(Fitch vs. Burkman face-off video via YouTube.com/MMAWorldSeries. Skip to the 2:10 mark to see Burkman zip his entire body inside a jumpsuit. Wow. He is just the *master* of mind games, isn’t he.)
The 18 fighters competing at tonight’s World Series of Fighting 3: Fitch vs. Burkman event successfully weighed-in yesterday at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. The main card — which also features Jacob Volkmann‘s promotional debut against Lyle Beerbohm, and undefeated prospect Justin Gaethje facing off against Brian Cobb — will be broadcast on the NBC Sports Network starting at 11 p.m. ET. Check out the weigh-in results below (via MMAJunkie), click past the jump for a WSOF 3 “Countdown” feature on Jon Fitch, and let us know if you’ll be watching tonight.
MAIN CARD
Josh Burkman (170) vs. Jon Fitch (171)
Steve Carl (169.5) vs. Tyson Steele (170)
Lyle Beerbohm (155.5) vs. Jacob Volkmann (155.5)
Brian Cobb (155) vs. Justin Gaethje (156)
PRELIMINARY CARD
Jerrod Sanders (146) vs. Jeff Smith (146)
John Gunderson (154.5) vs. Dan Lauzon (156)
Carson Beebe (135) vs. Joe Murphy (135.5)
Kendrick Miree (185) vs. Krasimir Mladenov (185.5)
Brenson Hansen (146) vs. Josh Montalvo (145)
(Fitch vs. Burkman face-off video via YouTube.com/MMAWorldSeries. Skip to the 2:10 mark to see Burkman zip his entire body inside a jumpsuit. Wow. He is just the *master* of mind games, isn’t he.)
The 18 fighters competing at tonight’s World Series of Fighting 3: Fitch vs. Burkman event successfully weighed-in yesterday at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. The main card — which also features Jacob Volkmann‘s promotional debut against Lyle Beerbohm, and undefeated prospect Justin Gaethje facing off against Brian Cobb — will be broadcast on the NBC Sports Network starting at 11 p.m. ET. Check out the weigh-in results below (via MMAJunkie), click past the jump for a WSOF 3 “Countdown” feature on Jon Fitch, and let us know if you’ll be watching tonight.
MAIN CARD
Josh Burkman (170) vs. Jon Fitch (171)
Steve Carl (169.5) vs. Tyson Steele (170)
Lyle Beerbohm (155.5) vs. Jacob Volkmann (155.5)
Brian Cobb (155) vs. Justin Gaethje (156)
PRELIMINARY CARD
Jerrod Sanders (146) vs. Jeff Smith (146)
John Gunderson (154.5) vs. Dan Lauzon (156)
Carson Beebe (135) vs. Joe Murphy (135.5)
Kendrick Miree (185) vs. Krasimir Mladenov (185.5)
Brenson Hansen (146) vs. Josh Montalvo (145)
The first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight champion won’t be crowned at the show coming up this Friday from Las Vegas, but the winner of the main event, either Jon Fitch or Josh Burkman, will challenge for the belt in their next fight. World …
The first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight champion won’t be crowned at the show coming up this Friday from Las Vegas, but the winner of the main event, either Jon Fitch or Josh Burkman, will challenge for the belt in their next fight.
World Series of Fighting Vice President and matchmaker Ali Abdel-Aziz, in an interview with MMA‘s Great Debate Radio for Bleacher Report that will air on Thursday, broke the news that the winner of the bout between Jon Fitch and Josh Burkman will then move onto a welterweight title shot later this year.
“The winner of this fight, Burkman or Fitch, is getting a title shot,” Abdel-Aziz stated. “It doesn’t matter who, but the winner will get a title shot.”
Many wondered when the featured fight was announced if the title would already be up for grabs or not.Fitch signed with World Series of Fighting just days after he was released from the UFC, and Burkman is currently riding a four-fight win streak, including two victories in the World Series of Fighting cage.
While both fighters bring veteran experience to the table, Abdel-Aziz felt it was premature to put the title up for grabs with Fitch in his first bout under the World Series of Fighting banner.
“Fitch is always going to be a champion, Burkman deserves to become a champion, and the best man is going to be fighting for the title and have the opportunity to have the world title,” Abdel-Aziz explained.“A lot of people wanted this to be a title fight, and I didn’t want (to) disrespect Burkman in any kind of way, but I think Jon Fitch has got to get his feet wet with the promotion before even talking about titles.”
