The Bad Guy Is Back: Chael Sonnen Cuts Promo for ‘Battlegrounds MMA One’

Battlegrounds MMA is hosting an old-school one-night eight-man tournament this Friday at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, featuring Jesse Taylor, Cody McKenzie, and blah blah blah that part’s not really important. What’s important is that the $19.95 PPV will be commentated by semi-disgraced UFC star Chael Sonnen and pro-wrestling legend Jim Ross. The fighters might bring the steak, but brother, Sonnen and Ross will provide the sizzle.

Above, Sonnen hypes the event in his usual silver-tongued style. Below, Jim Ross commentates video games, just because it’s hilarious.

Battlegrounds MMA is hosting an old-school one-night eight-man tournament this Friday at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, featuring Jesse Taylor, Cody McKenzie, and blah blah blah that part’s not really important. What’s important is that the $19.95 PPV will be commentated by semi-disgraced UFC star Chael Sonnen and pro-wrestling legend Jim Ross. The fighters might bring the steak, but brother, Sonnen and Ross will provide the sizzle.

Above, Sonnen hypes the event in his usual silver-tongued style. Below, Jim Ross commentates video games, just because it’s hilarious.

UFC Star Chael Sonnen and WWE Announcer Jim Ross Help Take MMA Back to Its Roots

Answering a phone call when you aren’t sure who or what awaits on the other end can be a dicey proposition in the best of times. When you’re Chael Sonnen, and life is a constant roller coaster ride of your own devising, that’s especially true. 
Bu…

Answering a phone call when you aren’t sure who or what awaits on the other end can be a dicey proposition in the best of times. When you’re Chael Sonnen, and life is a constant roller coaster ride of your own devising, that’s especially true. 

But sometimes courage is rewarded. Sometimes you hit that green button and it’s WWE legend Jim Ross on the other end with an intriguing offer from BattleGrounds MMA, a chance to join him in the announce booth for their inaugural pay-per-view this Friday. Sometimes, you get a third chance to make things right with the sport you love.

“The only apprehension I had was who my partner was going to be. I didn’t want it to be somebody who would be uncomfortable with a ‘that rasslin guy’ coming into MMA as his partner. Who might resent me,” Ross told Bleacher Report in an exclusive interview. “I gave Chael a call. We’ve never met. But I loved his studio work on Fox. I thought he was one of the bright shining stars on the UFC coverage and he had a really compelling personality as that American Gangster guy. The guy has a little edge, he’s really bright and he talks in sound bites when he needs to. He understands the genre. He gets it. He reminded me a lot of Paul Heyman back in the day.

“Knowing that he had got into the situation he found himself in, losing his gig at UFC and losing his gig at Fox, I assumed he’d be available. But I didn’t know if he’d have an interest. Because it would be brand new to him, too. He’s a studio guy. There’s a big difference between being a studio guy and calling it live cageside as it unfolds.   

Sonnen, however, was quick to agree. After months on the sidelines, this was his opportunity to get back to living and breathing MMA. The idea that it should be a frightening proposition, he told Bleacher Report, never really occurred to him—especially with Ross at the helm. For him, it will be a return to the world that made him a star. But he’s not sure yet whether it will be a permanent one.

As far as my participation in this sport, I don’t know. I got to operate in a lot of roles. As a competitor, as a coach and behind the scenes in the office as well. I had a lot of fun and I cherish those memories. But my time is done,Sonnen said. “I get calls for interviews and asked to weigh in on different things. But I don’t think it’s appropriate. I think you’ve got to give the guys that are out there fighting, you’ve got to give them their time. The guys who are fighting should be the ones getting the headlines.”

The opportunity to call the action, however, was too big to pass up.

“It’s different. I worked with Jon Anik and he told me that in the broadcasting world live sports is the pinnacle. That’s what you want to do,” he said. “I had never thought about it in those terms. When he told me that it became reality. Anik says live sports is the biggest thing and that’s what I want to do. This will be a chance to do it.”

