And Now He’s Retired: Jay Hieron Hangs It Up After a Decade in MMA

Jay Hieron announced his retirement from MMA competition today via twitter. He retires with a 23-7 record, accrued over 10 years of competition.

Jay Hieron announced his retirement from MMA competition today via twitter. He retires with a 23-7 record, accrued over 10 years of competition.

Hieron was truly one of the most well-traveled fighters in MMA. He fought for every big organization to grace the sport in the last era. He made his mark in Strikeforce, Bellator, the WEC, and the IFL. In the latter organization, he captured gold for the first and only time in his career, becoming the inaugural IFL welterweight champion.

Hieron’s success in the B-leagues of MMA never translated into success in the UFC, however. He lost all four of his fights in the world’s leading MMA organization. That doesn’t mean Hieron was a poor fighter though. He has wins over the likes of Pat Healy, Rick Story, Jason High, Rick Hawn, and Joe Riggs, (and debatably over Ben Askren). And for the most part, Hieron only lost to the best.

Hieron’s retirement signifies an ending era of MMA. There are few fighters of his ilk anymore—men who have fought for every would-be claimant to the UFC’s throne. The landscape is different now. The only organizations big enough to showcase talent aren’t big enough to keep it.

We wish Jay Hieron the best in his life outside the cage.

 

23 Things in MMA We’re Glad We Never Have to Experience Again


(This was a real thing. / Photo via Getty)

By CagePotato.com Staff

1. A Paul Buentello post-fight speech.

2. Anything Kimbo Slice related.

3. A James Toney promo.

4. Nick Serra’s butt-scoots.

5. Fedor vs. Lesnar discussions.

6. Tim Sylvia.

7. Strikeforce vs. UFC debates.

8. PRIDE vs. UFC debates.


(This was a real thing. / Photo via Getty)

By CagePotato.com Staff

1. A Paul Buentello post-fight speech.

2. Anything Kimbo Slice related.

3. A James Toney promo.

4. Nick Serra’s butt-scoots.

5. Fedor vs. Lesnar discussions.

6. Tim Sylvia.

7. Strikeforce vs. UFC debates.

8. PRIDE vs. UFC debates.

9. Internet message board rants about how the WEC is more exciting than the UFC.

10. Incessant whining about how GSP is the most boring fighter on earth.

11. Pulling an all-nighter to live-blog a PRIDE event (this is a little bittersweet).

12. Trying to remember the horrid IFL team names.

13. Articles about [insert middleweight] being the Guy to Beat Silva™.

14. Articles about [insert heavyweight] being the Guy to Beat Fedor™.

15. Articles about [insert welterweight] being the Guy to Beat GSP™.

16. Commentators referring to BJJ techniques as “some kind of choke.”

17. Commentators referring to guard as “the Gracie guard” and just putting “Gracie” in front of standard BJJ and Judo techniques in general.

18. Antonio McKee‘s trash talking.

19. Antonio McKee’s fighting.

20. Watching Chuck Liddell get violently knocked out.

21. Gus Johnson doing commentary.

22. EliteXC.

23. Sententious lectures about TRT—either for it or against it.

And Now He’s Retired: Bart Palaszewski Hangs Up the Gloves After 50+ Fight Career


(Just off camera, Guy Fieri could be heard describing these ribs as “A 1-2 punch to the taste buds from the heavyweight champion of Flavortown. Zabadoo!”)

A 50+ fight veteran of the game since 2002 who has fought under the IFL, WEC, KOTC, and UFC banners, Bart “Bartimus” Palaszewski announced his retirement from MMA on Twitter earlier this week, stating:

It’s about that time! Want to thank @VFDMarketing @ufc @teamcurranmma @SuckerPunchEnt  all my fans but I’m officially hanging it up!

KarmaAteMyCat must be crushed. 