Fitch enters the fight off of a loss to Demian Maia in his last trip to the UFC Octagon but hopes to bounce back and pick up his second win over Burkman when they meet this weekend. Fitch first defeated Burkman while both fighters were in the UFC back in 2006.
Now Fitch and Burkman will be competing with the knowledge that the winner will move on to fight for the World Series of Fighting gold later this year.
The current agenda for the upstart promotion is for their fourth show to take place in August, followed by cards in September, October and December. It’s over the next two shows that Abdel-Aziz plans to crown the other No. 1 contender in the welterweight division.
“The winner is probably going to have to sit for a little bit while I put on some other fights,” Abdel-Aziz said.“We’ll see what happens when they fight each other, and the best guy who fits will fight Fitch or Burkman.”
Two up-and-coming welterweight prospects will have their chance to impress this weekend when Tyson Steele meets Steve Carl in the co-main event of the World Series of Fighting 2 card.
More welterweight bouts will also be added to the August and September shows, and when the dust settles, the promotion will pit the most impressive fighter in that list against either Fitch or Burkman for the first ever World Series of Fighting welterweight title.
Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report and all quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.
Former UFC welterweight Jon Fitch is breathing new life after leaving his former employer and signing on with upstart promotion World Series of Fighting, where he debuts in the main event this Friday night. Fitch fought for the UFC for just over seven-…
Former UFC welterweight Jon Fitch is breathing new life after leaving his former employer and signing on with upstart promotion World Series of Fighting, where he debuts in the main event this Friday night.
Fitch fought for the UFC for just over seven-and-a-half years, battled for the welterweight title on one occasion, and, in total, fought for the organization 18 times, amassing a 14-3-1 record overall.
Ultimately following a stretch where he went 1-2 over three fights, the UFC opted to release Fitch from the organization despite being ranked No. 9 at the time in the promotion’s own rankings.The decision to release Fitch was met with some shock, but he moved on quickly to sign with a new promotion and start phase two of his career.
Still the UFC’s name gets brought up to Fitch quite often, and last week during a media conference call he responded by saying working there many times felt like it was a “hostile” environment where he was “not appreciated” and it was a “clear sign of not wanting somebody around.”
It didn’t take long for UFC President Dana White to respond to the ill will claims from Fitch, so in an interview with MMAJunkie.com, he revealed Fitch’s discretionary bonuses, which are not accounted for by the typical fighter salaries released by the state athletic commissions following each fight card.White stated that the company paid Fitch $302,000 in additional bonuses on top of his agreed upon pay structure, and that his complaints of a hostile workplace were “total bulls—t.”
On Monday, Fitch decided to respond with a video explaining how much he was paid by the UFC over the course of his career. He also emphatically stated that he never once complained about the money he made while he was in the company, and his comments were never necessarily about the pay they gave him while he was there.
“There’s been some talk involving money matters and me and some bonuses I’ve made over my career with the UFC,” Fitch stated.“So I wanted to shine some more light on my financial matters to give the fans a better idea the type of money a fighter like me actually makes.
“I’ve never complained about money, I’ve always loved the money that I made from fighting with the UFC and organizations before I fought with the UFC.”
Fitch broke down the numbers for his salary over the years with the UFC, and the amounts largely matched exactly what White stated, at least regarding the bonuses paid on top of his regular show and win money.
“In my 18 fights with the UFC, I was paid $1,020,000—that was show money and win money.I also made about $300,000 in bonuses, two of those bonuses were Fight of the Night bonuses,” Fitch explained.“One was Georges St-Pierre, a $60,000 fight of the night, and the Erick Silva fight, it was a $70,000 bonus.So, in total, I made $1,322,000.
“Sounds like a lot of money, but lets look at that a little bit closer.Out of the 18 fights out of that $1,020,000, I paid 20 percent of that to management and the gym.So if you take that number—$1,322,000—divided by seven-and-a-half years, I was roughly making just over $176,000 a year.Now remember that’s before management and gym fees. You also have other expenses you have to pay for, equipment, stuff like that.”
If Fitch’s numbers are accurate, that means he would have paid around $204,000 to his management and gym at American Kickboxing Academy.While Fitch didn’t discuss this at the time, he also has to pay taxes on that amount of money, which would also reach well over $200,000 based on his original pay of $1,020,000 over 18 fights.