It’s the first part of Sonnen‘s third act, a chance for redemption. For Ross, too, it’s another chance to get some skin back in the game.

After decades as the voice of wrestling for Vince McMahon’s WWE, doubling up at times as the company’s vice president for talent relations, Ross found himself adrift last year, put out to pasture, a victim of a promotional youth movement. It turns out that an old man in a cowboy hat and Southern accent at odds with a very New York business wasn’t considered the ideal spokesman for a television program aimed at an audience in diapers when Ross unleashed his epic and unforgettable call of Mankind’s perilous plummet from atop the Hell in the Cell.

But, for two generations worth of fans, when you think about professional wrestling, those reminisces have a soundtrack provided by Ross. The lines live in legend:

“Business is about to pick up.”

Will somebody stop the damn match?”

As God is my witness, he is broken in half!”

If you doubt Ross’s influence on the popular culture, the Internet should disabuse you of any notion that his voice reached only the few and disenfranchised, the stereotypical wrestling fan. Ross resonated. More than a million people follow him on Twitter and his Ross Report is a podcast sensation.

Even today, his iconic voice is used to provide the excitement, passion and hyperbole so often missing from the carefully coiffed professionals who so often populate mainstream sports broadcasts. If you ever require the antidote to the Jim Nantz’s of the world, check out a clip where some enterprising young hooligan has replaced the tired and staid commentary of a sports highlight with relevant Ross commentary.

Subtle? Not always. But effective? Unquestionably.

“That was 16 years ago, the Hell in the Cell stuff,” Ross said. “And I still get people walking up to me quoting those lines. ‘Hey J.R., this game is going to be a slobberknocker!’ ‘Yeah, it sure will be.’ I want to bring the same level of enthusiasm I’ve always brought to events I’ve worked on and try to make my inflection and my tone fit the moment. That’s the deal. It has to fit the moment. It can’t be forced. Because then it would sound like a pro wrestling deal. It would sound disingenuous and I’m not looking to do that.”

The Ross on display will be the one from early in his career, when he called the action for Mid-South Wrestling. Headed by the legendary Bill Watts, it was old-school wrestling with an emphasis on sport, not shenanigans. Ross treated it seriously, discussing the wrestlers’ real-life athletic backgrounds and the story of the match as it transpired. 

“He’ll definitely be the captain of the ship. I’ll take my cues from him,” Sonnen said. “Jim asked me ‘Chael, when you grew up did you think wrestling was real?’ And I said, ‘Yeah.’ And he said, ‘Well, who made you think that?’ And I said, ‘Well, you did.’ If he can make you think a fake product is real, how do you think he’s going to do with something so real in a competitive environment?”

But even at his most serious, Ross is still a showman. He knows that fans are expecting some classic Ross-isms—but only if they work in context. 

“If they fit, there’s probably a good shot that some of those colloquialisms will be heard,” Ross said. “But I’m not going to force the proverbial square peg into a round hole. Am I going to have all my cliches on a sheet of paper and mark them off as we go? No. A lot of that stuff is just instinctual. You just feel it and you do it. But I’m going to have so much on my mind I won’t have time to think, ‘Don’t forget to get your stuff in. Make sure you say slobberknocker at least once an hour.'” 

Ross and Sonnen were both a little lost, drifting, waiting for an opportunity like this to find them. BattleGrounds MMA is not UFC and it’s not WWE. It’s a bit “indy,” an unheralded offering from a fledgling promoter, a bet that MMA is ready for a nostalgia act, an eight-man one-night tournament that harks back to the sport’s earliest days. 

“I can count the number of eight-man tournament winners on one hand. It’s a very, very rare thing. They don’t even exist anymore. Everyone who’s ever won one has a very meaningful place in MMA history. If you beat three men in one night, it’s a big deal,” Sonnen said. “I’m impressed that guys have raised their hands and volunteered to do this. You don’t have to walk out there. We are a volunteer army in this sport. It’s a very daunting task. Which is largely why the tournament went away.”