Although he was released from the UFC last May following a three fight skid, Palaszewski steps away from the sport with an impressive 36-17 record and wins over the likes of Tyson Griffin, Ivan Menjivar, and most notably, current lightweight champion Anthony Pettis. Additionally, Palaszewski was a two-time “Of the Night” winner in his brief UFC stint, scoring a KOTN over Griffin at UFC 137 and putting in a FOTN-worthy performance against Diego Nunes at UFC on FOX 10.

But perhaps the most significant thing we can take away from Palaszewski’s career was his absolute fearlessness in the cage. This is a man who was in some absolute wars, people (his battle with Ryan Shultz at the 2006 IFL championships comes to mind), yet never backed down from a fight and always looked for the finish.

We would like to thank “Bartimus” for his devotion to putting on a show in the cage as well as wish him the best of luck wherever the road takes him. Join us after the jump for a look back at some of Palaszewski’s finest moments.


(Just off camera, Guy Fieri could be heard describing these ribs as “A 1-2 punch to the taste buds from the heavyweight champion of Flavortown. Zabadoo!”)

A 50+ fight veteran of the game since 2002 who has fought under the IFL, WEC, KOTC, and UFC banners, Bart “Bartimus” Palaszewski announced his retirement from MMA on Twitter earlier this week, stating:

It’s about that time! Want to thank @VFDMarketing @ufc @teamcurranmma @SuckerPunchEnt  all my fans but I’m officially hanging it up!

KarmaAteMyCat must be crushed. 

Although he was released from the UFC last May following a three fight skid, Palaszewski steps away from the sport with an impressive 36-17 record and wins over the likes of Tyson Griffin, Ivan Menjivar, and most notably, current lightweight champion Anthony Pettis. Additionally, Palaszewski was a two-time “Of the Night” winner in his brief UFC stint, scoring a KOTN over Griffin at UFC 137 and putting in a FOTN-worthy performance against Diego Nunes at UFC on FOX 10.

But perhaps the most significant thing we can take away from Palaszewski’s career was his absolute fearlessness in the cage. This is a man who was in some absolute wars, people (his battle with Ryan Shultz at the 2006 IFL championships comes to mind), yet never backed down from a fight and always looked for the finish.

We would like to thank “Bartimus” for his devotion to putting on a show in the cage as well as wish him the best of luck wherever the road takes him. Join us after the jump for a look back at some of Palaszewski’s finest moments.

J. Jones

Disastrous Debut Costs IFL Millions: The History of MMA on Television, Part 2

You’d probably never heard of MyNetworkTV, at least not until they shocked the cable world by acquiring WWE Smackdown in 2008. I certainly hadn’t back in 2007, unaware that the channel existed, let alone that me and 96 percent of Americans had ready ac…

You’d probably never heard of MyNetworkTV, at least not until they shocked the cable world by acquiring WWE Smackdown in 2008. I certainly hadn’t back in 2007, unaware that the channel existed, let alone that me and 96 percent of Americans had ready access to it.

But soon enough, mixed martial arts fans throughout the country were all too familiar with the fledgling network, made up mostly of old UPN and WB affiliates looking for a home. MyNetworkTV, you see, was supposed to be the platform for a fledgling new promotion, one with an entirely new vision and a myriad of fighter-friendly policies, to challenge the mighty UFC head on. It was the vehicle the International Fight League (IFL) was ready to ride all the way to the top of the combat sports world.

 

To say it didn’t work out that way is one of the world’s great understatements. And the promotion’s demise all started with the disastrous decisions it made on that very first night, proving there is truth in the old maxim “You never get a second chance to make a first impression.”

Before we get too deep into what didn’t work, which was most everything, we should talk a bit about what did. The IFL, founded by magazine magnate Gareb Shamus and real estate guru Kurt Otto back in 2005, wasn’t just another UFC clone run by boxing promoters looking to cash in on the next big thing. At least not in the beginning.

Shamus and Otto were both real-deal MMA fans, but fans with a heart. They had seen the seminal HBO documentary The Smashing Machine which followed former champion Mark Kerr from the top of the sport all the way down to the depths of depression and drug dependency. There had to be, they thought, a better way to take care of fighters while still raking in the piles and piles of cash that were right at that moment allowing UFC president Dana White to buy his first Ferrari or rhesus monkey, or whatever it is really rich people do with their money.

