Last night’s MFC 31 wasn’t the only MMA card our friends north of the border were treated to. Astute readers may have also remembered that Instinct MMA made its promotional debut in Quebec, Canada last night as well. The night’s main event pitted ex-hockey enforcer Steve Bosse against UFC veteran Houston Alexander. With a combined fourteen knockouts in twenty victories for the pair, you probably guessed that someone was going to get knocked out. And my God did these two deliver.
Last night’s MFC 31 wasn’t the only MMA card our friends north of the border were treated to. Astute readers may have also remembered that Instinct MMA made its promotional debut in Quebec, Canada last night as well. The night’s main event pitted ex-hockey enforcer Steve Bosse against UFC veteran Houston Alexander. With a combined fourteen knockouts in twenty victories for the pair, you probably guessed that someone was going to get knocked out. And my God did these two deliver.
GIFs are after the jump.
Also of note, Patrick Cote picked up a first round TKO over Crafton Wallace, as Wallace injured his leg early and was unable to continue. And since you’re so curious, Eric “Butterbean” Esch lost to 33-year-old heavyweight boxer turned MMA fighter Eric Barrak. Eric Barrack was making his MMA debut last night after racking up a 5-0 record as a professional boxer. And Barrack won by a guillotine choke in the third round. Getting choked out by a boxer making his MMA debut is probably a sign that you should be focusing on your reality television career instead of fighting at this stage in your life, homie.
After 10 years in MMA and a run in the UFC that included victories over Keith Jardine and Alessio Sakara, Houston Alexander is just getting started.”I’m healthy,” Houston Alexander told BleacherReport.com. “I’ve been healthy for a long time so I …
After 10 years in MMA and a run in the UFC that included victories over Keith Jardine and Alessio Sakara, Houston Alexander is just getting started.
“I’m healthy,” Houston Alexander told BleacherReport.com. “I’ve been healthy for a long time so I can go another five, six, seven years. I can do the same thing Randy Couture did minus all the injuries. I’ve never had any major injuries, so as long as I stay in good shape and fight on a high level I can go as long as I want. No bump on Randy Couture, but I want to be the next Houston Alexander.”
What will the Couture-like comeback of Houston Alexander include? Well if the comeback is to happen at all, Alexander must be successful in his outing at Instinct MMA’s inaugural event this Saturday against Steve Bossé.
Bossé has been carving a bloody path throughout the local Canadian MMA scene and has amassed an impressive 8-1 record, with seven of those wins coming in the first round! He was also a feared enforcer in the North American Hockey League.
Alexander couldn’t care less. “I really don’t care where he comes from or what his background is,” he said. “As far as I’m concerned, when the cage is closed, we’re on equal terms. So it doesn’t matter who has done what previously.”
Still, Alexander did have some praise for his opponent. “He’s a very tough guy. His Muay Thai is great. He’s just going to be a worthy opponent.”
Fortunately for Alexander, he’s had a star-studded training camp for this upcoming fight, which includes the likes of Jake Ellenberger, the man who recently bested former Strikeforce middleweight champion Jake Shields.
“I just sparred with Jake the other day,” said Alexander. “He’s a great wrestler, quick guy, different weight class but he’s still a great partner to spar with.”
“Ryan Jensen is one of my primary coaches. We got a great cast of characters out there. Joe Ellenberger is out there, you got Ryan Jensen, you got Jason Brilz. I think we got a great team of people that you go up against on a regular basis.”
With such training partners, it’s no doubt that Alexander is enjoying a four-fight winning streak (which would be five if not for an accidental eye poke) going into the fight with Bossé.
Under such circumstances, it’d be normal for a fighter to get nervous due to aspirations of returning to the UFC, but Alexander isn’t exactly normal when it comes to such things; he prefers to let the fans worry for him.
“I’m actually on a great streak so it doesn’t matter whether it’s UFC or whoever. I’ve been facing quality opponents, I’ve been beating quality opponents that have been in the UFC or any type of thing—Strikeforce. The fans are gonna see that I’m winning and then the fans are gonna be asking ‘How come he’s not fighting on this type of scale when he’s winning all these fights?’ I’m not worried too much about it; the fans will speak for themselves.”
So should we expect to see Houston Alexander coming to an Octagon near you anytime soon? Perhaps, but that Octagon may not be near you…unless you’re in Japan.
“For me, I would love to go where martial arts started and I believe Japan is one of those places,” he said. “China is one of those places and to go to Brazil—Brazil is the land of Jiu-Jitsu. Even Russia, you got great fighters out there so wherever a lot of these martial arts have gotten started I wouldn’t mind going to and actually being a part of history.”
Whether or not he knows it, Alexander is a part of history because he was present in MMA when the sport was still a sordid one and is still fighting as it enters the main stream.
“I started training in 2001,” Alexander remembered. “Right after my first fight I started training, shortly after that. It’s been about 11 years. The first fight I had—it was unsanctioned—but it was a sign-up deal. So I signed up with a fight and it was one of those things were they having a weekly MMA fight every week. So I signed up for a fight and got in and I ended up winning because I had a background in boxing and wrestling and I was hooked ever since.”