The names aren’t big ones. Ross and Sonnen will dwarf any competitor in relative fame and Q rating. The prestige signings are two UFC castoffs, J.T. Taylor and Cody McKenzie, who are both plenty respectable fighters. But the names, with due respect, don’t matter. The roster has changed multiple times during BattleGround’s wild journey. Ultimately it’s the concept, not the individual fighters, that matters most.

“I did an eight-man tournament. And I didn’t win,” Sonnen continued. “It was won by a man named Babalu. I’ve never looked at Babalu the same since that night. He could have lost every other fight he had in his career—I look at him differently. Just because it’s so hard. It’s going to be a big deal. You’re going to get the money and everything that comes along with it, but they’re also going to be able to write their own ticket. They’ll be able to go anywhere they want and they’ll deserve it all.”

For a beginner, promoter Bryan O’Rourke seems to be making all the right moves. Locally he’s leveraging the influence of Oklahoma wrestling legend Kenny Monday, making the Olympic gold medalist the face of the promotion for a fanbase that remember his exploits clearly. Nationally, he’s enlisted the aid of Doug Jacobs and his team at Integrated Sports, the leading independent distributor of sports PPV in the world. The result is a show available on essentially every cable and satellite system in the country.

“I don’t mean to sound obnoxious, but if I put my stamp of approval on something, most of the time they take it,” Jacobs said. “…I think there are opportunities in MMA. And going back to the one-night tournament was an idea (cable companies) liked. If you just have a card full of former UFC and Bellator guys, how does that differentiate you from a UFC or Bellator event, whether free or on pay-per-view? 

“When I first started distributing soccer in the mid-’90s, it was pre-Fox Soccer channel, pre-Goal TV. People who were hard-core fans were desperate to see soccer, so you could put almost anything on and people would buy it. I think at one point there was a similar situation with MMA. The only place you could see it was on PPV. Now, with so much MMA available on free television, for something to be successful on pay-per-view it needs a uniqueness to it.

“I think people are excited to see something different. It’s that unique, throwback twist, allowed us to get fully distributed. It’s the same distribution as a Manny Pacquiao fight or a UFC event—every cable company, every Telco, in the U.S. and Canada.”

For all Jacobs’ considerable influence, the broadcast team wasn’t his idea. He gives the credit to O’Rourke, who deflects it back to Ross. Sonnen was his call, literally, a partner he went out and pursued on his own before bringing the idea back to BattleGrounds

You can see where Ross is coming from, of course. Sonnen is a magnetic television presence. He helped reinvent fight promotion in the UFC, giving rise to a new breed of self-promoting fighter like Conor McGregor. But it’s not a choice without risk.

“I just have a gut feeling we’re going to have chemistry,” Ross said. “And I don’t have anything to base that on, except for my instincts. We’ll obviously find out on Oct. 3. But I think he’s going to be outstanding. And, as Rock would say, I know my role. My role isn’t to pretend I’m an MMA expert. I’m a storyteller. I’ve done an awful lot of live television. Mechanically, I have the skill set. I can help him with that. The technique and the mechanics of fighting? He can help me with that. I don’t need to be the expert. Chael Sonnen is the expert.”

Sonnen, for all his talents on the microphone, has never called a live-action fight. There’s room for stale script in a studio television appearance and bluster can carry you through a wrestling style interview. Talking nonstop for more than three hours requires a different kind of skill set, one that Sonnen will be forced to hone on the fly.

“I talked to Jim about it and the one thing he doesn’t like in his experience is scripts. He doesn’t like to rehearse it or have a plan,” Sonnen said. “I know the sport really well. Jim knows the sport. We both like talking about it. Neither one of us gets tired or runs out of energy. I think we’re going to have a lot of fun. When you go in with those kinds of expectations, when the goal is having fun and sharing that enthusiasm with the viewer, I think it’s a good sign you’ll have a good evening.”

