that goal Friday, and to continue expanding his fanbase by popping the former top-10 lightweight.
“Clay Guida is ranked ninth in the rankings and is very, very famous and well-established. I will surprise anyone…who doesn’t know about me.”
We’ll see if Kawajiri can add another big name to his lengthy resume, and if he can indeed vault into the thick of UFC title contention.
Combat sports don’t register in the pecking order of geopolitical concerns amplified after Russian president Vladimir Putin moved to annex the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine.
But with relations between Russia and the West quickly approaching pre-Rocky …
Combat sports don’t register in the pecking order of geopolitical concerns amplified after Russian president Vladimir Putin moved to annex the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine.
But with relations between Russia and the West quickly approaching pre-Rocky IV levels, an emerging group of Kremlin-governed mixed martial artists may be caught up in the fray just as they’re poised to do big things in the U.S.
Should tensions rise, Richard Wilner, a California-based immigration lawyer familiar with MMA promoters and competitors, expects the current state of affairs in Russia, Ukraine and Crimea to effect visa processing, “not just for Russian athletes, but for all persons applying for visas through U.S. consulates in Russia.” U.S.-based MMA organizations such as UFC and Bellator “should anticipate encountering delays in the consular processing of visas for Russian fighters. And, that even if approved here, the delays and ‘issues’ overseas might, practically speaking, make a fighter unavailable.”
Any political outcome that stalls bouts like Khabib Nurmagomedov-Rafael dos Anjos, and Rustam Khabilov-Benson Henderson, is plainly undesirable for MMA fans, which, of course, includes the Russian president. Putin’s government recognized MMA as a state sanctioned amateur sport in 2012, and has considered partnering with big-money professional events in the not-so-distant future.
With some luck, Russian fighters can go about their business uninterrupted, and UFC, Bellator, or any Stateside promoter that wishes to will make matches for them. If so, rising international tensions could actually lead to a promotional opportunity: the jingoism of flag-draped marketing campaigns.
East vs. West. Drago versus Rocky. It’s nothing new.
For example: Bellator’s middleweight title fight Friday at the Maverick Center in West Valley City, Utah, pitting Russian champion Alexander Shlemenko and American challenger Brennan Ward. Quoted in a press release announcing the bout a month before Putin flexed his muscles in Crimea, Ward declared: “Simply put, I’m looking forward to bringing the heat and taking the belt away, Cold War style.”
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Russians owns a valued place in MMA history.
Winning and surviving based on grit and the effectiveness of Sambo — a martial art developed by the Soviet Red Army in the 1920s with a well deserved reputation as a leg-breaker — Oleg “The Russian Bear” Taktarov carved a name for himself inside the Octagon during the early days after Glastnost.
Ten years ago, during Putin’s first term as Russian president, Andrei Semenov and Amar Suloev arrived in the UFC showcasing a fun, wide-open style hampered by limited wrestling and the fact that they were undersized for the competition.
Despite failing to reach terms to fight for Zuffa, “The Last Emperor,” Fedor Emelianenko, retired as Putin’s ally and the stony face of Russian MMA. He currently heads the state-sponsored Russian Union of MMA, an emerging regional network for amateur competition and regulation.
In 2014, in the spirit of that lineage, the latest generation of Russians appear primed to leave a large mark. Especially back home.
“The maturation of mixed martial arts in Russia is similar to the maturation and timing of talent [in America] and in Brazil,” said Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney, who’s seen Shlemenko, heavyweight Vitaly Minakov, and a spate of Russians rise through his promotion to win tournaments and titles. “It’s a sport that over the last three to four years has really evolved. The question you have to ask yourself is what’s the wrestling background like?”
Like a kid from Iowa who’s predisposed to cauliflower ear, Dagestanis are born wrestling. That’s one significant advantage over their Russian Federation counterparts, and the reason they pose a serious threat to fighters from across the globe.