Fitch would have also paid taxes anytime he fought internationally, like his bout against Erick Silva at UFC 153 in Brazil.Whenever fights take place outside of the United States, fighters will routinely be taxed in the country they are visiting before their final pay is given to them by the promotion.
Former UFC lightweight John Cholish recently revealed in an interview with Bleacher Report that when he traveled to Brazil for UFC on FX 8 earlier this year, the country took 27 percent for taxes off his total gross pay.
All told, Fitch still says he wasn’t complaining about the money he made with the UFC, although when he started breaking down numbers for pay-per-view sales, gates and attendance, he believes the promotion is keeping a lion’s share of the profits.
Once White revealed the bonuses, however, Fitch felt compelled to reveal exactly what he was making over the course of his career with the UFC.Regardless of any numbers tossed around, he still stands by his original point that he was never concerned about the money he made and that’s not what his statement was about.
“Money was never important to me.That wasn’t why I fight, that wasn’t the point of fighting,” Fitch said.“I wanted to be the best in the world and prove that I’m the best in the world.I don’t know why money always gets brought back up with them and it’s not important to me, but I thought it was important for the fans to know what the numbers actually are and to get some kind of perspective what fighters are actually getting paid.”
Damon Martin is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report
If you have seen the latest promotional video for WSOF 3, then you know that Josh Burkman says: “What’s black and blue and red all over? Jon Fitch, when I get done with him.”At this point in his career, Fitch’s reputation …
If you have seen the latest promotional video for WSOF 3, then you know that Josh Burkman says: “What’s black and blue and red all over? Jon Fitch, when I get done with him.”
At this point in his career, Fitch’s reputation certainly speaks for itself. He has already defeated Burkman the first time they fought, finishing him by rear-naked choke at UFC Fight Night 4 over seven years ago. He is the favorite to win the main event at WSOF 3 and could probably let words like that roll off his shoulders. However, on Thursday’s media call to promote the June 14 fight that will be seen live on NBC Sports, he offered this response:
“We’ll see about that,” Fitch told Bleacher Report during the call. “We’ll see who’s black and blue.”
Burkman, who was also on the call, said “You’re trying to start trouble,” which resulted in resounding laughter from the fighters, WSOF president Ray Sefo and other media members on the call. He later explained that it was actually his wife’s joke, and that the part of him saying that was edited out of the video.
Sefo chimed in saying “I thought it was funny.”
“It got an audible laugh out of me,” Fitch admitted.
When Fitch was released by the UFC back in February, it was anything but funny for the AKA fighter. Even though he had gone 1-2-1 in his last four fights, the release was a shock to many. Fitch had a 14-3-1 overall record in the UFC and was still considered one of the best in his division.
Finally, after signing a four-fight deal with the upstart WSOF promotion in March, he could begin the next chapter in his now post-UFC career and set focus on June 14 instead of the past.
“Yeah, it’s been pretty rejuvenating to get this opportunity to kind of get the second half of my career started in an environment where I’m supported, and pushed and respected as a fighter,” Fitch confessed. “It feels good. You can’t put a price tag on respect.”
Some telling words by the former-UFC welterweight, with perhaps a few jabs aimed at his former place of business. After all, does anyone really have anything nice to say about their former employer after they’ve been fired?
When Fitch squares off against Burkman, it will be the 32nd fight in a career spanning over a decade. At 35 years of age, he is closer to the end of his career then he is to the beginning. Will the WSOF promotion be the one he closes out his career with?
“Possibly, I feel like I got a lot of good years left in me,” Fitch confessed. “I never abused any performance enhancing drugs. I’m not on TRT or any kind of growth. I don’t even know how to use EPO. I’m feeling good. I’ve made it this far naturally. If I make it to 40 and everybody is still using TRT then, who knows? He continued in a biting tone. “Maybe I’ll just do it because it will mean I can fight five more years and feed my family.”
Michael Stets is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report. All quotes were obtained first hand unless otherwise noted.
The world of mixed martial arts is all-too-familiar with provocative labels—extreme, intense and borderline-insane all rightfully come to mind. These are the characteristics needed to sign a legal contract to fight another person, proceed to …
The world of mixed martial arts is all-too-familiar with provocative labels—extreme, intense and borderline-insane all rightfully come to mind. These are the characteristics needed to sign a legal contract to fight another person, proceed to train until peak physical condition and then accordingly step foot inside a caged battleground prepared to attack until they surrender—whether or not their consciousness is left intact.
