No Words Exchanged Between Ellenberger, Shields on Shields’ Father’s Death

Filed under: UFC, NewsNEW ORLEANS – Jake Ellenberger’s quick and dominant win over Jake Shields on Saturday will forever be linked to a story that transcends the world of fighting and sports.

When Shields’ father and manager, Jack Shields, died sudde…

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NEW ORLEANS – Jake Ellenberger‘s quick and dominant win over Jake Shields on Saturday will forever be linked to a story that transcends the world of fighting and sports.

When Shields’ father and manager, Jack Shields, died suddenly last month, there were quickly questions of whether he would be able to recover emotionally for the main event with Ellenberger at UFC Fight Night 25 – or if he even might pull out of the fight altogether. Shields was that close with his dad.

Ellenberger said leading up to the fight he could not help but understand Shields’ grief, and respected his decision to go through with the fight. After Ellenberger’s 53-second TKO win, he said he didn’t exchange any words with Shields, post-fight, about the loss of his father.

“I don’t feel it’s my place to be (offering condolences after the fight),” Ellenberger told MMA Fighting. “I know he’s going through a really tough time, but I don’t think it’s my place to talk about it. I feel for him – I really do. Like I said when I heard about this, family is the most important thing in the world outside of fighting, outside of anything.”

Shields had not been stopped in a fight since 2000, his third pro fight, and only in April, in a decision loss to Georges St-Pierre for the welterweight title, had his more than six-year-long winning streak snapped. He has now lost two straight for the first time in his career, which included the Strikeforce middleweight title before he vacated it last year to sign with the UFC.

Ellenberger’s win gave him five straight in the welterweight division, and the ease with which he dispatched Shields likely thrust his name right into title contention with another win. St-Pierre defends next against Carlos Condit in October. Nick Diaz fights BJ Penn on the same night with the winner likely to be next in line after Condit. But Ellenberger’s quick win, taking virtually no damage, may mean he’s back to work quickly, hoping to build on his streak and cement himself as next in line for a shot sometime in 2012.

Saturday, though, he said anyone who wants to downgrade his win by saying Shields might not have been ready for the fight in the wake of his father’s death should reconsider.

“It doesn’t matter, to be honest,” Ellenberger said. “He took the fight. He stayed in there, which I respect about him. He showed he’s a professional and a warrior. He had the opportunity to pull out. I’m not taking anything away from him. A fight is a fight.”

Before Jack Shields passed, there was just a hint of bad blood starting to rise between the two Jakes when Shields said he hadn’t really heard of Ellenberger. But after Saturday night, that likely all got swept under the carpet.

But Ellenberger said he knew he had to put his sympathy for Shields aside when the cage door closed.

“That’s the hard part,” Ellenberger said. “I know he’s going through such a tough time. No matter what you do and say, it’s really hard to push that aside and compete. But I do feel for him. Outside of fighting, I feel for him. I respect him. But when you get in there, it’s our job to fight, and that’s what we do.”

 

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Jake Shields Loses Again, Now Cesar Gracie Must Be Glad Nick Diaz Backed off GSP

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu master Cesar Gracie must be secretly grateful that his ward Nick Diaz would rather watch beauty pageants than join one. Otherwise, it would spell a second straight loss in a UFC main event for his MMA team in six weeks, after the ot…

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu master Cesar Gracie must be secretly grateful that his ward Nick Diaz would rather watch beauty pageants than join one. Otherwise, it would spell a second straight loss in a UFC main event for his MMA team in six weeks, after the other Jake (Ellenberger) TKO’d his Jake (Shields) last night in UFC Fight Night 25.

Unless you’re in the soap opera business, you know that sympathy doesn’t win you new clients. And a string of losses—even just two in a row—can discourage discerning (and touchy) prospective customers and sponsors from patronizing whatever it is you’re running.

After consoling Shields over his, and their, second straight loss, this time in the hands (and knees) of Ellenberger, the senior Gracie must have thanked Diaz for a successfully-executed stunt. He stood up Dana White and Georges St-Pierre, thereby demoting himself to a fight versus lighter and lesser competition in B.J. Penn.

After all, what most fans and experts expected was an exciting title fight between St-Pierre and Diaz, not a post-fight announcement of a “new UFC welterweight champion” come UFC 137.

A major UFC win is what Team Cesar Gracie needs ASAP, and that is made more probable now for Diaz against Penn. Not bad that it’s still a co-main event.

Good for Gracie that White insisted that Diaz parade in a bikini in every UFC 137 press conference, which made the latter avoid the first two “beauty pageants” like the plague. (Who knows the real story?)

Alright, now time for some “MMA math.”

Ellenberger stopped Shields, which St-Pierre failed to do. Therefore, Ellenberger is better than…oh take a walk!

Just talking to myself.

 

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For Jake Ellenberger, a Challenge Made Is a Promise Kept in Knockout Fashion

Filed under: UFCIt was a fight he lobbied for incessantly.

Jake Ellenberger wanted a chance to face Jake Shields, a chance to face one of the welterweight division’s best. The intensity of his interest in the fight though, came as something of a surp…

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It was a fight he lobbied for incessantly.

Jake Ellenberger wanted a chance to face Jake Shields, a chance to face one of the welterweight division’s best. The intensity of his interest in the fight though, came as something of a surprise when he began to stalk Shields on Twitter. Ellenberger called him a “joke,” told him his days were numbered, said he was about as “exciting as watching a bowl of mash potatoes get cold.” And when the fight was finally made, and Shields said he didn’t really know who Ellenberger was, he made one last statement.