UFC’s current crew, a strong mix from autonomous Russian republics around the Caucasus Mountains, appear capable right now, for the first time really, of winning belts inside the Octagon. At 155 pounds, Khabib Nurmagomedov and Rustam Khabilov, brothers in arms back in Dagestan, are considered the cream of the crop.
“Having a chance to train with American and UFC fighters was certainly not something Taktarov and Semenov had the luxury of,” said Sam Kardan, a Russian expat living in New Jersey who represents many of his countrymen fighting in the Octagon. “This new generation of fighters can definitely be better in terms of experience, technique, and conditioning for the fight.”
From Jackson’s MMA, to American Top Team, to American Kickboxing Academy, to a wide swath of gyms across the U.S., Russians are benefiting from America’s strong MMA infrastructure. Results have been exciting so far, both in terms of talent level and dynamic style.
If they can strike. If they can wrestle. If they can use submissions. If they’re in shape and competing at the appropriate weight, the belief among many informed MMA people is that Russians are set up to be well represented on Top 10 lists for a long time to come.
“I don’t think there’s any doubt they can be champions in the UFC,” said trainer Greg Jackson. “You’re going to have kids coming from Dagestan, Chechnya and Russia.”
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Competition among American promoters seeking quality Russian prospects has turned intriguing over the last couple years. Both UFC and Bellator MMA believe they signed athletes from that part of the world that can reach No. 1 status.
Compared to UFC, which has essentially no presence in Russia, Bellator, the Viacom-owned property, holds a solid footing on television alongside soccer and Formula-1 on sports-specific network Russia-2, one of 10 free Federal channels broadcast throughout the country.
Fights like Shlemenko-Ward are shown live early in the morning, then replayed multiple times across the country’s nine time zones.
“We’re in a really good place in Russia, and most of the top contenders coming out fall to us first for a look,” Rebney said.
That was certainly the case a year ago, though the recent emergence of a Russian pipeline to UFC suggests the terrain could be shifting. “Probably more Russians wanted to be in Bellator than UFC,” Kardan said. “But now that we kind of opened the doors to Russians into the UFC, I see the trend of fighters trying to get into UFC more than Bellator.”
At UFC 169, Kardan introduced Zuffa brass to Ruslan Suleymanov, the president of big-spending upstart Legend MMA. Kardan believes among the litany of Russian MMA promotions, Legends would make a solid partner for the UFC if the American juggernaut chose to go that route.
Suleymanov made a point to present gifts to Lorenzo Fertitta and Dana White, as well as matchmakers Joe Silva and Sean Shelby. He opted for symbolism. Traditional burkas designed for shepherds operating high in the Caucasian mountains, and ornate daggers signifying friendship and trust — essentially, you’re armed and I’m not, let’s be pals.
This scene falls in line with traditions of the region between the Caspian and Black Seas, where the bulk of UFC’s “Russian” talent hails from.
Having spent time coaching several fighters whose names can run together like a jumble if you stare at them long enough, Jackson labeled Dagestan a “machismo culture,” a difficult but exciting journey where pride and shame are traded in place of stocks and bonds, where and men are bred to be men.
“They want their respect. They’re willing to fight hard for it,” said Jackson. “That’s a motivating factor more than money.”
Jackson cornered Rustam Khabilov, a suplex machine, for a fight in Derbent, Dagestan, in 2011. The high-altitude surroundings reminded the trainer of New Mexico, and ranks among the favorite places he’s ever visited.
“I literally could’ve stayed there two weeks longer than I did,” Jackson said. “By the time I left there was a 30 or 40 man entourage with us. Everyone was very friendly. They gave you gifts. So warm. So amazing. If they have $5 left and you’re their guest, well you’re going to get that $5.”
You can’t read about Dagestan, however, without bumping into descriptors like “troubled” or “embattled” or “jihadi.” Reporting three years ago from the country’s capital, Makhachkala, BBC called Dagestan “the most dangerous place in Europe.”
Dagestani fighters view themselves as Dagestani first, not Russian, said featherweight Shahbulat Shamhalaev, a highly-touted Bellator tournament winner.
