Courtesy of :The MMA Truth Related Posts:UFC 126: Silva vs. Belfort: After Much Talk, Belfort Still Had To Wait for SilvaUFC 125 Resolution: Edgar vs Maynard Results and Live Chat/BlogUFC 127: Cain Velasquez in Puerto Rico for Fan Rally in Support of J…
Courtesy of :The MMA Truth Related Posts:UFC 126: Silva vs. Belfort: After Much Talk, Belfort Still Had To Wait for SilvaUFC 125 Resolution: Edgar vs Maynard Results and Live Chat/BlogUFC 127: Cain Velasquez in Puerto Rico for Fan Rally in Support of Jorge RiveraUFC Fight Night: Fight For the Troops 2: Real Play By Play […]
“Danny Boy” Downes is a young, hungry up-and-coming fighting out of the Roufusport camp in Wisconsin. The 25-year-old fighter was born in Chicago and moved to Wisconsin after college to train and pursue a career as a mixed martial art…
“Danny Boy” Downes is a young, hungry up-and-coming fighting out of the Roufusport camp in Wisconsin. The 25-year-old fighter was born in Chicago and moved to Wisconsin after college to train and pursue a career as a mixed martial artist. Downes fought twice in the WEC before that company was absorbed in the UFC last […]
Prior to the UFC revealing that the Japanese standout would be squaring off with middleweight champion Anderson Silva at UFC Rio in August, our Japanese correspondent Stewart Fulton visited Yushin Okami to interview him and take in a training session at Real Japan Wrestling gym in Tokyo.
Okami touched on a number of topics including the fact that he has been preparing for an inevitable showdown with Anderson, his training with Team Quest, Xtreme Couture and Yoshihiro Akiyama and his thoughts on a GSP-Silva super fight.
(Video courtesy of YouTube/Us)
Prior to the UFC revealing that the Japanese standout would be squaring off with middleweight champion Anderson Silva at UFC Rio in August, our Japanese correspondent Stewart Fulton visited Yushin Okami to interview him and take in a training session at Real Japan Wrestling gym in Tokyo.
Okami touched on a number of topics including the fact that he has been preparing for an inevitable showdown with Anderson, his training with Team Quest, Xtreme Couture and Yoshihiro Akiyama and his thoughts on a GSP-Silva super fight.
We will have an update in the coming days from “Thunder” now that the bout is official and we’re hoping to get his thoughts on Silva’s recent allegations that he faked being injured by an illegal upkick to get out of their 2006 Rumble on the Rock bout.
(Garza picking up the first UFC win in Ontario in impressive fashion.)
After racking up nine straight wins in the regional circuit, Pablo Garza suffered the first loss of his career under the bright lights of the WEC. Determined that he belonged in the big show, “The Scarecrow” made his way to Las Vegas to try out for The Ultimate Fighter 12, but failed to make it into the house when eventual finalist Michael Johnson knocked him out of the competition in the qualifying round.
Garza walked away from the show determined to improve. He was given another shot to prove that he belonged in the Octagon at the TUF 12 finale and he took the opportunity and ran with it as he knocked out Fredson Paxiao 51 seconds into the opening frame with a picture-perfect, $30,000 Knockout of the Night garnering flying knee.
Riding the momentum of his impressive UFC debut in December, the 27-year-old Fargo, North Dakota native wanted to make another statement in his follow-up fight last weekend at UFC 129 in Toronto against Yves Jabouin. It took him just 4:31 to silence the Canadian crowd and earn himself another performance bonus — this time for Submission of the Night and to the tune of $129, 000.
We spoke to Garza yesterday and touched on a number of topics including his win over Jabouin Saturday night, what he plans to do with his latest bonus and what his family thinks about his career path.
Check out the interview with the fast-rising featherweight after the jump.
(Garza picking up the first UFC win in Ontario in impressive fashion.)
After racking up nine straight wins in the regional circuit, Pablo Garza suffered the first loss of his career under the bright lights of the WEC. Determined that he belonged in the big show, “The Scarecrow” made his way to Las Vegas to try out for The Ultimate Fighter 12, but failed to make it into the house when eventual finalist Michael Johnson knocked him out of the competition in the qualifying round.
Garza walked away from the show determined to improve. He was given another shot to prove that he belonged in the Octagon at the TUF 12 finale and he took the opportunity and ran with it as he knocked out Fredson Paxiao 51 seconds into the opening frame with a picture-perfect, $30,000 Knockout of the Night garnering flying knee.
