After Younger Brother’s Abduction and Murder, L.C. Davis Keeps Grinding

On October 24, 2013, Ryan Cobbins left his home and headed toward the barbershop he’d been going to for well over two years, on 39th Street and Prospect Avenue in Kansas City. He had an 11 a.m. appointment scheduled at the shop. It was a regular thing …

On October 24, 2013, Ryan Cobbins left his home and headed toward the barbershop he’d been going to for well over two years, on 39th Street and Prospect Avenue in Kansas City. He had an 11 a.m. appointment scheduled at the shop. It was a regular thing for Cobbins; he got his hair braided there at least once or twice a month.

On this day, though, something went wrong. Cobbins disappeared, somehow vanishing into broad daylight. His Camaro was discovered days later in an apartment complex parking lot, but Cobbins was nowhere to be found.

On November 4, Kansas City police officially began looking into Cobbins as a missing persons case. They implored locals to call the KCPD Missing Persons hotline if they knew any information that could lead them to Cobbins.

Cobbins and his brother, the Bellator bantamweight L.C. Davis, grew up together. They did not have the most stable of childhoods, living in “pretty much every suburb” Kansas City had to offer. Their single mother moved them around constantly in her search for work. They eventually moved to live with their grandmother. When Davis was in high school, he left his little brother and his mom behind, moving in with his dad, feeling that his father could offer a more stable living environment. But he still came back on holidays and each summer. Even when Davis moved to Iowa, they stayed in touch, and Cobbins would visit when he could.

Everyone was confused when Cobbins disappeared, but they held out hope that he would return home or show up somewhere. Anywhere.

“I went about two months just hoping and praying that he would pop up alive somewhere,” Davis said. “It was terrible. Every day, you just wake up and pray that you’re going to find out good news.”

But the news was not good.

On January 1, 2014, a Kansas City codes inspector was checking on a series of abandoned houses. He found Cobbin’s body in one of the homes. He’d been tied up, with his wrists and ankles tied together, and he had been executed.

The case is still unsolved. Kansas City police have investigated Cobbins‘ death as a homicide from the beginning, and Davis said it is now a federal investigation with three or four states involved.

From the beginning, Davis took an active part in trying to find out what happened to his brother. None of it made sense, but Davis tried to piece it together as best he could. He made phone calls. He cased out every building and location he possibly could. He went to the last place his brother was seen. He went to the place his body was found. He talked to all of Cobbins‘ friends. He gave the investigating detectives every single name and number he could think of, of anyone who might be remotely tied to the disappearance.

He had a million scenarios running through his head about why, how, when. But he also felt he wasn’t getting the whole truth from the people he spoke to.

“One thing I do know: I know that some of his friends and the people he was acquainted with know more than what they are saying,” Davis said. “I know several of his so-called friends, I feel like they know more than they are saying. That’s really the only suspicion I have.”

Despite the total upheaval in his personal life, and despite the uncertainty, Davis continued to train. Shortly after his brother’s disappearance, but before they found his body, Davis had a title fight on December 14, 2013, for Victory Fighting Championship against Ryan Roberts. Clearly distracted and weighed down, Davis dropped a split decision. But he stayed in the gym, using it as an outlet to vent his anger.

In hindsight, Davis said, that was not the best idea. But he didn’t have any training partners willing to pull him aside and tell him that he needed to take some time off to deal with his emotions.

“I didn’t have that. In a way, I wish I would have. Or maybe that I’d taken a little break. I lost that fight, and it was the first fight I’d lost in several years,” Davis said. “I probably should not have taken that fight. And the other part of me is that I’m a fighter. I keep moving forward. I don’t like to feel sorry for myself. I feel like everyone has a story. Everyone has something bad happen to them. So I don’t have a pity party for myself. I just try to keep moving forward and keep doing the right things.”

Losing his brother was tough, but he had his wife and kids and extended family to fall back on. Mostly, Davis said, he felt bad for the two young daughters Cobbins left behind.

“And my mother is in prison, and she didn’t even get to come to his funeral,” Davis said. “Things like that made me hurt more than feeling sorry for myself.”

Davis continued investigating his brother’s disappearance, and he calls the police investigators once a week, every week, to inquire if there are any new leads or developments in the case.

But he also continues to fight. He rebounded from the loss to Roberts by signing with Bellator and then reeling off wins over two consecutive opponents. This Friday, he faces Hideo Tokoro at Bellator 135 in Thackerville, Oklahoma.

Davis said that another win will put him one step closer to a title fight, but he knows a win alone may not be enough.

“I would like to jump the line by going out there and doing something spectacular,” Davis said.

And so he goes to the gym every day, pushing forward. He continues to pay close attention to the investigation into his brother’s death. He is hopeful that one of the days, they will find out what, exactly, happened to his brother that October day, and they’ll find out why it happened. But until then, he presses forward, doing the only thing he knows how, because that’s how he honors the memory of Ryan Cobbins.