“In Dagestan, decisions are made on the go,” Shamhalaev explained. “A lot of times you can make due. You don’t have to follow all the rules.”
By comparison, the U.S. feels boring, he said, a good place to retire.
Perhaps Shamhalaev doesn’t see it this way, but he and most of his compatriots also live under strict rules. Predominantly Muslim, they pray five times a day, eat specially prepared foods, take care to avoid many things, all the while enduring the difficult routine of being a professional fighter.
Eat. Sleep. Pray. Train. Recover. Again. And again. That’s life, which partly explains why Dagestan’s Magomedrasul “Frodo” Khasbulaev is dying to return to the U.S. and fight for Bellator, which owes him a featherweight title shot.
Bellator confirmed that Washington recently denied Frodo’s visa application outright. “Any of the -stans makes it more difficult” to receive a visa, said Wilner, the immigration attorney. The stout fighter is free to reapply at his leisure, though with everything that’s happening in the world, it may prove futile.
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Living in Omsk, Siberia, Shlemenko hasn’t had the luxury of sleeping in his bed while being near enough to a wrestling room to train how he wants. His stylish striking, a compilation of spinning attacks and powerful body shots, reflects that reality, though it only works as well as it does today because of lessons he learned while training in America.
“The most important thing for me was the mental confidence that I received there,” Shlemenko said. “I got a chance to spar and train with Top 10 fighters and could test myself against them. I could see I was doing pretty well and that gave me self confidence that helped me a lot. Also, before my career in the U.S., I really lacked confidence of the MMA game, for example standing up from the ground or working against the cage.”
Affixed high on a wall inside a converted garage in Huntington Beach, Calif., reminders of this work exist in the form of cartoony oversized checks, each made out for $100,000. Alongside Shlemenko’s prize, which Bellator issues like trophies, hang ones payable to Vitaly Minakov, Andrey Koreskhov, Alexander Volkov and “Frodo” Khasbulaev.
A blend of ethnic Russians and Dagestanis, Russian Orthodox Christians and Muslims, these men joined forces the past four years to improve their skills and prepare for fights while living in a fantasyland along the Pacific Ocean.
“Even though they’re ethnically different, when it comes to the cage they’re all fighters,” said Zhernekov, whose Rusfighters Sports Club represents the bulk of Bellator’s Russian cadre. “They all come from Russia. And they all represent Russia when they fight abroad. Sometimes it’s hard to draw the line between them. They look different, but not much else.”
Dorm life includes carpeted floors, a sauna, two bunk beds, a comfortable couch, and a refrigerator full of food for Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Everything someone serious about training for a fight could want, for rent in the rear of former MMA manager Ken Pavia’s place, with the added benefit of being situated a short walk from the beach.
For first timers, culture shock has been part of the experience. During some strolls around the neighborhood, for instance, polite smiles and head nods from strangers prompted confusion. “In Russia, people don’t do that,” Zhernekov said. “It’s a cultural thing. Sometimes when people smile or nod to them, they turn to me and say, ‘Hey, why is everyone saying ‘hi’ to me? Do they know me? Why is that?’ I tell them it’s common in the U.S. to be friendly. It doesn’t mean you really have to be friends and tell them about your day.”
After four years worth of fights in the U.S., Shlemenko, 29, is well acclimated to life here, though the car buff, who back home drives a custom built 360-horsepower, Subaru Legacy designed for drifting, remains in awe of the four-wheel toys Americans have access to at a third of the price.
Shlemenko views himself as “a pretty important part” of this newest group of Russians seeking success at the highest level of MMA. The Bellator champion has been positioned as the stereotypical stern, stoic Russian — the “Ivan Drago” reputation — in part because his English remains limited. Any marketing beyond a fun set of highlights and a brash challenger has been difficult for Bellator.