Bless them, though, Shamus and Otto put their money (albeit most of it was other people’s money in the form of a public stock offering) where their mouths were and completely shifted the paradigm, reinventing what the sport could be and what it might be again one day in the future.

Focusing on a team concept, similar to a wrestling meet, a competition once uniquely individual in nature became something more. Fighters were now part of a group, competing for points in five weight classes. You weren’t just fighting for yourself anymore—you were fighting for team. Stocked with young talent, the teams didn’t feature any well-known superstar talent. That was reserved for coaches like Pat Miletich, Renzo Gracie and the Shamrock brothers, some of whom spiced up fight cards by competing against each other in super fights.

Changes didn’t stop there and they were more than conceptual. They were life changing for many. The company offered fighters, most used to living from check to check, sometimes going broke between fights, a regular paycheck. More than just a salary, they offered health benefits, a precursor to the UFC’s current injury insurance. Fighters loved the IFL. If you want an angry man with cauliflower ears to mess you up something fierce, go ahead and say something bad about the IFL. I dare you.

Of course, one man dared, dared to say whatever he wanted. As the most powerful man in the industry, White had carte blanche to let his feelings be known. And he was not happy about the IFL, particularly the defection of Keith Evans, a UFC executive, to the competition. 

“I’m going to f *cking crush these guys,” White allegedly told Miletich. In a sworn statement, Miletich went on to explain that it was clear to him that there would be repercussions for signing with the IFL. “When the dust settles, anyone associated with the IFL would not be associated with the UFC.”

The battle lines were drawn and history has shown White to be a man of his word. With just a few exceptions, Gracie being the most prominent, former IFL coaches, many of them UFC champions and pioneers like Maurice Smith, Carlos Newton and Matt Lindland, remain at arm’s length from the UFC. White was playing for keeps.

Lawsuits went back and forth, with the UFC claiming that the IFL, through Evans and former UFC employee Steven Tornabene, had access to their proprietary information. The IFL countersued saying the UFC was threatening potential partners, including Fox Sports Net with whom they eventually signed a television deal.

It was on Fox Sports that Miletich’s Quad City Razorbacks won the first two IFL championships, but their stockpile of cash raised in a 2006 public offering was running low. The company was spending more than a $1 million at every event, despite a TV contract that paid just $50,000. That math simply didn’t work out over the long haul.

Fox Sports Net, like it had been for the UFC years earlier, served almost as a commercial for the brand, advertising the show to potential buyers. The network, with its limited reach and funding, wasn’t going to cut it. The IFL needed a big-time television partner and that’s where MyNetworkTV came into the equation.

 

Brought in to produce the show, called IFL Battleground, was former Showtime executive Jay Larkin. A major player in boxing, Larkin had essentially brought the sport to the pay network, at different times working with the likes of Mike Tyson, Marvin Hagler and Julio Cesar Chavez. He had not, however, always been a huge supporter of mixed martial arts, something White was quick to point out, essentially dismissing Larkin and other boxing promoters as carpet baggers and Johnny Come Latelys.

“Jay Larkin is a guy I talked to five years ago that wouldn’t put it on Showtime,” White told CBS Sports’ Sam Caplan. ” Didn’t believe in it at all, now he’s getting a paycheck from one of the companies and now he’s all about it. These are all guys who didn’t have the passion for it, didn’t like it and didn’t see the future in it.”

To White, Larkin’s lack of bona fide love for the sport would prove his undoing. And, in a way, he was right on the money. Larkin’s first IFL broadcast was a disaster, every fight fan’s worst nightmares all come to pass in two excruciating hours.

Repeating the UFC’s early marketing missteps, the IFL emphasized the extreme violence on display. The show opened with coach Frank Shamrock telling viewers his fighters “are ready to fight to the death for their team,” followed by an injured fighter going into convulsions as a heart-rate monitor flatlines in the background. Ambulances and even a 911 call were featured prominently.

