Nick Diaz, Carlos Condit Camps Differ on Defending Interim Belt While GSP Heals

Filed under: UFC, MMA Fighting Exclusive, NewsLooming in the background of UFC 143’s main event is the specter of UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre, who is potentially the real prize for Saturday night’s winner. Either Nick Diaz or Carlos Con…

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Looming in the background of UFC 143’s main event is the specter of UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre, who is potentially the real prize for Saturday night’s winner. Either Nick Diaz or Carlos Condit will emerge with the interim title after the scheduled five-rounder, but a date with St-Pierre and a chance to win the linear title is ultimate reward.

Complicating matters is uncertainty about St-Pierre’s return date. UFC president Dana White recently said that GSP may be back in the summertime, while St-Pierre himself suggested that November was a more likely time frame.

That leads to questions about how the division will move forward in his absence. And on Monday’s edition of The MMA Hour, Diaz’s manager and trainer Cesar Gracie revealed that if Diaz wins, he’ll urge his charge not to compete until St-Pierre is ready to face him.

“If we’re fortunate and we win this fight, I would advise Nick to not take another fight before the GSP fight unless it was in different weight class,” he said. “We want to wait for that 170-pound thing. The people I speak with, they want to see the GSP fight if Nick is able to defeat Condit. That’s where I’m at with it. I’d advise Nick to not take another fight.”

Depending on St-Pierre’s recovery time, that could lead to a 10-month break between fights, a period that Gracie said could be broken up by a temporary move to middleweight.

Historically though, UFC has rarely allowed champions to move divisions to compete in non-title matches. The last to do it was middleweight kingpin Anderson Silva, who moved up to light-heavyweight to KO Forrest Griffin in August 2009.

Gracie’s comment got under the skin of Condit’s manager Malki Kawa, who wondered if the Diaz camp was looking past UFC 143 and into the future.

“At the end of the day, if people are writing Carlos Condit off, it’s a big mistake,” he said. “Carlos is coming to fight. The guy is in great shape. Remember, he was supposed to fight in October. He hasn’t stopped training. He’s coming to fight and this is going to be a real good fight. And if and when he wins this belt, if [the UFC] wants to put him back out to fight again, Carlos is going to fight again and defend his belt against anyone who challenges him. We’re not going to sit around and wait for anyone, not Georges or anybody. If there’s fights out there, Carlos wants them.”

But Gracie said his comment was meant with no disrespect, and that he was simply offering his opinion on a hypothetical situation.

Gracie said that refusing another welterweight bout was simply a means of preserving a fight that has come to be anticipated by both fans and fighters since Diaz was originally matched up with GSP last year. As he noted, the fight itself is more important to Diaz than the actual hardware for beating him. And in his opinion, given St-Pierre’s level of dominance, a fight against Diaz would be important for the sport.

“There hasn’t been any hype in a GSP fight for a very long time to the point he cleaned out his division and they were talking about an Anderson Silva matchup just to get some kind of excitement,” he said. “Nick really brings that to table because he’s one of most gifted athletes in terms of technically sound fighters out there. And you saw GSP on primetime. [Nick] brings out the thing where GSP wants to fight. I think it would be an amazing fight. And so that’s the fight I would want.”

Gracie credited Condit’s completeness as a fighter, saying he has an underrated ground game, dangerous striking and excellent stamina. But he also made it clear this fight has no personal significance for Diaz past the fact that Condit is going to be standing across from him on Saturday.

“Carlos is an enemy now,” he said. “He’s in the way and he must be taken care of.”

Condit’s manager disagreed with Gracie speaking about what Diaz might do after winning, but the two found common ground on the competitiveness of the fight itself.

“They’re talking like they already won the fight,” Kawa said. “I do that as well sometimes, but when I see someone do it to me, I have to turn around and say, ‘Hey, don’t write my guy off.’ No one should. This is a better fight overall [than a GSP-Diaz fight]. No disrespect to Georges but we all know that these two guys will come to scrap.”