Veterans of the industry have seen all kinds of disasters, especially when a first-time announcer steps into the booth. They can talk too much, distracting from the action. They can talk too little, not doing nearly enough to give the bouts context or depth. Sometimes they can even accidentally talk to the audience at home instead of producers in the truck.

This thing could easily devolve into a complete train wreck, something everyone involved is keenly aware of. But the show’s executive producer, former WWE television chief Nelson Sweglar, believes Ross, a veteran of thousands of hours of live TV, can help Sonnen find his way the same way he’s helped dozens of other novice broadcasters in his day.

“As my old friend Vince McMahon used to say, ‘If it goes bad, we always meant it to be that way.’ I never really was sure what Vince meant by that,” Sweglar said with a laugh. “…But Jim comes with all kinds of experience. The ability to improvise within a given structure, a skill you learn in wrestling to advance the story, doesn’t go to waste in professional sports like MMA. 

“It takes awhile for a new person to get a sense of when to talk. And not to step on each other’s lines. It’s an interesting talent, to read the speech patterns of the guy sitting next to you. Jim is very good at knowing how to read the person sitting next to him and keeping folks in rhythm.”

While Ross is holding Sonnen‘s hand, the same thing is true vice versa. For all his experience in the broadcast booth, Ross has never called an MMA fight, though he did dabble with a bit of boxing earlier this year. Sonnen, a veteran of 44 career fights, will fill in the blanks when it comes to technical nuance. Ross, in turn, will concentrate on the narrative.

“The fights are what it’s all about. That’s where the rubber meets the road. But there are some displaced wrestling fans who will probably want to hear good old J.R. on commentary again,” Ross admits. “Am I going to stink the joint out or am I going to come through with flying colors? And how will Chael do sitting at cageside? There are fans who will want to see how he transitions too. There is curiosity about the broadcast. There’s a lot of traffic.

“Hopefully fans will give us a try and not condemn the show and the broadcast until they see how things are going to go. I’m really excited about the opportunity and think it’s going to be fun. That’s the main thing for me at this stage of the game. I want to earn my stripes. For the MMA fans who are purists, I want them to know I have great respect for the genre. I’m a big fan just like they are.”

 

BattleGrounds MMA ‘O.N.E.’ will be broadcast live from the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, this Friday beginning at 10 p.m. EST/7 p.m. PST at a price point of $19.95. In addition, the event will be available online as an iPPV on Go Fight Live

Jonathan Snowden is Bleacher Report’s lead combat sports writer. Unless otherwise noted, all quotes were acquired firsthand.

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Is Battleground MMA Worth Buying on PPV?

The next Battlegrounds MMA show is this Friday night at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The show will feature a one-night elimination eight-man tournament, and will cost 19.95 on pay-per-view. But is it worth buying?
The tournament format is an inte…

The next Battlegrounds MMA show is this Friday night at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The show will feature a one-night elimination eight-man tournament, and will cost 19.95 on pay-per-view. But is it worth buying?

The tournament format is an interesting concept, and a lot of mixed martial arts fans are nostalgic of the old days when fighting up to three times a night was the norm for fighters like Royce Gracie, Ken Shamrock, Don Frye and Mark Coleman. We’ve seen plenty of tournaments in Bellator, but this one is a one-night elimination tournament, something about that just gets MMA fans excited.

The eight men who will not know their first-round opponents until the day of the weigh-ins are Roan Carneiro, Luigi Fioravanti, Trey Houston, Brock Larson, Cody McKenzie, Joe Ray, Jesse Taylor and Randall Wallace.

The commentators for the show will be professional wrestling commentary legend Jim Ross and recently retired/disgraced MMA fighter Chael Sonnen. The two will undoubtedly make for an interesting call, but is it worth paying your actual money for?

How should we feel about one-night tournaments anyway? Should we appreciate them for their violent and volatile nature, where the winner will have accomplished a true feat in the sport by winning three times in one night? Or should we consider them something of the past, that MMA has rid itself of on its quest to make the sport as safe as possible for the athletes?