I’m not making this up.

The show would later use the fact that an athlete had to leave the ring on a stretcher as a selling point, seven times using a fighter’s injury as a tease to keep viewers locked in. It was ugly, and to MMA fans sensitized to potential backlash like the kind that nearly killed the UFC, completely unacceptable. MMA reporter Zach Arnold spoke for many on his blog Fight Opinion:

Every possible negative stereotype that MMA enthusiasts and backers have been trying to fight against for the past decade reared its ugly head on this show. Portraying fighters as uneducated college dropouts needing father figures, stretcher job teasers everywhere, mostly stand-up fighting and little ground work, it was the complete definition of dumbing down the way you present a sport.

Worse still, the IFL was in such a rush to share all the great action from 2006 they actually attempted to fit nine fights into a two-hour block. That meant the bouts were heavily edited, sometimes in a confusing manner that left it unclear exactly what was going on. It was clear, however, that the edits were made by someone who didn’t appreciate MMA as a unique sport, eliminating ground fighting almost entirely and focusing instead on concussive standup attacks.

After the show aired, the MMA Internet exploded with furious indignation. To their credit, the IFL quickly responded, with CEO Shamus telling the Wrestling Observer’s Dave Meltzer the show was a work in progress:

We have seen the feedback from the fans and industry professionals and are addressing their concerns… we felt that overall the show had a great production value and will expose the sport to a wide audience. We have already made some significant strides moving forward for our future episodes. We are going to present the incredible stories of our athletes each week and get to the fights…including many that have not aired anywhere.

While Shamus was good to his word, what he couldn’t fix, at least not right away, was the fact that IFL Battleground was a taped program in a world where live sports is king. By the time the promotion finally negotiated a live fight show with MyNetworkTV in late 2007, promising to double their average rating which fluctuated right around a million viewers, if given the opportunity, it was too little and much too late.

By June 2007, their stock price, once a robust $17, had slipped below a single dollar.

Soon, after a last ditch effort in 2008 that saw them abandon their principles, including fighter salaries and benefits, they were out of business with $36 million in debt. It was an ugly end for a promotion that had started with such hope.

“Here‘s the truth,” Larkin told me in a 2008 interview. “MMA is a one-promotion industry and that promotion is the UFC. They have done an incredible job of branding and marketing and they are the name synonymous with the sport. The UFC is MMA.”

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

[AUDIO] Renzo Gracie Explains How He Beat Up Muggers & Tweeted at The Same Time


(Renzo Gracie’s knuckles after beating up muggers. Out of the frame, Renzo Gracie absolutely beaming with a huge smile on his face)

The other day we told you about how Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and MMA legend Renzo Gracie managed to tweet about how he *ahem* defended himself from two muggers in Manhattan this week, at the same time as he was beating the snot out of defending himself from them. Well, The MMA After Hour got Renzo on the line for a short interview where Gracie goes in to detail of how, exactly, he came to beat up two thugs and why he was insulted that they even tried.

We’re not going to waste too much of your time with our copy here because Renzo has plenty to say himself (and we really can’t re-create the effect of his Brazilian accent in writing, and you know it adds a lot to the story, my friend). After the break you’ll find the full interview.


(Renzo Gracie’s knuckles after beating up muggers. Out of the frame, Renzo Gracie absolutely beaming with a huge smile on his face)

The other day we told you about how Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and MMA legend Renzo Gracie managed to tweet about how he *ahem* defended himself from two muggers in Manhattan this week, at the same time as he was beating the snot out of defending himself from them. Well, The MMA After Hour got Renzo on the line for a short interview where Gracie goes in to detail of how, exactly, he came to beat up two thugs and why he was insulted that they even tried.

We’re not going to waste too much of your time with our copy here because Renzo has plenty to say himself (and we really can’t re-create the effect of his Brazilian accent in writing, and you know it adds a lot to the story, my friend). After the break you’ll find the full interview.