With a rehabilitation time of between six and 10 months, St-Pierre has plenty of time to digest that. At least he has some idea of what might be coming his way. If Diaz wins, he’ll be there waiting when GSP is ready, but Condit will defend the interim belt with no regard for St-Pierre’s return date.

 

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Manager: Carlos Condit Mad at Georges St-Pierre, Not UFC, for Losing Title Fight

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Malki Kawa had a bad feeling when he heard his phone ring and looked at the caller ID. It was then that he realized UFC president Dana White was on the other line. UFC 137 had just ended 30 minutes earlier, and it was already after midnight on the east coast. It was not a time for mindless chit-chat. It was a time for serious business.

As is his style, White cut to the chase. Georges St-Pierre no longer wanted to fight Kawa’s client Carlos Condit next. Instead, the UFC welterweight champ wanted to fight Nick Diaz, the winner of UFC 137’s main event. We all now know the outcome. St-Pierre got the fight he wanted, and he’ll be fighting Diaz in early February. Condit? He wasn’t too happy, and he didn’t exactly “step aside” as White told the media at the post-fight press conference.

“I could understand them coming to us like that,” Kawa said on Monday’s edition of The MMA Hour. “The issue with the whole ‘he decided to step aside,’ obviously, that wasn’t the case. There was no just stepping aside. There was a little bit more than that. It’s going to take more than that. I think we’re way more upset with Georges and the way Georges handled it than we are with the way Dana presented it or anything like that.”

Everything changed in the moments after UFC 137. Diaz got the ball rolling by saying St-Pierre was scared and by questioning his injury just after his main event win. According to White, St-Pierre then “flipped out” and demanded that he bypass Condit and face Diaz next.

But as Kawa pointed out, Diaz had previously called out St-Pierre after he was originally replaced with Condit, and St-Pierre never responded. In addition to that, St-Pierre had gone on record saying that believed Condit presented the tougher challenge.

“I don’t know if the emotions of the moment got to him, and he just decided to do that,” Kawa said. “It’s kind of un-Georges-like.”

Kawa said that he and Condit didn’t step aside as graciously as it sounded, describing the ordeal as “gut-wrenching.”

“[Carlos’] words were, ‘My heart hurts,'” he said.

But ultimately, Kawa said that they are “company men” who made the move that the promotion wanted. He also suggested that there was some financial reward for bowing out.

“Dana always does the right thing and in this case, he’ll do the right thing again,” he said.

Kawa said he tried to keep things in perspective by noting that he originally got Condit moved into the title slot with some hustle of his own, and that sometimes, that sort of thing works against you. He even candidly admitted that if he was Diaz’s manager, he would have lobbied for the fight, too.

“Are we pissed off about it? Absolutely,” he said. “But it’s not like I’ve never been on other end of stick where I put one of my fighters ahead of someone else and another guy got shafted or screwed over. It’s just business, it’s not personal. It’s nothing personal with Georges. Are we upset with him? Absolutely.”

Meanwhile, Condit has every intention of fighting again instead of waiting to take on the St-Pierre vs. Diaz winner. Kawa said the UFC has thrown out some possibilities, but that nothing has been decided upon. The biggest factor is that it has to be someone that Condit can gain something from in fighting, mentioning Josh Koscheck and Jake Ellenberger as possibilities.

“It’s more about whoever brings the most to the table,” he said. “We want to make it a big-money fight. Whoever that is. Make it a big-money fight. A No. 1 contender, possibly make it a five-rounder if we could. And somebody who win, lose, or draw, we can take something from it.”

 

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Malki Kawa had a bad feeling when he heard his phone ring and looked at the caller ID. It was then that he realized UFC president Dana White was on the other line. UFC 137 had just ended 30 minutes earlier, and it was already after midnight on the east coast. It was not a time for mindless chit-chat. It was a time for serious business.