Aside from the tournament, Battlegrounds MMA will have a few other fights on the card. The co-main event is a lightweight fight between Danny Navarro (11-4) and Jonny Carson (11-6). Oklahoma featherweight prospect Jamal Parks (3-0) takes on Ruben Warr, and Tyler Shinn (6-2) takes on Chris Gutierrez (4-1) in a bantamweight fight.

The main focus of the card will be on the tournament, which provided all the fights of each round go forward, will require seven fights in total. I can’t tell you how to spend your money, as that is ultimately up to you.

But if you find yourself buying mixed martial arts pay-per-view events, this is one you might want to watch. The talent pool in the tournament is an interesting mix of lightweights, featherweights, welterweights, and even a middleweight or two all competing at 170 pounds.

We don’t know what the matchups will be, and that is something that sets this card apart from the week-in week-out UFC and Bellator schedules. Of course, we will know come fight night the first four fights of the tournament, but it is anyone’s guess who is going to make it to the finals.

The real reason to watch this show is Jim Ross making his mixed martial arts commentating debut. He recently called a boxing event on Fox Sports 1, and I for one am dying to hear him call an MMA fight.

We’ve seen a few different sides of Chael Sonnen on the mic recently. We all know “The Bad Guy” gimmick that he would put on ahead of his fights, and we’ve seen him in serious circumstances as well in his recent retirement and dealings with the NSAC.

On commentary we’ll most likely see a more nuanced version of The American Gangster, who will surely be excited to be sitting next to Good Ole’ J.R. There are a lot of things that set this event apart from what we normally see, and at a price point of under 20 bucks, it’s worth taking a look at.  

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Chael Sonnen, Jim Ross to Commentate Battleground MMA PPV in October

Two of the most colorful characters on the microphone in recent memory are set to team up and announce an MMA pay-per-view next month. 
Chael Sonnen, a two-time UFC title challenger and former Fox Sports analyst, and Jim Ross—a UFC Hall of F…

Two of the most colorful characters on the microphone in recent memory are set to team up and announce an MMA pay-per-view next month. 

Chael Sonnen, a two-time UFC title challenger and former Fox Sports analyst, and Jim Ross—a UFC Hall of Famer who called pro wrestling for nearly four decades—are set to commentate Battleground MMA on October 3, per MMA Fighting

The show harkens back to the old days of mixed martial arts, with an eight-man tournament in the welterweight division. The tournament features six  former UFC fighters, in Dennis Hallman (53-15-2), Brock Larson (37-8), Roan Carneiro (17-9), Luigi Fiorvanti (24-11), Cody McKenzie (15-4) and David Mitchell (14-4). Also in the tournament is former Strikeforce fighter Trey Houston (10-2) and two-time All-American wrestler Chris Honeycutt (4-0).

Ross, named Announcer of the Year 14 times, retired from the sports entertainment business about a year ago and immediately expressed an interest in commentating MMA fights on Ariel Helwani’s The MMA Hour

The Battleground MMA event will mark the first time Ross calls the action inside the cage. 

The card will also be the first time Sonnen calls a pay-per-view event, though he did a ton of pre-fight and post-fight analysis when working for Fox Sports. 

However, after a debacle where “The American Gangster” failed two consecutive drug tests for performance-enhancing drugs, Sonnen had his Fox Sports/UFC broadcasting contract terminated, per Yahoo Sports

Battleground MMA takes place at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and is headlined by a lightweight contest between Ryan Couture and Jonny Carson.

Will Ross and Sonnen end up being a color commentary team for the ages or will their personalities not mesh well and be a total flop as an announcing pair?

 

John Heinis is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA editor for eDraft.com.