Elias Cepeda

Dead MMA Fighter of the Month: Justin Levens


(Photo via the Justin Levens Remembrance Album on CombatLifestyle.com / Props to Deadspin‘s brilliant “Dead Wrestler of the Week” feature for the inspiration.)

By Ben Goldstein

All murder-suicides are shocking. Not all of them are entirely surprising.

On December 17th, 2008, UFC/WEC veteran Justin Levens and his wife Sara McLean-Levens were found dead inside their condominium in Laguna Niguel, California, both from gunshot wounds. Initial evidence suggested that Justin was the shooter. “It was a chest wound that penetrated her heart and killed her, and his was to the head,” said O. C. Sheriff Coroner’s Office spokesman Jim Amormino.

Amormino confirmed that painkillers and anti-depressants were discovered in the Levens’s home, along with the handgun Justin allegedly used to end their lives. Police had visited Justin and Sara at least twice in the previous month, once to investigate a possible drug overdose.

At the time of his death, Justin Levens was 28 years old and hadn’t won an MMA match in over two years. He’d gone 0-5 in 2007 — an agonizing year in which his close friend and IFL teammate Jeremy Williams committed suicide, also by shooting himself — and was dealt a six-month suspension by the California State Athletic Commission in July 2008 when a pre-fight drug test came back off-the-charts for the painkiller Oxymorphone. For the last five months of his life, Levens was unable to earn a living as a fighter, and fell deeper into a spiral of depression and prescription drug use.

Justin didn’t leave a suicide note. There were no signs of a struggle. He and Sara had already been dead for four days when their bodies were discovered.


(Photo via the Justin Levens Remembrance Album on CombatLifestyle.com / Props to Deadspin‘s brilliant “Dead Wrestler of the Week” feature for the inspiration.)

By Ben Goldstein

All murder-suicides are shocking. Not all of them are entirely surprising.

On December 17th, 2008, UFC/WEC veteran Justin Levens and his wife Sara McLean-Levens were found dead inside their condominium in Laguna Niguel, California, both from gunshot wounds. Initial evidence suggested that Justin was the shooter. “It was a chest wound that penetrated her heart and killed her, and his was to the head,” said O. C. Sheriff Coroner’s Office spokesman Jim Amormino.

Amormino confirmed that painkillers and anti-depressants were discovered in the Levens’s home, along with the handgun Justin allegedly used to end their lives. Police had visited Justin and Sara at least twice in the previous month, once to investigate a possible drug overdose.

At the time of his death, Justin Levens was 28 years old and hadn’t won an MMA match in over two years. He’d gone 0-5 in 2007 — an agonizing year in which his close friend and IFL teammate Jeremy Williams committed suicide, also by shooting himself — and was dealt a six-month suspension by the California State Athletic Commission in July 2008 when a pre-fight drug test came back off-the-charts for the painkiller Oxymorphone. For the last five months of his life, Levens was unable to earn a living as a fighter, and fell deeper into a spiral of depression and prescription drug use.

Justin didn’t leave a suicide note. There were no signs of a struggle. He and Sara had already been dead for four days when their bodies were discovered.

*****

In a January 2006 Sherdog profile, writer Mike Sloan paints Justin Levens’s early childhood as a Dickensian nightmare:

Imagine a dreary neighborhood where crack is sold on virtually every street corner, hookers are trying to sell themselves for some quick cash, dead dogs litter the curbs and vermin infest almost every house. Homeless people shacked up in rundown buildings with boards in place of windows and abandoned cars without tires are just an everyday circumstance. Try to imagine that but only worse and you might understand just exactly where light heavyweight contender Justin Levens used to call home.”

That home was a Southeast Philadelphia housing project where Levens lived with his mother, stepfather, and three siblings; according to a People.com obituary, Levens never knew his biological father. Their minority status — “we were the only white family in the whole neighborhood,” Levens said — made Justin an outcast and a constant target for physical violence. The experience turned him into a fighter, for better or worse.