“That’s what he would want me to do. He wouldn’t want me to sit around and be sad and give up on my fighting career and have a meltdown,” Davis said. “So all I can do is move forward. I think by grinding and moving forward, that’s how I cope with it.”

 

Jeremy Botter covers mixed martial arts for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter

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Bellator 124 Live Blog: Main Card Results and Commentary

Bellator 124 is here, and while it’s not quite Bellator 123 in term of star power, it’s still certainly worth watching.

On the main card we’ve got Ryan Couture meeting Tom Bagnasco, a late replacement. Then there’s L.C. Davis vs. Zeilton Rodrigues. The highly touted Liam McGeary faces Kelly Anundson in the co-main event. The main event is a peculiar booking: Emanuel Newton vs. Joey Beltran for the Bellator light heavyweight title.

Please stand by…

Bellator 124 is here, and while it’s not quite Bellator 123 in term of star power, it’s still certainly worth watching.

On the main card we’ve got Ryan Couture meeting Tom Bagnasco, a late replacement. Then there’s L.C. Davis vs. Zeilton Rodrigues. The highly touted Liam McGeary faces Kelly Anundson in the co-main event. The main event is a peculiar booking: Emanuel Newton vs. Joey Beltran for the Bellator light heavyweight title.

Please stand by…

Ryan Couture vs. Tom Bagnasco

L.C. Davis vs. Zeilton Rodrigues

Liam McGeary vs. Kelly Anundson

Emanuel Newton vs. Joey Beltran

Bellator 113 Results: Newton Edges Vegh, “Pitbull” Freire Buries “Caveman” Rickels

Much to Bellator’s dismay, their light heavyweight title belongs to someone not named Muhammad “King Mo” Lawal; Emanuel Newton bested Attila Vegh in a lackluster decision at Bellator 113 to unify the light heavyweight strap. The first round of Bellator’s season 10 lightweight tournament took place at Bellator 113 too.

But the first notable event of the night happened on the prelims. A bout between journeymen Daniel Gallemore and Fredrick Brown ended with one of the worst stoppages in MMA history. Gallemore elbowed Brown, putting him out on his feet. After a few punches from Gallemore, Brown faceplanted. At this point, Brown was clearly “done” but referee Chuck Wolfe allowed about a dozen more blows to land before he had seen enough. It was despicable, to say the least. See for yourself (GIF via @ZProphet_MMA)

Other preliminary card events of importance: Derek Anderson kneed Brandon Girtz’s head into the rafters in the night’s first lightweight tournament quarterfinal. Former WEC standout LC Davis was scheduled to fight on the prelims, but his fight was moved to after the main card. At the time of writing, the results of this fight aren’t available. We’ll update the article when they are.

Much to Bellator’s dismay, their light heavyweight title belongs to someone not named Muhammad “King Mo” Lawal; Emanuel Newton bested Attila Vegh in a lackluster decision at Bellator 113 to unify the light heavyweight strap. The first round of Bellator’s season 10 lightweight tournament took place at Bellator 113 too.

But the first notable event of the night happened on the prelims. A bout between journeymen Daniel Gallemore and Fredrick Brown ended with one of the worst stoppages in MMA history. Gallemore elbowed Brown, putting him out on his feet. After a few punches from Gallemore, Brown faceplanted. At this point, Brown was clearly “done” but referee Chuck Wolfe allowed about a dozen more blows to land before he had seen enough. It was despicable, to say the least. See for yourself (GIF via @ZProphet_MMA)

Other preliminary card events of importance: Derek Anderson kneed Brandon Girtz’s head into the rafters in the night’s first lightweight tournament quarterfinal. Former WEC standout LC Davis was scheduled to fight on the prelims, but his fight was moved to after the main card; it wasn’t televised or streamed. Davis won via guillotine with only two seconds left in the first round.

In the first televised fight, Tim Welch fought Derek Campos in another lightweight tournament quarterfinal bout. The first round was evenly matched, but Campos was more aggressive, consistently pushing Welch back with his striking. He also landed more strikes. Campos almost finished Welch in the second, wobbling him with a right hand. He neglected to swarm a battered Welch, however. Instead, he opted for a takedown, which allowed Welch to recover and eventually rise to his feet. The third round didn’t feature much action. Campos took Welch to the ground and held him there. Unsurprisingly, Campos got the nod from the judges.

It didn’t take long for Polish prospect Marcin Held to defeat Rodrigo Cavalheiro. After a very brief striking scuffle, Held took Cavalheiro to the mat and submitted the Brazilian with a toehold.

In the night’s co-main event, David Rickels fought Patricky “Pitbull” Freire. This was also the last lightweight tournament quarterfinal of the night. The first round was, essentially, five minutes of brawling with some grappling interspersed. Rickels got the better of nearly every exchange in the first round, but that changed in the second. Freire hurt Rickels with a right hook, swarmed in, and then dropped him cold with a left hook. After one follow-up strike, it was called off.