As is his style, White cut to the chase. Georges St-Pierre no longer wanted to fight Kawa’s client Carlos Condit next. Instead, the UFC welterweight champ wanted to fight Nick Diaz, the winner of UFC 137’s main event. We all now know the outcome. St-Pierre got the fight he wanted, and he’ll be fighting Diaz in early February. Condit? He wasn’t too happy, and he didn’t exactly “step aside” as White told the media at the post-fight press conference.

“I could understand them coming to us like that,” Kawa said on Monday’s edition of The MMA Hour. “The issue with the whole ‘he decided to step aside,’ obviously, that wasn’t the case. There was no just stepping aside. There was a little bit more than that. It’s going to take more than that. I think we’re way more upset with Georges and the way Georges handled it than we are with the way Dana presented it or anything like that.”


Everything changed in the moments after UFC 137. Diaz got the ball rolling by saying St-Pierre was scared and by questioning his injury just after his main event win. According to White, St-Pierre then “flipped out” and demanded that he bypass Condit and face Diaz next.

But as Kawa pointed out, Diaz had previously called out St-Pierre after he was originally replaced with Condit, and St-Pierre never responded. In addition to that, St-Pierre had gone on record saying that believed Condit presented the tougher challenge.

“I don’t know if the emotions of the moment got to him, and he just decided to do that,” Kawa said. “It’s kind of un-Georges-like.”

Kawa said that he and Condit didn’t step aside as graciously as it sounded, describing the ordeal as “gut-wrenching.”

“[Carlos’] words were, ‘My heart hurts,'” he said.

But ultimately, Kawa said that they are “company men” who made the move that the promotion wanted. He also suggested that there was some financial reward for bowing out.

“Dana always does the right thing and in this case, he’ll do the right thing again,” he said.

Kawa said he tried to keep things in perspective by noting that he originally got Condit moved into the title slot with some hustle of his own, and that sometimes, that sort of thing works against you. He even candidly admitted that if he was Diaz’s manager, he would have lobbied for the fight, too.

“Are we pissed off about it? Absolutely,” he said. “But it’s not like I’ve never been on other end of stick where I put one of my fighters ahead of someone else and another guy got shafted or screwed over. It’s just business, it’s not personal. It’s nothing personal with Georges. Are we upset with him? Absolutely.”

Meanwhile, Condit has every intention of fighting again instead of waiting to take on the St-Pierre vs. Diaz winner. Kawa said the UFC has thrown out some possibilities, but that nothing has been decided upon. The biggest factor is that it has to be someone that Condit can gain something from in fighting, mentioning Josh Koscheck and Jake Ellenberger as possibilities.

“It’s more about whoever brings the most to the table,” he said. “We want to make it a big-money fight. Whoever that is. Make it a big-money fight. A No. 1 contender, possibly make it a five-rounder if we could. And somebody who win, lose, or draw, we can take something from it.”

 

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Is There a Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing at Wolfslair? Rampage Cries Spy!

The old adage when it comes to a traitor among friends is called a “wolf in sheep’s clothing” but given that Quinton “Rampage” Jackson trains out of Wolfslair MMA Academy, it seems there may be.

The old adage when it comes to a traitor among friends is called a “wolf in sheep’s clothing” but given that Quinton “Rampage” Jackson trains out of Wolfslair MMA Academy, it seems there may be a spy disguised as a loyal Wolf teammate. Rampage claimed to Yahoo Sports! that he made up a hand injury that he only spoke of in his gym when four hours later, his manager, Anthony McGann received a phone call concerning the “injury” from  Joe Silva . When McGann assured Silva the hand was fine, he asked who had informed him of the injury, to which Silva replied, it was Jon Jones‘ manager, Malki Kawa. Rampage says:

One of my friends was talking to Jon Jones’ manager recently, and Jon Jones’ manager was saying that he knows everything that is going on in our camp. He said he had spies in our camp and he knew everything that was going on. That got me thinking. How did he know about my hand injury that fast? It wasn’t on the Internet, and yet he knew about my hand injury right away. The UFC people were in Brazil, which is why it probably took them four hours to call me.