“We finally moved out here to California [to get away from it all] but then I used to fight all the time out here, too,” Levens told Sloan in 2006. “I don’t know why I was always fighting; maybe I was an angry kid or something…People were always picking on me or saying rude things to me…I got into martial arts to deter myself from street fights. My parents were getting pissed at me all the time. They threatened to throw me out of the house. All kinds of crap. I had to grow up pretty fast and figure out what I was going to do with my life. I pretty much stopped getting into fights when I took up martial arts and got off the streets. I mean, I still got into a few fights, but that was pretty much it after that.”

After a brief stint in the U.S. Navy, Levens found his spiritual home at Ruas Vale Tudo in Orange Country, headed by Brazilian MMA pioneer Marco Ruas. There, Levens was able to hone his natural aggression and gameness into ferocious weapons. He kicked off his professional MMA career with seven consecutive first-round stoppage victories from 2004-2005, leaving a trail of bodies in the Total Combat, Gladiator Challenge, and WEC promotions. Though he would lose his next fight in the WEC — a light-heavyweight title challenge against a beefed-up Scott Smith — the UFC had already taken notice.


(Justin Levens vs. Tony Lopez @ WEC 15, 5/19/05)

In April 2006, Levens was signed to fight middleweight Evan Tanner at UFC 59 as a short-notice injury replacement for Jeremy Horn. (Grim footnote: To our knowledge, this is the only UFC fight ever held between two competitors who later died.) Though Levens hoped to keep the fight standing, he wound up falling prey to Tanner’s infamous triangle choke, which came a little over three minutes into the first round of their fight. No shame in that, really; Tanner was a huge step up in competition, and Levens didn’t have the opportunity to put in a full training camp. But unbeknownst to him, Levens’s Octagon debut — fighting a former champion on the main card of a UFC pay-per-view event — was actually the pinnacle of his MMA career, and so much of his later mental anguish seemed to stem from that fact. His decline as a prospect came as quickly and dramatically as his ascension. It was all downhill from here.

The UFC re-booked Levens just two months later for a match against newcomer Jorge Santiago, in the first preliminary bout of UFC Fight Night 5. Early into the bout, Santiago landed a pair of knees from clinch that knocked Justin cold, giving him his second UFC defeat, and his third-straight loss overall. Levens was released by the promotion. He returned to California, and picked up the last two victories of his career that fall — a TKO against Justin Hawes under the WEC banner, and a technical submission against Brian Warren at a Beatdown in Bakersfield event. Twelve fights into his career, Levens had still never made it out of the first round.


(Jorge Santiago vs Justin Levens @ UFN 5, 6/28/06)

In 2007, the IFL debuted four new teams for its second season, including the Southern California Condors, led by Levens’s mentor Marco Ruas. Levens returned to light-heavyweight to compete for the Condors, while his friend Jeremy Williams was the team’s middleweight representative. The IFL gig could have been a springboard to even greater success for both fighters — perhaps a ticket back to the UFC for Jeremy. Unfortunately, things didn’t work out that way.

Levens struggled at his old weight class. In his first IFL appearance in January, he was out-wrestled by Reese Andy, losing a forgettable unanimous decision. Less than two months later, he was smashed by league standout Vladimir Matyushenko, losing by first-round TKO. Meanwhile, his partner Jeremy Williams was flourishing, submitting Bristol Marunde and Kaz Hamanaka at the same events, both by first-round triangle choke. Williams, who had taken a four-year hiatus from MMA competition to focus on coaching, was suddenly on a win streak again, and finally gaining some recognition in the sport — which made his sudden suicide all the more inexplicable.


(Levens and Williams demonstrate some submissions on ‘The Best Damn Sports Show Period,’ promoting the IFL’s second season.)

On May 5th of that year, Jeremy Williams pulled over to the side of Pacific Island Drive in Laguna Niguel and shot himself. He left behind two young daughters and a six-months-pregnant wife. According to an OCWeekly profile, Williams had moved into his parents’ house two weeks before he died due to marital problems. His suicide knocked the wind out of everybody who knew him. Said his close friend Chris Dinicola: “When you hear that classic line — ‘Oh, that’s the last person I would expect would do that’ — well, [Williams] was the last person I would expect to ever do that.” The coroner’s report on Jeremy confirmed that he had no drugs or steroids in his system at the time of his death.