The lightweight tournament semifinals will be as follows:

Patricky “Pitbull” Freire vs. Derek Campos.
Marcin Held vs. Derek Anderson

Bellator 113′s main event was to unify Bellator’s light heavyweight title. Interim champ Emanuel Newton faced non-interim champion Attila Vegh. It was a long, boring 25 minutes, that featured ineffective striking and lots of missed “spinning shit.” There really isn’t much to tell other than that both guys threw lots of strikes that amounted to nothing. If you DVR’d the event, watch this on fast forward if you feel the need to watch at all. Twitter pundits scored it every way imaginable, but the only people that mattered (the judges) gave it to Newton.

Complete Results:

Main Card

Emanuel Newton def. Attila Vegh via split decision (48-47, 47-48, 49-46)
Patricky Freire def. David Rickels via KO (punches), 0:54 of round 2
Marcin Held def. Rodrigo Cavalheiro via submission (toe hold), 1:56 of round 1
Derek Campos def. Tim Welch via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

Preliminary Card

LC Davis def. Tory Bogguess via submission (guillotine), 4:58 of round 1
Derek Anderson def. Brandon Girtz via KO (knee), 0:23 of round 2
Israel Giron def. Cody Carrillo via unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)
Eric Wisely def. Donnie Bell via split decision (30-27, 28-29, 29-28)
Daniel Gallemore def. Fredrick Brown via TKO (punches), 3:34 of round 1
Bobby Cooper def. Marcio Navarro via unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)

WEC 49 Recap + Results: Varner vs. Shalorus Ends in Split Draw; Hominick and Grispi Win Big

(In Iran, a brutal kick to the balls is actually a gesture of respect. Photo courtesy of CageWriter)
It was supposed to determine the next challenger to Ben Henderson’s lightweight title, but the main event of last night’s WEC 49 event at the Rexall …

Jamie Varner Kamal Shalorus WEC 49 low blow kick
(In Iran, a brutal kick to the balls is actually a gesture of respect. Photo courtesy of CageWriter)

It was supposed to determine the next challenger to Ben Henderson‘s lightweight title, but the main event of last night’s WEC 49 event at the Rexall Place in Edmonton only proved that 1) Jamie Varner is a magnet for illegal techniques, and 2) You don’t leave it in the hands of the judges, particularly when Sensei Cecil is on the scoring table.

Varner (16-3-1) had the edge early in his three-rounder against Iranian-born wrestling specialist Kamal Shalorus (6-0-2), using his far more technical striking attack to land punches from the outside, and clearly rocked Shalrous at one point. Instead of relying on his grappling, the Prince of Persia stood in the pocket, and focused on attacking Varner’s lead leg with heavy kicks. Despite getting the worst of the exchanges, Shalrous was happy to brawl with the former lightweight champ. Things got ugly in the second round when two of Shalrous’s low-kicks made contact with Varner’s cup. The second occurrence spurred referee Josh Rosenthal to deduct a point. After taking an extended break to collect himself, Varner continued to outstrike Shalorus, wobbling him again with a head kick and right straight. The kicks to the legs and balls were slowing Varner down, but he still seemed to be in control of the fight.

The final round opened with Shalorus landing another point-blank kick to Varner’s nuts, putting the Worm down again. Rosenthal decided that one point deduction in the fight was enough, and decided not to take another one from Shalorus, despite Varner’s protests. When the action was restarted, Shalorus managed to score a takedown after catching a kick from Varner, and worked some strikes from the top for the majority of the round. Varner escaped to his feet in the final minute, and kept his distance as the match came to a close. The scores were a surprise, to say the least. Nelson Hamilton seemed to get it right with his 29-27 tally for Varner, but local yokel Cameron Quwek had it 29-27 for Shalorus, meaning he gave all three rounds to the Iranian, minus the point deduction. Ridiculous. Putting the anti-climactic cherry on top, Cecil Peoples cast the final vote — a 28-28, making the match a split draw. Varner stormed off in disgust, and is probably icing his balls as we speak. 

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Josh Grispi Chokes Out LC Davis

Filed under: WEC, NewsJosh Grispi is back, and he’s better than ever.

Grispi, one of the rising stars of the featherweight division in mixed martial arts, returned to the cage after a year off and choked out LC Davis in the first round of their fight …

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Josh Grispi is back, and he’s better than ever.

Grispi, one of the rising stars of the featherweight division in mixed martial arts, returned to the cage after a year off and choked out LC Davis in the first round of their fight at WEC 49 on Saturday night.



WEC 49: Preview and Predictions

Filed under: WEC
World Extreme Cagefighting is back on Versus Sunday night for the first time in almost four months, with a card that might feel like something of a letdown compared to April’s pay-per-view offering, but should nonetheless provide plent…

Filed under:


World Extreme Cagefighting is back on Versus Sunday night for the first time in almost four months, with a card that might feel like something of a letdown compared to April’s pay-per-view offering, but should nonetheless provide plenty of the fireworks that the WEC consistently offers.

We’ve got the preview and predictions on the five-fight televised card below.