Since that day, the sport has grown leaps and bounds and is going from hole-in-the-wall bars and parking lots to Facebook and FOX and Alexander couldn’t be happier.
“It makes me feel proud to be a part of it. It gives you more incentive to train. It gives you more incentive to get your ass in the gym and put your butt on the line. I’m with the fact that we’re getting the exposure we deserve.”
However, as always, things could be better. As many fighters note, the fans are awfully negative and have a tendency to exaggerate, especially when “lay and pray” is concerned.
Alexander claimed that the fans were “just blowing it out of proportion.” He continued on and said, “You just need to get your ass up. If you can’t get your ass up then something’s wrong. Defend the takedown or do something to make it more exciting. You should want to get up, you shouldn’t want to lay on the ground. That’s what I think about that.”
Concerning the future of MMA criticism as a whole, he had more to say.
“I’m hoping that the fans and all the negative people who are negative towards MMA are getting educated more on the sport,” he said.
“It’s actually a sport that requires a lot of energy and a lot of know-how and a lot of go-getting. I’m hoping that the fans are supportive and most importantly I hope that the fighters getting what they’re worth in payment. I also hope the sponsors, such as Nike and these bigger companies, recognize MMA as one of the sports of the future.”
Instinct Mixed Martial Arts today announced most of the main card line-up of it’s upcoming inaugural MMA event set for October 7 at the Rousseau Centre of Sports Excellence in Boisbriand, Quebec and the card is shaping up nicely.
The main event of the evening will see former UFC light heavyweight Houston Alexander take on hockey enforcer-turned-MMA-fighter Steve Bosse. In the night’s co-main event former number one UFC middleweight contender Patrick Cote will look to improve his post-Octagon record to 3-0 with a win over muay thai specialist Crafton Wallace. The third fight on the card will feature a heavyweight tilt between king of the four-rounders and reality television star Eric “Butterbean” Esch and undefeated 5-0 Quebec boxer Eric Barrak who will make his MMA debut that night.
Instinct Mixed Martial Arts today announced most of the main card line-up of it’s upcoming inaugural MMA event set for October 7 at the Rousseau Centre of Sports Excellence in Boisbriand, Quebec and the card is shaping up nicely.
The main event of the evening will see former UFC light heavyweight Houston Alexander take on hockey enforcer-turned-MMA-fighter Steve Bosse. In the night’s co-main event former number one UFC middleweight contender Patrick Cote will look to improve his post-Octagon record to 3-0 with a win over muay thai specialist Crafton Wallace. The third fight on the card will feature a heavyweight tilt between king of the four-rounders and reality television star Eric “Butterbean” Esch and undefeated 5-0 Quebec boxer Eric Barrak who will make his MMA debut that night.
It’s no surprise that the card is conspicuously short of submission specialists, considering this is the same organization that was originally called Strikebox which was started by TKO MMA founder Stephane Patry a few years back and was touted as “kickboxing with MMA gloves.” You may recall the incident back in 2009 where a riot erupted when James Thompson ignored a “gentleman’s agreement” not to take the fight to the canvas after the Quebec athletic commission refused to grant the promotion clearance for a special set of rules that would see the referee immediately stand fighters up if the fight hit the floor.
Hopefully things run more smoothly this time around for Patry, who was responsible for putting on some of the best bouts in Canadian MMA history under the UCC and TKO banners and who helped launch the careers of a number of Canadian fighters including UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre, Sam Stout, Chris Horodecki, Mark Hominick, David Loiseau, Jonathan Goulet and Cote among other notables.
Instinct 1
Friday, October 7, 2011
Rousseau Centre of Sports Excellence
Boisbriand, Quebec
Houston Alexander (13-6) vs. Steve Bosse (8-1)
Crafton Wallace (18-5-1) vs. Patrick Cote (15-7)
Eric “Butterbean” Esch (14-8-1) vs. Eric Barrak (0-0)
Sergej Juskevic (11-6-2) vs. Martin Grandmont (11-5)
Travis Cox (6-9-1) vs. Derek Gauthier (6-3)
Syd Barnier (3-3) vs. Dimitri Waardenburg (7-5)
Shawn Levesque (1-0) vs. Guillaume Vigneau (1-1)
Clint Kingsbury (1-0) vs. Bojan Kladnjakovic (1-1)
Pulver vs. Wheeler, from last night’s Co-Main Event
Yesterday, you may have looked at the name of Houston Alexander’s opponent, Razak Al-Hassan, and thought “Where have I heard of him before?”. Spoiler alert: He’s the guy who got his arm snapped by Steve Cantwell at Fight for the Troops because tapping is for bitches. It probably won’t come as too much of a surprise to you to find out that he had another fight stopped by injury. It may surprise you to find out that this time, the injury that prevented him from continuing was a dislocated finger. You read that correctly, Urijah. Not to make any accusations of bitchassness, but how did the doctor even realize that Al-Hassan had dislocated his finger without someone telling him?