Riding the momentum of his impressive UFC debut in December, the 27-year-old Fargo, North Dakota native wanted to make another statement in his follow-up fight last weekend at UFC 129 in Toronto against Yves Jabouin. It took him just 4:31 to silence the Canadian crowd and earn himself another performance bonus — this time for Submission of the Night and to the tune of $129, 000.
We spoke to Garza yesterday and touched on a number of topics including his win over Jabouin Saturday night, what he plans to do with his latest bonus and what his family thinks about his career path.
Check out the what the fast-rising featherweight had to say below.
———-
Have you had to pinch yourself to make sure you weren’t dreaming since notching your impressive win and won a record-setting $129,000 Submission of the Night bonus you received from the UFC Saturday night?
“It feels good. My mind can’t comprehend what I just did and what will probably happen in the future for me.”
What was your reaction when Dana White informed you how much you would be getting for your slick flying triangle submission over Yves Jabouin?
“It sounded awesome and to tell you the truth it still hasn’t even set in. Just last night I was replaying it in my mind and I was like, ‘Geez, I can’t believe what I just did. It’s surreal to me still.”
Was it unnerving realizing that you were facing a Canadian in Canada in front of a partisan crowd of more than 55,000 people?
“I expected the crowd to be against me. I prepared myself for that. It was basically his hometown. He’s from Montreal. It’s close by. I came in knowing that I was going to get boeed, but I wasn’t going to let it bother me. What actually surprised me is that when I came out of the Octagon and was walking backstage, people were actually cheering for me, like ‘Yeah Pablo! Let’s go! Let’s go!’ and stuff like that, so it kind of added to the motivation.”
Your transition to the triangle seemed flawless. Is that a move you work on a lot in the gym?
“I wouldn’t say I work on my flying triangle a lot, but I have done it before. That wasn’t the first time I’ve done it. I’ve actually done them in jiu-jitsu tournaments and it’s a lot easier doing them in the gi. That move is a move that after jiu-jitsu class me and my training partners will just hang out and work on cool moves like that just for the hell of it. I started just messing around with it and I started getting a little better with it and doing it in jiu-jitsu tournaments, but this was the first time I ever did it in a fight.”
What rank are you in BJJ?
“I’m only a blue belt in jiu-jitsu, but I think I’m a little bit better than that. I don’t know. I’ve only been training jiu-jitsu for about two-and-a-half years or so. I’ve just recently started, maybe two months ago training really hard in the gi. Before that I was doing a lot of no-gi stuff and wrestling.”
I think too much attention is paid to belt rank and not enough is paid to experience or skill level. Jason MacDonald, who also fought and scored an impressive submission win and whose ground game is very underrated isn’t ranked because he doesn’t train in the gi. Is that why you’re only a blue when your skill level and experience is much higher, because you haven’t trained with the gi as much?
“The gi definitely helps a lot. At first I was like, ‘Why do I need a gi if I fight and we don’t wear them?’ but it’s all part of being a martial artist. There are benefits of training in a gi that correlate into fighting that you won’t be able to see until you try it.”
You fought and picked up your first loss under the WEC banner and were let go by the promotion so you decided to go another route and try out for The Ultimate Fighter but missed out on your opportunity to get into the house after you lost to eventual finalist Michael Johnson. Would you do it over again if given the opportunity?
“Getting on the show and then fighting Michael Johnson and losing to him, I definitely used that as a learning experience. It definitely motivated me to train harder. I don’t regret it. If anything it pushed me to get better. I used that stumbling block or that loss as motivation to get better. I really can’t say whether or not I would do it again because I never go to experience being in the house like my training partner Dane Sayers. He got into the house. I can’t say I would do it a thousand times over because I didn’t get into the house, but going the way I went about things as far as how the road led me back to the UFC, I’m glad and I feel blessed that things worked out the way they did.”
Have you had the chance to think about a possible opponent you’d like to face next? Not that you have a say in it, but sometimes fighters create a buzz from calling out another fighter and the UFC takes a closer look at the possibility.
“Honestly, there’s nobody I have in mind right now. I haven’t even thought about it. After I fight, I don’t even want to think about fighting. I don’t even want to do anything this week or next week but totally relax. My goal in the UFC isn’t, ‘Oh, I want to fight this guy,’ or ‘Oh, I want to fight that guy.’ My goal is to stay in the UFC. For most fighters, the goal is to get to the UFC, but the hard part isn’t getting there. It’s staying there once you make it because the competition is so high. That’s my goal. My goal is to stay in the UFC and keep my job.”