He didn’t say much when Doug Marshall popped off. And, as a fighter, he regards the mouthy 25-year-old Ward as a “typical American guy who wants it all, and wants it now.” Shlemenko said he’s never had anything against America or Americans, and even if other fighters take cheap shots, he’ll avoid playing the nationalism card.
“Of course I don’t like it,” he said. “I want this belt to stay in Russia and I will do everything to make that happen.”
All quotes are obtained firsthand unless noted otherwise.
Josh Gross has reported on mixed martial arts since April 2000. He served as executive editor of Sherdog.com before covering MMA for SI.com and, most recently, ESPN. He can be found on Twitter at @yay_yee.
Anthony Ruiz’s crooked face brought forth a smile and some timely advice from Vladimir Putin.
A judo black belt who penned a book and starred in a DVD touting the grappling art, Putin is said to be especially enamored with combat sports because of…
Anthony Ruiz’s crooked face brought forth a smile and some timely advice from Vladimir Putin.
A judo black belt who penned a book and starred in a DVD touting the grappling art, Putin is said to be especially enamored with combat sports because of what they reveal about people.
In recent years, Putin famously sat ringside in Moscow and Saint Petersburg paying respects to ethnic Russian heavyweight icon Fedor Emelianenko. Neither of those bouts, however, provided the former KGB officer a chance to see the mettle of a man.
Eighteen months before the world visited Sochi for a slushy Olympic march inside the ring of steel, the Russian president joined friends at the seaside resort for a sports festival featuring one of his favorites: mixed martial arts.
Ruiz’s status, of course, can’t touch Emelianenko’s, though he has earned a reputation during his 50-fight journey. Before meeting Alexander Shlemenko in Russia two summers ago, Ruiz competed exclusively in his home state of California for basically any MMA promoter operating there not named “UFC.”
If you saw him fight, you quickly realized he didn’t mind taking a beating. In Sochi, at the age of 34, for a $6,000 purse, Ruiz, of Coarsegold, Calif., endured his worst one yet.
Three days before the bout, ignorant of Russian people, promoters and customs, the man known as “A-Train” arrived in a place seemingly incompatible with winter sports.
None of Ruiz’s training partners or coaches owned a passport, so he brought along a friend who did. They navigated around town as best as they could, succumbing to charades to communicate with the locals. When Ruiz wanted to find a place to swim, he took his nose between a couple of fingers and pretended to jump into the deep end of a pool. Another time, craving a steak, he actually stooped to mooing.
Ruiz eventually found a workable translation app for his phone that helped with the basics, but on fight night, it proved less than useful. As the only English speaker on the card he felt uncomfortable, in part, because of concerns about the rules. Ruiz had grown accustomed to competing under California State Athletic Commission regulation.
There wasn’t anything similar in Sochi, he said.
The American middleweight could have wrapped his hands however he wanted, he thought. Or used whatever drugs he wished—which in a way made sense considering the venue’s makeshift backstage, with large beds and lounge chairs suited for that sort of thing.
The area along the coast of the Black Sea was muggy. Tropical even. It was damp enough so grass appeared green without being watered.
“Almost somewhere I’d take my wife,” Ruiz said. “It was pretty bad ass.”
To his chagrin, so was Shelmenko, who “hit me probably a thousand times,” tallied Ruiz. “My nose was broken all the way to the side in the last round. It was brutal.”
Alexei Zhernakov, Shlemenko’s manager and matchmaker for the evening’s promoter, League S-70, described Ruiz’s night like this: “He got the crap beat out of him.”
The outgunned American was put down on several occasions, the first just three minutes after the opening bell. Said Shlemenko: “There were a couple times when I knocked him down and could have kept pounding him, but I didn’t do it. I allowed him to stand. I didn’t take advantage of it.
“Putin was right to tell me I fought nobly—I didn’t want to kill Ruiz in the ring.”
Shlemenko called Ruiz’s multiple recoveries a “mystery.”
Putin thought enough of the American’s resilience and courage to offer a standing ovation, kind words and significantly more.
Immediately after the fight, with the tone of one friend telling another they have food stuck between their teeth, the Russian president offered this advice in English.