The stoppage to this fight was almost as odd as watching Junie Browning give up during the first round of his fight with Jacob Clark. Granted, you could argue that Junie Browning gave up on this fight well before yesterday’s weigh-ins. Junie Browning came out quickly, earning an early takedown and nearly submitting Jacob Clark with a twister. However, once the ref stood the fighters back up and Clark stuffed an attempted takedown, Junie Browning gave up. Browning allowed Clark to gain side control, and immediately tapped once Clark started throwing elbows. Given Browning’s loss coupled with the fact that he has to forfeit an undisclosed sum of money per pound over 155, there is a possibility that Browning essentially fought for free (or rather, whatever his sponsors paid him) last night.
Pulver vs. Wheeler, from last night’s Co-Main Event
Yesterday, you may have looked at the name of Houston Alexander’s opponent, Razak Al-Hassan, and thought “Where have I heard of him before?”. Spoiler alert: He’s the guy who got his arm snapped by Steve Cantwell at Fight for the Troops because tapping is for bitches. It probably won’t come as too much of a surprise to you to find out that he had another fight stopped by injury. It may surprise you to find out that this time, the injury that prevented him from continuing was a dislocated finger. You read that correctly, Urijah. Not to make any accusations of bitchassness, but how did the doctor even realize that Al-Hassan had dislocated his finger without someone telling him?
The stoppage to this fight was almost as odd as watching Junie Browning give up during the first round of his fight with Jacob Clark. Granted, you could argue that Junie Browning gave up on this fight well before yesterday’s weigh-ins. Junie Browning came out quickly, earning an early takedown and nearly submitting Jacob Clark with a twister. However, once the ref stood the fighters back up and Clark stuffed an attempted takedown, Junie Browning gave up. Browning allowed Clark to gain side control, and immediately tapped once Clark started throwing elbows. Given Browning’s loss coupled with the fact that he has to forfeit an undisclosed sum of money per pound over 155, there is a possibility that Browning essentially fought for free (or rather, whatever his sponsors paid him) last night.
In far less depressing news, Jens Pulver won in convincing fashion over former WEC bantamweight Coty “Ox” Wheeler. Jens looked solid in his bantamweight debut against one of the better non-UFC American bantamweights, earning a second round TKO. Jens seems to be making a permanent move to 135, which appears pretty smart after last night’s performance. Check out the video, and let us know what you think in the comments section.
Houston Alexander def. Razak Al-Hassan by TKO (injury) Rd 2 (5:00)
Jens Pulver def. Coty “Ox” Wheeler by TKO (punches) Rd 2 (1:59)
Tyler East def. Prince McLean by TKO (punches & elbows) Rd 1 (1:33)
Jamie Yager def. Willie Parks by submission (guillotine choke) Rd 2 (:21)
Diana Rael def. Angelica Chavez by split decision (28-29, 29-28, 29-28) Rd 3 (5:00)
Jacob Clark def. Junie Browning by submission (elbows) Rd 1 (4:18)
Filed under: NewsIn a lackluster main event to conclude the first pay-per-view fight card put on by the upstart MMA Fight Pit promotion, Houston Alexander defeated Razak Al-Hassan when the ringside doctor checked Al-Hassan’s hand after the second round…
In a lackluster main event to conclude the first pay-per-view fight card put on by the upstart MMA Fight Pit promotion, Houston Alexander defeated Razak Al-Hassan when the ringside doctor checked Al-Hassan’s hand after the second round and ruled that Al-Hassan couldn’t keep fighting because of a dislocated finger.
The official result was a second-round technical knockout win for Alexander, but the main event at MMA Fight Pit: Genesis wasn’t a great fight for Alexander. There wasn’t a lot of action, and the fans in Albuquerque booed during much of the bout.
Alexander has always been known for having power in his hands, and he showed off his power a couple of times by dropping Al-Hassan with a big jab in the first round and again with a right cross in the second round. But Alexander wasn’t letting his hands go often enough: He looked tentative for much of the fight and didn’t do a lot of damage other than those two big punches. Alexander said afterward that he felt that he had to be cautious after knocking Al-Hassan down because he worried that Al-Hassan would recover quickly.
“Just when you think you’ve got a guy, he recovers,” Alexander said. “I thought I had him but I wanted him to stand back up.”
That turned out to be a winning strategy for Alexander, but it wasn’t the kind of fight that most MMA fans willing think was worth their money on pay-per-view. It’s going to be tough for MMA Fight Pit to make it to a second pay-per-view event.
Filed under: ResultsMMA Fighting has MMA Fight Pit: Genesis results live for the pay-per-view event that is taking place at “The Pit” in Albuquerque, N.M.
In the main event, Houston Alexander squares off against Razak Al-Hassan, while former UFC champ…
Undercard Ali Hanjani def. Sean Spencer via submission (triangle choke)
Jason Sampson def. Joshua Montoya via submission (armbar)
Conrad Padilla def. Guy Youell via unanimous decision
Rocky Ramirez def. Mark Lujan via submission (punches)