This latest bonus makes two in a row for you since you picked up one for Knockout of the Night for your flying-knee KO of Fredson Paixão at the TUF 12 finale. Have you treated yourself to anything with your winnings?
“I’m going to put the money aside for now until I can talk to some financial advisors. I want to be really smart with my money. Most guys when they get to the UFC, they say their goal is to become champion. I always told myself that if I ever got to the UFC and made enough money to pay off my college loans, I was definitely going to do that. That’s what I’m going to do. I’m going to pay back my college loans and save, invest the rest and be smart about it.”
Where did you go to school?
“I graduated from the University of North Dakota with an exercise science and personal fitness training degree.”
Do you work in the field you studied?
“Yeah. I work at the university teaching classes from Monday to Thursday.”
How has the reaction been from your students who are MMA and UFC fans?
“They’re really proud. They’re really cool. A lot of the students didn’t know what MMA and UFC was. Now they’re fans and watch it. They think I’m a really cool teacher and they’re proud for me.”
Do you integrate any of your MMA training methodologies into your lessons?
“No. I only train muay thai and kickboxing classes, so I guess I do share some of my stand-up training.”
Oh, Okay. When you said you teach at the university, I thought you might have taught kinesiology or something like that.
“No. I’d have to be a teachers assistant or something to do that. I would never have enough time to do that with training.”
Is your family supportive of what you do?
“My fiancee is really supportive and proud. She really encourages me to do well and just all around supports me. She watches my fights. As for my mom and dad, they honestly don’t understand what it is I do. A couple weeks ago I tried to explain to her what I do and I tried explaining my flying-knee win was the first knockout at 145 in the UFC and how important it was and what it meant to me. Her reaction was like, ‘Well, as long as it makes you happy.’ She has no clue what the UFC is. My mom’s old school. She’s like, ‘As long as you like your job, I’m happy for you.’”
My grandma is like that. She still thinks I cover pro wrestling for a living.
“Yeah, my mom thinks I’m a wrestler. She’ll ask me, ‘So do you wrestle or do you box?’ She tries to explain it to a friend and it’s pretty funny hearing her try.”
I know that one of your main sponsors is Rev Gear, which is who we set this interview up with. How important are good sponsors to up-and-coming fighters like yourself?
“I’m just really glad that a company like Rev Gear took the time to invest in me and believe in me. I come from pretty meager beginnings and my family has worked hard for everything we had, yet we were at the lower end of the [economic] scale. I’ve never had a lot of money. I like Rev Gear a lot because they aren’t a huge faceless corporation like some of the other bigger clothing sponsors. They’re a perfect fit for me. They really look after me and we have a great relationship. I’m glad that they believed in me and that I showed them that their investment in me is really beneficial for them.”
UFC featherweight Mark Hominick was on The Fan 590 RadioMonday morning where he spoke with host Andrew Krystal about his gutsy fight at UFC 129 against Jose Aldo this past weekend.
According to “The Machine,” who says the gruesome hematoma he incurred during the bout was “merely a flesh wound,” the UFC brass were so impressed with his performance Saturday night that they have assured him that if he can put together a couple more wins, he’ll get another crack at the the promotion’s 145-pound strap.
Check out what Hominick had to say after the jump.
(“Hey you guys!!! Can I get a Baby Ruth?”)
UFC featherweight Mark Hominick was on The Fan 590 RadioMonday morning where he spoke with host Andrew Krystal about his gutsy fight at UFC 129 against Jose Aldo this past weekend.
According to “The Machine,” who says the gruesome hematoma he incurred during the bout was “merely a flesh wound,” the UFC brass were so impressed with his performance Saturday night that they have assured him that if he can put together a couple more wins, he’ll get another crack at the the promotion’s 145-pound strap.
Here’s what Hominick had to say about:
His disgusting hematoma:
“It was superficial. It looked a lot worse than it was, you know? I’ve got pair of black eyes but the swelling is down and it looked a lot worse than it was in the fight. I’m trying to avoid [seeing] some of [the photos from the fight]. Like I said, it was superficial and those hematomas…that’s just what happens in a fight. There’s swelling there and there’s nowhere for the swelling to go because you’re not cut or anything, so it just stockpiles there. I went to the hospital, got a CAT scan, everything was there, made sure nothing was broken, and nothing was broken and the CAT scan was completely fine. I put some ice on it and within two hours the swelling was gone. Both eyes are black and blue. A little swelling in the face but nothing serious. I’m wearing sunglasses and I can hide under them.”