One would think, then, that no topic should ever be treated with a white-glove, taboo approach. When dealing with hyper-skilled caged combatants, what concern is mere diplomacy and politics? And yet, diplomacy and politics are at the very core of the Testosterone Replacement Therapy (TRT) debate.
Merely broaching the topic is likely to incite a rather hectic session of verbal sparring. There are those that view it as a plague spreading like wildfire, whereas others consider it to be a medically approved necessity.
In recent times, the TRT discussion has grown a nasty habit of polarizing those with differing opinions.
All the while, casual MMA fans grow tired of the pageantry as venerable media outlets analyze the ethical and legal implications of TRT use.
Most just yearn to hear a simple answer: Is it right or is it wrong? Legal or illegal? A genuine concern or a trivial topic of conversation? Is TRT merely just a fanciful label for a new way to cheat?
Ultimately, though, the real question is far more profound: Could the answer even be so simple for an issue so complex?
At face value, TRT ought to be a simple matter. Prescribed by sanctioned medical professionals to fighters experiencing low levels of testosterone, it’s on occasion been described as an absolute necessity. The unwelcoming poster child for TRT, Vitor Belfort, recently spoke to MMAfighting.com regarding the matter:
It’s hard. I cannot explain why I need something. It’s just, the doctors, you know, just they said that I need [TRT]. I did everything by the book. I went to the commissions, the UFC. I never hide from them, so they knew what I was doing. I believe everyone has their personal things. My health is my personal life, you know? But they knew I doing everything with the UFC together, and never hiding anything. It’s just open books with me. Nothing was cheating. I never cheat, everything was by the book, and it is what it is.
Clearly Belfort considers it to be an open-and-shut case. In fact, he presents the notion that ethics have nothing to do with it—TRT is legal and he’s merely following the rules. If only his situation were so conveniently transparent—it remains unknown if his present drop in testosterone is the result of his known history with anabolic steroids.
But are complex decisions ever so simple?
Intuition tells us that a 36-year-old Belfort should be at the nadir of his historic career. Gone should be the days of blistering speed and uncanny reflexes. Nevertheless, two consecutive victories by head-kick knockout—in the eyes of certain sects of the MMA community—represent the problems underlying TRT.
Some exclaim that TRT didn’t land those head kicks and that, more importantly, no performance enhancer could ever replace the value of proper technique.
Such conversations are ultimately futile as one cannot turn back time and repeat an identical fight sans testosterone.
What we can do, on the other hand, is defer to a growing body of evidence demonstrating that the effects of testosterone impact muscular growth, repair and adaptation throughout a training camp. When the cage door closes, can we consider both combatants to be equal if only one is taking exogenous testosterone?
In Belfort’s case specifically, it certainly doesn’t help that fans feel as though they’re witnessing reverse-aging as he continues his TRT treatments. Perhaps photographic evidence isn’t entirely damning, but it can certainly leave a lasting impact:
Former UFC welterweight contender Jon Fitch thinks the entire thing is a farce contrived to aid fighters who’ve wrecked their bodies via steroid abuse:
“This is devised to let guys who have used steroids in their past re-boost their testosterone since they abused their bodies when they were younger”, he says. “I am 35 years old, and I promise, I would and will bet money that my testosterone levels are just as good as a younger fighter. You know why? Because I have not wrecked my body with steroids, never used any type of PED and train healthy and properly to compete.”
Yet athletic commissions readily issue Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUE) to those that are willing to make the request—warranting the fighter to use testosterone so long as he stays within preordained ratios. In an ideal setting, such commissions are intended to be wise, non-partisan governing bodies dedicated to absolute regulation. Yet even they undergo discussions as to the exact conditions for approving TRT.
As the list of aging cage fighters on TRT continues to grow—Frank Mir, Dan Henderson and Chael Sonnen to name a few—so too does the concern that users are unfairly trying to slow the sands of time.