Said Putin: “You need to fix your nose.”
Inside the ring, minus the fun of charades, Ruiz clasped his nose between his fingers and rearranged tangled cartilage from a chicane to a straightaway. Just one more battle along the way, he thought.
Two weeks after returning home, mostly recovered by then, Ruiz’s phone rang. The voice on the other end spoke English, although it was obvious this was an intermediary for a Russian party who could be overheard in the background.
Ruiz was asked about his health.
Did he need anything?
He was fine, he said.
Then he was asked for a SWIFT code—the standard means of transferring money between banks, especially internationally.
Ruiz didn’t have a clue. He visited his bank to inquire why anyone would want to know such a thing.
Two days later, after deciding to play along, $50,000 was wired into his account from the Russian Federation.
Understandably, Ruiz freaked out. He checked with his financial institution and was told, indeed, it’s real money and, better yet, his to keep.
“I couldn’t believe it,” he recalled. “Then the next day, boom, another $50,000.”
For all Ruiz knew, a third wire transfer, also to the tune of $50,000, represented the number of times Shlemenko buried him in Sochi.
“The bank was telling me there’s some people who aren’t all that straight doing transfers and stuff like that,” he said. “I also knew it was coming from Putin, and he’s one of the wealthiest persons in the world. So, really, $150,000 ain’t that much to him. That’s what I’m telling myself to justify it. Sure enough, I kept it in there and left it alone. It was real. It really happened.”
He couldn’t be blamed for pulling up his balance from bed at 6 a.m. the next morning, but that was it. The transfers ended, leaving the middleweight’s family and friends ecstatic, in disbelief and even frightened.
When they asked how in the world this could happen, Ruiz answered as best as he could: “Well, I offered my life. I was there. I was willing to die. And it showed on film.”
He’s never been rich, or close to rich. So a hundred-fifty grand in three days thanks to Vladimir Putin? This was life-altering stuff. Ruiz purchased a home and paid down debt.
But because the transactions appeared tied to the Russian government, there was some thought that the money carried with it an added element of danger. Zhernokov claimed the $150,000 belonged to sponsors operating on behalf of Putin, “our special guest,” not the Kremlin directly.
When word leaked about Ruiz’s good fortune against Shlemenko—Bellator’s current middleweight champion, who to this day is bothered that he didn’t receive a piece of the Putin performance bonus—Zhernakov told fighters that what went down in Sochi was a “once a century” moment.
Ruiz recently returned to Russia to fight in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, which is situated on the opposite side of the nine-time-zone nation from Sochi. With Putin attempting to annex Crimea from Ukraine, the Russian president wasn’t able to watch Ruiz win a decision over unknown Ramazan Mukailov.
“I would think that I’m not going to get that lucky twice,” Ruiz said, “but you never know.”
All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.
Josh Gross has reported on mixed martial arts since April 2000. He served as executive editor of Sherdog.com before covering MMA for SI.com and, most recently, ESPN. He can be found on Twitter at @yay_yee.
UFC light heavyweight standout Jimi Manuwa steps into the UFC Octagon March 8 at UFC Fight Night 37 to face Alexander Gustafsson in what is the most high-profile fight of his life.
But the British powerhouse has already won his greatest battle.
A…
UFC light heavyweight standout Jimi Manuwa steps into the UFC Octagon March 8 at UFC Fight Night 37 to face Alexander Gustafsson in what is the most high-profile fight of his life.
But the British powerhouse has already won his greatest battle.
A troubled childhood left Manuwa directionless, a renegade born through the struggles that life sometimes unkindly tosses our way. Regularly fighting and defying the law, Manuwa eventually found himself locked up in prison in 2002 for conspiracy to burgle.
He was released in 2003, and he soon after found MMA, a sport which gave him hope, a goal and, unbeknownst to him at the time, a productive, limitless future.