Whether or not he thinks he was close to finishing the dominant champion:
“I think at the four minute mark he was waiting for that bell to ring. That’s just it. I was giving everything I had in my effort to finish the fight because I knew I was down. Besides the knockdown I believe it was pretty close throughout the fight. He just had heavy hands and any time he landed a clean punch he did damage and I think that was the difference in the fight. I hurt him early. A lot of people were talking about he was getting tired, he was tired I think because I hit him in the body. Even in the first round I hit him with a couple hard liver shots. That’s like my patented punch and I always attack the body on everybody. It takes your will to fight and I think that’s why he changed up the game plan and took me to the mat. It was a war and we got fight of the night for a reason. He did a lot of damage but like I said I inflicted a lot of damage on him and almost got the finish in the fifth round. Every couple of shots I landed a hard shot and I could just see it in his eyes. As much as he’s a champion and he wants to go out swinging, he was wanting that bell to ring. There’s no question. He was in there in survival mode as opposed to defending and attacking. He thought he had the fight in the bag at that point, so I think he was just trying to survive that last round.”
How many tickets he was asked to get by friends and family members:
“The numbers went down [of how many tickets I had to get] because they knew my hands were tied, but I know half of my high school was there for sure. It was pretty cool though. it was a big fight for all of them because all of them have known me since I was like five years old and to see where I came from… I’m from a town of 2,500 people. To be fighting in the biggest UFC [event] of all time for the world belt and to put on a fight like that, everyone was emotionally involved in that fight.”
The effect the raucous hometown crowd had on his performance:
“It was just a constant stream [of cheering], that’s what I was hearing. It just made me try that much harder. I think I proved there is no quit in me. I know I was supposed to go in there and I wasn’t supposed to make it out of the first round, but I was just trying to finish him. I wanted that belt so bad.”
What the UFC thought of his performance:
“Oh, they were thrilled. They were like, ‘Heal up and we want you back as soon as you can. In another two fights you will get another crack at the title.’ I know some of the things I have to work on to take him out. I don’t think he would be lining up to fight me to tell you the honest truth.”
Where he goes from here:
“[I’m going to] just take [on] a guy who’s maybe coming off of a win because I’m still in contention. I don’t think that fight puts me on the bottom of the pile. I’m still up there with the performance I put in. Jose Aldo hasn’t lost in five years. He’s never been in any type of trouble in any of his fights and I almost finished him. I took him to his limits. People know that I’m for real and I just have to go out there and prove it again. Honestly, I think 30 seconds more and I could have finished the fight. I wasn’t stopping and he was fading. But again, the bell rang and he won, so I have to go back to the drawing board and come back stronger.”
Fight Hub TV’s Marcos Villegas caught up with Gary Shaw over the weekend and spoke to the former head of EliteXC about Nick Diaz’s boxing aspirations and why Kimbo Slice’s boxing debut never happened.
(Video courtesy of YouTube/FightHubTV.com)
Fight Hub TV’s Marcos Villegas caught up with Gary Shaw over the weekend and spoke to the former head of EliteXC about Nick Diaz’s boxing aspirations and why Kimbo Slice’s boxing debut never happened.
“I love Nick Diaz, first of all. I think he’s as exciting as can be. I’ve not reached out for him. If he wants to box, he knows my number. They know the name of my company. But if he’s going to box then he’s got to box relevant fighters,” Shaw pointed out. “Fernando Vargas is not a relevant fighter, Jeff Lacy is not a relevant fighter. So what are you proving? That’s just a waste of time. Television’s not going to buy it, so if he wants to really fight, they’ll contact me and then they’ll really want to fight then we’ll do something on Showtime or HBO or ESPN.”
Although Shaw believes that Diaz has star power and says he could do well in the sport, he cautions the Stockton native to think long and hard about competing in The Sweet Science as it is a different animal than MMA-style boxing.
“He’s a good fighter. He’s a very good fighter, but boxing is a lot different than MMA, so… The techniques are different,” Shaw said. “You can knock guys out in MMA, but you’re not knocking out boxers. You’re knocking out other MMA fighters. So he might find it a little more difficult than he believes.”
When asked about what’s up with Slice’s delayed foray into boxing, Shaw said that it isn’t likely that we’ll see Kimbo donning 10-ounce gloves any time soon.
“He realized how hard it is to be a boxer. I had him in training camp in California, but he wasn’t committed…as committed as he had to be. I still love Kimbo. I still think he’s the single biggest attraction in our sports,” Shaw explained incredulously, demonstrating why EliteXC failed. “I’d love to still put him in a boxing ring, but you gotta be really committed. He made a lotta money in mixed martial arts and maybe he just didn’t need the money bad enough at that time.”