It’s that exact sentiment that is echoed by UFC welterweight Tyron Woodley. He shed light on the situation in a recent interview with Sherdog’s Beatdown radio:
If your body says it’s time to stop [fighting], it’s time to stop. You shouldn’t be able to hit a reset button and go back and act like you’re 25 when you’re 39. I think people that do it, supposedly if you do it in moderation, if you have a doctor monitor it, if you look at your levels and they’re low and he brings you to 4 to 1 or whatever the ratio is that’s deemed acceptable—but nobody’s doing that. Everybody’s jacking [the ratio] up to 16 to 1 and training like a madman during training camp, every session, every training, sparring, running, and they’re just going nuts, and then they bring themselves down slowly, but they’ve already had six to eight weeks to train like that. You think they’re going to be in better shape? You think they’re going to be stronger? They’ve had better rounds. They’ve had longer rounds and been able to endure more. If you think about as far as the competitive advantage, it’s definitely there.
Woodley makes a strong case against testosterone use—or at the very least, a demand for heightened regulation. Nevertheless, TRT is no panacea for a career on a downward trajectory. All of the aforementioned fighters approved for TUE have lost fights while under its controversial effects.
Such a reality adds yet another dynamic to the discussion. How do we draw the line between adhering to a medical recommendation as opposed to deliberate augmentation?
Perhaps, when all is said and done, TRT may receive a concrete label. Firm and unfaltering, its use may be deemed as either absolutely just or undeniably unfair. But don’t hedge your bets on that happening.
Far more likely, TRT will reside—at least for the foreseeable future—in a hazy gray somewhere between right and wrong. Contentious or otherwise, the matter might be beyond mere side-choosing.
There are a wealth of variables to consider—everything from proper T:E ratios to cut off age limits. As the issues become more complex, the subtleties and nuances add more wrinkles to the debate.
It’s best to not create false dichotomies and delude ourselves into thinking that there’s an absolute right and wrong to the TRT debate. So long as doctors continue to prescribe TRT as necessary treatments, athletics commissions will find requisite need for granting TUEs. The relationship—however problematic—is causal.
Commissions will need to evaluate the medical evidence proposing the treatment as necessary. Fighters will need to consider their justifications for using it.
In the interim, those on the sidelines will have to reserve judgement—as much as possible—so that the end result can be achieved without bias or any form of subjectivity. Only through proper conversation can MMA fans, athletic commissions and the fighters themselves come to a consensus.
Performance enhancers like testosterone have ramifications that ripple throughout every aspect of the sport. As the list of fighters using—and possibly abusing—it continues to grow, so too will the need for a decision on how to handle it.
Whatever the answer, it won’t be a simple right or wrong.
MMA’s Great Debate Radio returns with a stacked show including guests Tyron Woodley, Jon Fitch and Steve Carl as well as a full breakdown and preview of UFC on Fuel 10: Nogueira vs. Werdum. Fighting at UFC 161, Tyron Woodley joins the show today to dis…
MMA‘s Great Debate Radio returns with a stacked show including guests TyronWoodley, Jon Fitch and Steve Carl as well as a full breakdown and preview of UFC on Fuel 10: Nogueira vs. Werdum.
Fighting at UFC 161, TyronWoodley joins the show today to discuss his upcoming bout against Jake Shields.Woodley will rate Shields as an opponent, and the impact he hopes to make with his fight against the former title contender next weekend.
Also on the show, former UFC welterweight Jon Fitch talks about his return to action next weekend, his rematch with Josh Burkman, and how he’s moved on from talking about his former employers at the UFC.
World Series of Fighting co-main event competitor Steve Carl also stops by to talk about stepping up on the card after the original co-main event had to be cancelled, and his expectations to make a big splash in a featured fight on this card.
Finally, debate is what we do best and on today’s show, all-new topics are on tap as well as a full preview of UFC on Fuel 10 with picks and predictions being made for the main card.
Today’s debate topics include:
—BJ Penn is testing the waters for a possible return to fighting at 155 pounds. Should BJ come back or should he retire?
—Rampage’s new deal will have him fight in Bellator, wrestle in TNA, do a reality series and work on movies through Paramount.He says this is a game changer—is he right?
—With a win on Saturday, should Fabricio Werdum be the No. 1 contender at heavyweight behind Junior Dos Santos?
—UFC on Fuel 10 Fight Picks for the Main Card
This is MMA’s Great Debate Radio for Thursday, June 6, 2013
(If the embeddable player does not work click HERE to listen to the show. Don’t forget to subscribe to the show via iTunes and listen on Stitcher Radio)