That shows me two things: They have spies in my camp, one, and two, they’re dumb as hell, because they didn’t know how to use the information correctly and to wait. He called right away, running to Joe Silva. Joe Silva called my manager right away.”

Rampage made up the hand injury story after receiving a message from someone via Twitter that Jones had a spy in Rampage’s camp. Coincidentally enough, Jones’ manager, Kawa disputes he has any spies and that he only learned of a hand injury via Twitter. Kawa claims:

“I promise to God, I have no spy in that camp,” Kawa said. “It’s completely and totally untrue. There is nothing to it at all. It’s funny he said that, though, because we’ve heard he has had old training partners of Jon coming in to work with him. We don’t care and it’s kind of hilarious he’s doing this. But I can guarantee you there is nothing at all that is true about this other than that I called Joe Silva after someone put out a thing on Twitter that Rampage was injured and pulling out. I wanted to know what was up, but it was no more than that. That is it.”

Rampage, who feels betrayed and thinks he knows who the spy is, doesn’t want to call out the person, but he does want this story out for the fans to respond via Twitter. Rampage said : “Of course they’re going to say they aren’t doing it, but we’ll put the story out there to the fans and let them decide.” He says he wants fans to send him messages via Twitter on whether or not they believe Jones has a spy.

Sounds like a Twitter bonus could be in Rampage’s future and an army of Rampage Twitter fans may help get into Jones’ head. Ah… the many useful wonders of social media.

‘Rampage’ Might Be Becoming a Tad Bit Paranoid


(“Was it you, Bisping or was it you, Tiki? I bet it was Arianny. She always seems like she be hidin’ somethin’.”)

Hopefully we’re way off, but if his recent bizarre accusations are any indicator of his current frame of mind, Quinton Jackson might be just a few energy drinks and consecutive screenings of “The Secret” away from playing monster truck smash-up derby again.

In an interview with Kevin Iole from Yahoo! Sports yesterday, “Rampage” revealed that he believes someone within his training camp is a mole and although he isn’t naming names, he hinted that it’s a sparring partner.


(“Was it you, Bisping or was it you, Tiki? I bet it was Arianny. She always seems like she be hidin’ somethin’.”)

Hopefully we’re way off, but if his recent bizarre accusations are any indicator of his current frame of mind, Quinton Jackson might be just a few energy drinks and consecutive screenings of “The Secret” away from playing monster truck smash-up derby again.

In an interview with Kevin Iole from Yahoo! Sports yesterday, “Rampage” revealed that he believes someone within his training camp is a mole and although he isn’t naming names, he hinted that it’s a sparring partner.

According to the former UFC light heavyweight champion, someone in his close circle is feeding information to his opponents. For example, he says that in spite of the fact that he managed to keep a knee injury he sustained during training camp for his UFC 114 bout with Rashad Evans under the radar from the media, during the bout, “Suga” seemed to target the injury site.

“In all my years of fighting, I’d never been punched in the knee before and I never saw anyone punch someone in the knee,” he said.

Evans, however says that it was simply a case of him feeding off of his opponent’s reaction to a shot and when Rampage let out a moan when the first punch hit his knee, he continued to attack the area.

“I never heard a thing about [him injuring his knee]. I heard him talk about it after the fight. I didn’t know about it going into the fight. When I had him against the cage, I kept hitting him in the knee because of how he was reacting, not because anybody told me anything prior. When you’re in a fight, you just go for what you can get a reaction from,” Evans explains. “I’d punch him in the toe if I felt it was bothering him. We were leaning against the cage and it was really hard to take him down from there. I really couldn’t do much to him and he couldn’t do much to me. I wanted to keep the position and so I didn’t want the referee to break us. So I had to keep looking busy and I saw it was bothering him, so I kept hitting him in his leg. That was it.”