Levens was “never the same” after Williams’s death. And yet, he competed at the next IFL event just two weeks later, filling in as Jeremy’s middleweight replacement. From the OCWeekly article:

Alternate Justin Levens, who fought in Williams’ place, couldn’t complete a prefight interview. “Jeremy was a great guy,” Levens said. Then he froze. His eyes welled up, and he lowered his head. Under his breath, he said, “I can’t fucking do this.” Levens was beaten badly in the first round by Brian Foster. Afterward, a television interviewer tried to speak to Levens again. He broke into tears and dodged the camera.

It would be Justin’s last appearance for the IFL. That fall, he suffered his fourth and fifth consecutive losses, dropping a decision to Nathan James and getting submitted via triangle-choke in a controversial Palace Fighting Championship bout against Kenny Ento.


(Justin Levens vs. Kenny Ento @ PFC 4, 10/18/07)

Grieving for his friend, and failing in his career, Levens turned to prescription painkillers to dull his emotions. His friends recognized that he was struggling, and did their best to offer help. One of those friends was Affliction Vice President Tom Atencio, Justin’s longtime friend and sponsor. Atencio offered him a payday on the undercard of his July 19th Affliction: Banned event, the clothing brand’s first foray into MMA promotion.

What should have been a chance at redemption for Levens turned into a total fiasco. Due to a delayed start-time for the event, Justin’s scheduled bout against Ray Lazama was canceled. Then, his pre-fight drug test came back positive for Oxymorphone. The California State Athletic Commission’s allowable threshold for the painkiller is 120 ng/mL; Levens registered a level of 10,141 ng/mL. In response, the CSAC hit him with a $1,000 fine and a six-month suspension. Levens didn’t bother to appeal the ruling. He would be dead less than five months later.

While Levens had a relatively public relationship with adult film actress Brittney Skye in 2007, his subsequent marriage to Sarah McLean was a low-profile affair by comparison. Then again, Levens was an increasingly private person in 2008, far away from the spotlight. Unless you knew him personally, you stopped hearing about him. And not even his close friends fully understood what he was going through in the last days of his life.

Here’s what we know: On the afternoon of Wednesday, December 18th, Sarah McLean’s mother visited the Levens’s condo in Laguna Niguel. She hadn’t been able to contact her daughter for five days, and became concerned. When she arrived, she found the bodies of Justin and her 25-year-old daughter lying together in bed, shot to death.


(Associated Press report on Levens’s death.)

*****

The eulogies and tributes that circulated following Justin’s death shared two general similarities: They all focused on what an amazing person Justin was, and they all acknowledged how irrevocably lost he was. Here’s Tom Atencio talking to People:

Justin was a self-made man who literally fought his way to the top. He was a gentle soul who struggled with life. Anyone who grew up under his circumstances would struggle, and unfortunately it got the best of him. He just had some personal demons that he couldn’t overcome. Fighting was Justin’s life but it wasn’t going well for him,. I know he was considering leaving the sport. But Justin was a fighter, I don’t know what else he would’ve done…Justin had a rough life; he was a good kid and was trying to get on the right path. This is a total tragedy and all you can do is wonder. No one saw this coming in the manner in which it happened.”

That last line seems rather loaded; perhaps Atencio felt Justin’s death was inevitable, even if he wouldn’t have guessed that his friend would end his life by firing a gun through his wife’s chest and his own head. Justin’s former agent Ken Pavia echoed the sentiment:

I saw him become disenchanted with his career and the sport,” he said. “I think every fighter has the earnest belief they’ll reach the pinnacle of the sport, but few do. For everyone that makes it, there’s hundreds and hundreds who don’t. So I as an agent worry about guys who have a series of losses. Justin’s a guy that held promise, but it just didn’t work out for him.”