“MMA has improved my life leaps and bounds,” Manuwa told Bleacher Report. “As soon as I found MMA, I knew that this is what I wanted to do, and it gave me focus because I was good at it anyway, and it gave me a goal to reach. I kept winning my fights, and it’s given me a goal and a career opportunity. I am who I am today, and who knows what could have happened if I didn’t find MMA.”
As an undefeated professional fighter boasting a 14-0 record with all 14 wins coming inside the distance, Manuwa has developed a reputation as one of the most feared finishers in all of MMA. Taking on the No. 1-ranked light heavyweight in the world at UFC Fight Night 37, Manuwa feels little pressure, and he knows that his past has prepared him for this crucial moment in his life.
“I don’t think there’s anyone who strikes like me in the world,” Manuwa said. “I’ve seen a few of his [Gustafsson’s] fights and everything, but I don’t really study him…I was a fan of Alex before I had to fight him, but his skills have no bearing on what I think is going to happen Saturday.”
Compounding the pressures of taking on one of the world’s top 205-pound combatants, Manuwa finds himself fighting in the main event slot at London’s O2 Arena at UFC Fight Night 37, a prestigious setting for one of the most acclaimed British fighters in the sport.
Still, Manuwa sees this stage as an opportunity, not a concern.
“I’ve got a good skill at blocking things out and concentrating and everything, so I won’t feel any additional pressure,” Manuwa said. “It makes no difference. I’ve just got to fight and get the win, and all I’m aiming for is the title. That’s all I’m aiming for, so I don’t care where I fight or who I fight. What I’m aiming for is the title.”
As Manuwa continues his journey toward the top of the UFC’s 205-pound ranks, he is reminded of his past, of the hardships and the mistakes.
After opening Lion’s Pride MMA two and a half years ago, Manuwa is taking this past and turning all the negativity it contains into lessons, learning and positive futures—like his own—for the area’s youth.
He’s righting wrongs, and, as he has in his UFC career, he’s finding success doing so.
“I invite them (children, troubled teens) down to the gym, and we got kids’ classes and teenage classes, after-school classes, and now we have disabled kids,” Manuwa said. “It’s just about giving back and trying to not make them make the same mistakes that I did when I was their age. I wish I had started when I was younger. I didn’t. Now it’s time to give back and give some of these kids something to do when they’re teenagers.”
Maunwa’s life course culminates March 8 at UFC Fight Night 37 as he steps into the Octagon to face Gustafsson in the night’s main event. Beyond this fight, he sees mountains ahead, but he’s ready. He’s already overcome so much, and he’s prepared to continue the trend.
“When I beat Alex, I’m going to have to fight someone else, whether it be Jon Jones, whether it be [Glover] Teixeira, [Daniel] Cormier, whoever,” Manuwa said. “I feel that I’m ready to take on the best in the world, and I’ll be doing that Saturday night.”
Young champions, such as Jon Jones and Jose Aldo, are becoming the norm in the world’s top MMA promotion. There was a time when a 45-year-old Randy Couture reigned over the UFC’s heavyweight division. Nowadays, 31-year-old Cain Velasquez is the eldest of the organization’s eight current titleholders, and he’s the only UFC champion to have […]
Young champions, such as Jon Jones and Jose Aldo, are becoming the norm in the world’s top MMA promotion. There was a time when a 45-year-old Randy Couture reigned over the UFC’s heavyweight division. Nowadays, 31-year-old Cain Velasquez is the eldest of the organization’s eight current titleholders, and he’s the only UFC champion to have […]
As MMA has evolved, UFC champions have become younger and younger. The days when a 40-something Randy Couture could return from a 13-month hiatus to capture the heavyweight title are likely gone for good. Many hungry up-and-comers now fill every division and are knocking the majority of their elders down a peg well before they […]
As MMA has evolved, UFC champions have become younger and younger. The days when a 40-something Randy Couture could return from a 13-month hiatus to capture the heavyweight title are likely gone for good. Many hungry up-and-comers now fill every division and are knocking the majority of their elders down a peg well before they […]