Still, Jackson says he is convinced that someone close to him is playing the part of a spy for the enemy.

When he became suspicious that there was a traitor in his midst, he created a story that he injured his hand to try to smoke out the wrongdoer and only told a select few of his training partners whom he suspected as being the guilty party. Within a few hours he received a call from Brazil from UFC matchmaker Joe Silva inquiring about the seriousness of the injury. He had received a call from Jon Jones’ manager, Malki Kawa, who informed him about Jackson’s ailment. Adding to Jackson’s paranoia is the fact that Kawa proclaimed that he knows Jackson’s every move and that he had people in place to tell him what his gameplan is and what he is working on for his UFC 135 showdown with Jones on September 24.

Kawa chalks it up to gamesmanship and says he read about Jackson’s alleged injury on Twitter and wanted to check on the story’s legitimacy. With the number of people on the social media site, it isn’t outside the realm of possibility that someone overheard the news about Jackson’s injury in the gym and decided to play the part of an MMA news-breaker.

“I promise to God, I have no spy in that camp,” Kawa assures. “It’s completely and totally untrue. There is nothing to it at all. It’s funny he said that, though, because we’ve heard he has had old training partners of Jon coming in to work with him. We don’t care and it’s kind of hilarious he’s doing this. But I can guarantee you there is nothing at all that is true about this other than that I called Joe Silva after someone put out a thing on Twitter that Rampage was injured and pulling out. I wanted to know what was up, but it was no more than that. That is it.”

It happens all the time. But Jackson isn’t buying it, which could make for a very uncomfortable next few weeks with his entire camp being suspects.

“One of my friends was talking to Jon Jones’ manager recently, and Jon Jones’ manager was saying that he knows everything that is going on in our camp. He said he had spies in our camp and he knew everything that was going on. That got me thinking. How did he know about my hand injury that fast? It wasn’t on the Internet, and yet he knew about my hand injury right away,” Jackson point out. “The UFC people were in Brazil, which is why it probably took them four hours to call me. That shows me two things: They have spies in my camp, one, and two, they’re dumb as hell, because they didn’t know how to use the information correctly and to wait. He called right away, running to Joe Silva. Joe Silva called my manager right away.”

In spite of his suspicions, Jackson says he won’t name names even if he catches the spy red handed.

“I don’t do that,” Jackson says. “That will be between me and him. I would never out him publicly.”

Hopefully the distraction, which is working better than Jones’ camp could have dreamed, doesn’t affect his performance against the dominant champion.

“Of course they’re going to say they aren’t doing it, but we’ll put the story out there to the fans and let them decide,” Jackson says. “I don’t care what Jon Jones is doing, and I don’t care what his game plan is. I have zero care. I still have the honor of a fighter and going into battle the right way, not spying on my opponent. I’m not scared about my opponent, asking a lot of questions or worrying about what he’s doing. I don’t even watch film.”

Malki Kawa Explains Recent Twitter Spat With Fellow MMA Agent Ken Pavia

Filed under: UFC, NewsThough Malki Kawa has been around for a while, his quick entrance onto the MMA radar screen wasn’t even a year ago.

When Matt Mitrione publicly fired Kawa, then his agent, after UFC 119 in Indianapolis, Kawa suddenly was the hot…

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Though Malki Kawa has been around for a while, his quick entrance onto the MMA radar screen wasn’t even a year ago.

When Matt Mitrione publicly fired Kawa, then his agent, after UFC 119 in Indianapolis, Kawa suddenly was the hottest name in the sport. The superagent has parlayed that notoriety into a budding empire of major-name talent under his First Round Management stable.

But as Kawa has found out, with more popularity comes more criticism. Mo’ money, mo’ problems – even from competing agents.

Kawa recently engaged in a short Twitter spat with fellow MMA agent Ken Pavia. But Kawa told Ariel Helwani on Tuesday on “The MMA Hour” that there is no official fight brewing between the two.