Days after the tragedy, Justin’s ex-girlfriend Brittney Skye posted a set of personal photos of her and Justin (some of them mildly NSFW) on her MySpace profile, along with a goodbye letter that veered between heartbreak and self-blame:

THIS IS THE JUSTIN I KNEW AND LOVED! A GENTLE LOVING AND TOTALLY SILLY AT TIMES BUT ALWAYS PLAYFUL MAN THAT REALLY SHOWED ME WHAT UNCONDITIONAL LOVE WAS AND TAUGHT ME HOW TO LOVE LIKE THAT AND BE LOVED LIKE THAT. IM SO SORRY JUSTIN THAT I DIDNT HELP YOU MORE, I THOUGHT I WAS DOING THE RIGHT THING FOR YOU. I THOUGHT I WAS BEING RESPONSIBLE AND NOT SELFISH BUT NOW I REALIZE I WAS WRONG. I THINK I COULD OF BROUGHT YOU PEACE AND I KNOW THAT YOU KNEW THAT. I WISH I HAD RESPONDED THE LAST TIME I SPOKE TO YOU DIFFERENTLY. I DIDNT REALIZE THING[S] WERE THAT BAD FOR YOU AND I HATE MYSELF FOR NOT TRULY LISTENING TO YOU AND I KNOW IT MUST OF BEEN HARD TO ASK FOR HELP AND I WISH I HAD BEEN A BETTER FRIEND FOR YOU. I WILL FOREVER REGRET NOT LETTING YOU BACK IN. I WILL FOREVER LOVE YOU AND NEVER FORGET YOU OR HOW YOU TAUGHT ME TO LOVE. I LOVED EVERY SECOND WITH YOU JUSTIN, WE NEVER HAD A BAD TIME OR A FIGHT. I JUST WISH I DIDNT LET THINGS COME BETWEEN US. IM SORRY I PUSHED YOU AWAY TO DEAL WITH YOUR PROBLEMS ALONE INSTEAD OF HELPING YOU WORK THROUGH THEM CUZ YOU REALLY DID MAKE ME HAPPY JUSTIN AND IM SAD I’LL NEVER HERE YOU LAUGH AGAIN.. I LOVED BEING YOUR ANGEL, NOW I GUESS YOU’LL BE MINE…. I LOVE YOU AND MISS YOU JUSTIN!! RIP BABY :(

Not included in the pictorial tribute was this one of Levens mock-holding Brittney at gunpoint, which must have seemed like harmless fun at the time, and is now chilling to look at.

Levens is still listed on Marco Ruas’s website, although the language of his fighter bio has been changed to past-tense. And on a tribute page created by author Carol Gambill, Justin’s mother left her own testimonial:

Hello. I am Justin’s mother. I want to really thank the person who has made this site, it is beautiful and I think he would have appreciated it. Regardless of what the media portrayed, Justin had a family who loved him very much and we miss him every single day. The last time I saw him I told him I loved him more than anyone else in the world and I would happily die for him. I am glad I had the chance to tell him that. I think sometimes he forgot he wasn’t alone. Justin had a wicked sense of humor. He could make me laugh so hard. He would get this wry look on his face just before he let go a zinger. Justin was planning on moving out to Colorado to help me here with the farm. He loved it here and he loved the animals. He was hoping to make a fresh start. I think the darkness just got too [heavy] for Sara and him.

Justin will be having a niece or nephew born the end of April. This baby was conceived on or near Justin’s birthday. (Too much information for a mother to know, I know, but it’s so cool.) Justin was the most amazing dichotomy of a human being. He would quite happily beat the crap out of anyone, but if you needed help or you were an animal, you had a loyal and loving friend. When he was a little boy anytime we walked down the street I had to give money to the homeless people or I got such a lecture from him. I was in San Francisco recently with friends and we all went home broke from emptying our pockets in his memory. Next time you meet someone in need, give a little bit, in Justin’s honor.

Justin Robert Levens, 4/18/80 – 12/17/08. Tried to do his best, but he could not.

(BG)