“Jake Shields, you don’t know who I am, and you’re not gonna [sic] know who I am after the fight either,” Ellenberger tweeted on July 12. “You’re cornermen will tell you.”

With that, he called his shot, basically promising a knockout.

It was a bold call. An entire decade — and 29 fights — had passed since a referee had pulled an opponent off Shields. And he wasn’t fighting cupcakes during that time. He’d stood across the cage from names like Georges St-Pierre, Dan Henderson, Carlos Condit, Yushin Okami and Paul Daley, and none of them had been able to put him down for good.

On top of that, Ellenberger came in as the underdog, with Shields nearly a 2-to-1 favorite.

No one knocks out Shields, and Jake Ellenberger was going to do it?

If it sounded like empty hype, you couldn’t blame Ellenberger for firing out some verbal warheads. After six years in the fight game and an excellent record (he’s now 25-5), he might have been wondering what exactly he needed to do to gain any traction. Nothing he’d done in the UFC up to that point had made him a household name, and few were clamoring to see him fight the division’s best.

Finally, he got his chance, and made it a quick night of work. Living up to his promise, he knocked out Shields in just 53 seconds. After shrugging off a pair of Shields’ takedown tries, Ellenberger landed a crushing knee to the head that knocked his opponent down, then finished him on the ground with a series of hard left hands that forced the referee to step in.

With that, the 26-year-old Ellenberger announced himself as a true contender.

It was hard not to feel some sympathy for Shields. Just two weeks ago, he lost his father, 67-year-old Jack. Jake Shields said he never seriously contemplated withdrawing from the fight, but you have to wonder if his concentration level was where it needed to be.

That’s not Ellenberger’s concern, of course. The cage is no place for feelings. Histories must be left behind and future plans must be set aside, if only momentarily. The only thing that can matter is the next second.

While Shields rode the emotional roller coaster to New Orleans, Ellenberger had to be feeling at least a hint of pressure. While he came in on a four-fight win streak, this fight was his first UFC main event, and his first chance to really impress the people who matter. Wins against Mike Pyle and John Howard are fine. They look good on a record, and they move you up the rankings incrementally. But a win over Shields?

This is a guy who has beaten Henderson and Jason “Mayhem” Miller and Carlos Condit, and the list goes on. He’s won titles in two different weight classes, and his awkward striking style aside, he simply wins and wins. Beating Shields means something. It’s more than a victory; it’s a message. Jake Ellenberger has arrived.

You know how hard it is to call out a fighter ranked above you, get that fight and crush him? That’s the trifecta Ellenberger just pulled off. There were plenty of fighters he could have wanted, but he had his eye on one target all along, for very specific reasons. As Ellenberger tells it, he was supposed to fight Shields once a couple years ago, but Shields ended up withdrawing from the fight. As Ellenberger tells it, he was too dangerous and not well known enough for Shields to take the risk.

This is what you do when you get your long-awaited opportunity. Ellenberger fought like a man with everything to gain in the future while motivated by everything he’s missed out on in the past.

 

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UFC Fight Night 25 Results: 5 Fights to Get Jake Shields Back on Track

Jake Shields has had a terrible past few weeks.His father and manager sadly passed away on Aug. 29, and he was stopped for the first time in his career.  Clearly he needs to regroup before he steps back into the octagon to try to bring his UFC rec…

Jake Shields has had a terrible past few weeks.

His father and manager sadly passed away on Aug. 29, and he was stopped for the first time in his career.  Clearly he needs to regroup before he steps back into the octagon to try to bring his UFC record back to .500.  

When the time comes to step back in the cage, Shields will most likely be demoted to fighting on the main card, much to his dismay.  He will also be demoted to fighting middle of the pack welterweights in an effort to prove that he is worthy to fight another title contender.  

Who will show up in the next fight?  Shields the Strikeforce champion welterweight, or the Shields that can’t deal with strong stand-up?  Here are some matchups that may be able to help figure that out…

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UFC Fight Night 25 Shields vs. Ellenberger: The Real Winners and Losers

UFC Fight Night 25: Shields vs. Ellenberger is in the books and it’s that time again for us to take a look at the real winners and losers from the big event on Spike TV. Tonight’s fight card was full of great action, including the main ev…

UFC Fight Night 25: Shields vs. Ellenberger is in the books and it’s that time again for us to take a look at the real winners and losers from the big event on Spike TV.

Tonight’s fight card was full of great action, including the main event between welterweights Jake Shields and Jake Ellenberger whose stylistic matchup had a lot of experts scratching their heads on who would have their hand raised at the end of the night.

As with every event, we can always go back and look at the official record books which will tell us who walked out of the event with a “W” and who walked out with an “L.” But the official record book doesn’t always tell the whole story.

Like we’ve seen many times in the past, there were actually quite a few unofficial “winners and losers” from tonight’s fight card. Let’s take a closer look at the event. 

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UFC Fight Night 25 Results: Ranking the Top 10 Welterweights in the UFC

Tonight at UFC Fight Night 25, live from New Orleans, Jake Shields and Jake Ellenberger met in a battle between two top 10 welterweights.Despite losing his father and manager, Jack Shields, three weeks ago, Shields chose to continue with the fight…

Tonight at UFC Fight Night 25, live from New Orleans, Jake Shields and Jake Ellenberger met in a battle between two top 10 welterweights.

Despite losing his father and manager, Jack Shields, three weeks ago, Shields chose to continue with the fight against Ellenberger. 

Ellenberger was able to get the better of Shields and has now put himself in title contention.

Where do both men rank after tonight’s fight? Continue reading to find out! 

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