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Jim Ross Says Don’t Expect Brock Lesnar Back in the WWE in 2012

After getting crushed by former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Alistair Overeem in the main event of UFC 141, Brock Lesnar announced his retirement from the sport of mixed martial arts.Lesnar, a former two-time All-American wrestler at the University…

After getting crushed by former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Alistair Overeem in the main event of UFC 141, Brock Lesnar announced his retirement from the sport of mixed martial arts.

Lesnar, a former two-time All-American wrestler at the University of Minnesota, saw his name rise to prominence when he made his WWE debut in March of 2002.  

Based on the fact that the former “Next Big Thing” was a huge draw as a professional wrestler, many MMA fans and analysts speculated not if Lesnar would return to the WWE, but when. 

However, WWE commentator Jim Ross, who has been with the company since 1993, stated in his latest blog that he does not expect Lesnar to rejoin the premiere sports entertainment organization in 2012. 

Ross first cites the fact that Lesnar hated the grueling travel and work schedule professional wrestlers endure, as well as why he is not surprised that Brock pursued a career in the UFC: 

Brock dislikes, putting it mildly, traveling. Plus, he doesn’t need the money even though he’s smart enough to not turn down a big payday if the lay of the land is to his liking. That’s why the UFC thing was good for him because he could earn big money by traveling 2-3 times per year to fight.

While few expected to Lesnar to return to the ring full-time, many rationalized that the former Golden Gopher would appear at this year’s Wrestlemania, perhaps against the Undertaker.

Good ole’ JR put that rumor to bed as well, although he did not completely rule out Brock making a return in the future:

I could see Brock doing a major, one off WWE appearance a la Wrestlemania, but not this year, and doing so while not even making the live Raw events that lead into it. I could also see WWE traveling to Brock to shoot vignettes to build whatever match that he might be booked.

UFC President Dana White has already addressed the possibility of Lesnar returning to the WWE, something that he did not seem to be opposed to: 

When you retire, he retires under contract. I have no idea (how long the contract is). Listen, I’ve had my moments with Brock Lesnar but I’ve had a great relationship with him and we’ll figure it out, no big deal. Never had a situation with a guy where we haven’t done the right thing (via CageSide Seats).

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Report: At Some Point Brock Lesnar Thought it Would be Smart to Learn the ‘Fundamentals of Punching’

(“What you don’t seem to understand, *Pat*, is that our reliance on Lockean liberalism is precisely what’s allowed America to live under this guise of exceptionality that leads us to deny our own history in the name of social order. L…


(“What you don’t seem to understand, *Pat*, is that our reliance on Lockean liberalism is precisely what’s allowed America to live under this guise of exceptionality that leads us to deny our own history in the name of social order. Look, go read some Louis Hartz and then we’ll talk.” PicProps: @DCBrockLesnar)

Those of you who’ve been keeping up with “UFC Primetime” have likely already noticed two things: 1) Visiting sparring partner Pat Barry is far and away the most engaging and interesting (read: smartest) personality inside Brock Lesnar’s DeathClutch gym. 2) Yeah, it’s a little weird for Barry to be training with Lesnar leading up to his UFC 121 clash with Cain Velasquez. Somehow I just don’t see those two guys having compatible personalities. Nonetheless, Barry’s status as an invited guest at DeathClutch is another clear indicator that The Dark Lord is making an effort to get his leather together in the striking department. That endeavor, according to a recent article in the Boston Herald, has also included a second straight training camp with noted boxing coach Peter Welch.

“I never learned just the basics in boxing,” Lesnar explains. “I wanted to go get a grassroots boxing coach to get my feet underneath me, to try to combine my wrestling positions and mold into a boxing stance, and just lower myself and learn to punch from my feet to my hands. And so he’s been a huge help — just being able to understand the fundamentals of punching.”

Also, this is yet another situation that underscores how totally awesome it is to be Brock Lesnar. Here’s a guy who was already UFC heavyweight champion by the time he thought to himself, “Hey, you know what? I should learn a little bit of this crazy boxing stuff that everybody else is doing.” Must be nice.

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