“(There’s no beef) whatsoever,” Kawa said. “I think Ken is just a little upset that at one point he thought he was the best agent in MMA. He’s fallen off completely. He’s got problems with the UFC, he’s over there at Bellator, the whole nine. And he decided to pick something with me to get attention.”

Pavia, who runs MMAagents, became embroiled in a legal action between the UFC and Bellator last summer. Pavia was alleged to have provided Bellator with proprietary documents outlining some of the UFC’s best business practices for the purpose of Bellator copying them.

In the Twitter fight, Pavia claimed he was the sport’s best agent – as well as its second best agent – and Kawa comes in third. Kawa, naturally, disputed that claim and urged Pavia to not start a fight he couldn’t finish.

Kawa said Pavia later tried to play the instance off as clowning around.

“He later sent an e-mail to a mutual friend of ours saying, ‘Hey, make sure to tell Malki to keep the beef going on Twitter,'” Kawa told Helwani. “To him it was a joke, to me it wasn’t. I was just like, ‘Ken Pavia, go eff yourself. I’ve got nothing to do with you.'”

Kawa, whose clients include UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, Strikeforce lightweight champ Gilbert Melendez, former WEC lightweight champ Ben Henderson and former title challengers Diego Sanchez and Thiago Alves, said what Pavia may have thought was a joke was no laughing matter to him. And he might just escalate it.

“I saw him at the fight this past Sunday, and i said, ‘Hey, what’s up bro?’ – and he didn’t say a word to me,” Kawa said. “So at the end of the day, I can tell that me and him are starting to have some personal problems.”

Kawa said his policy is to not get involved with other managers on a personal level, saying he respects a few of his competitors, but that there are a few he could not “care less about.”

“I’m a normal guy,” Kawa said. “I’m not the type of guy to say, ‘Hey, we’re gonna beef on Twitter, and then when I see you we’re gonna pretend like we’re cool.’ I don’t play those games. I don’t know what Ken Pavia’s problem is. Whatever they are, he can call me. He knows how to get to me – he already tried it on Twitter. It’s not a fight he wants to have, I don’t think. Not at this point.”

 

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The MMA Hour With Marloes Coenen, Ronda Rousey, Krzysztof Soszynski, Malki Kawa

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The MMA Hour broadcasts live on Tuesday at 1 p.m. ET this week due to the UFC on Versus 5 airing on Sunday night. We will be back on our regularly scheduled day and time next week. Joining us this week will be:

* Women’s MMA star Marloes Coenen, who will discuss her recent loss to Miesha Tate and subsequent release from Strikeforce.

* Rising women’s MMA star Ronda Rousey will talk about her controversial win over Sarah D’Alelio at Strikeforce Challengers 18.

* UFC light heavyweight Krzysztof Soszynski will talk about what’s next for him.

* UFC lightweight Ben Henderson will discuss his win at UFC on Versus 5 and what’s next for him.

* MMA agent Malki Kawa will discuss Jon Jones‘ upcoming title fight and the business side of MMA.

* MMA Fighting’s Ben Fowlkes will discuss the passing of MMA trainer Shawn Tompkins and Sunday night’s UFC Live on Versus 5 event.

And of course, we’ll be taking your calls. Give us a shout at: 212-254-0193, 212-254-0237 or 212-254-0714.

*** You can also stream the show live on your iPhone or iPad by clicking here.

Watch the show live below beginning at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT. Subscribe to The MMA Hour on iTunes: audio feed here; video feed here. Download previous episodes here. Listen to the show via Stitcher here.

 

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The MMA Hour broadcasts live on Tuesday at 1 p.m. ET this week due to the UFC on Versus 5 airing on Sunday night. We will be back on our regularly scheduled day and time next week. Joining us this week will be:

* Women’s MMA star Marloes Coenen, who will discuss her recent loss to Miesha Tate and subsequent release from Strikeforce.

* Rising women’s MMA star Ronda Rousey will talk about her controversial win over Sarah D’Alelio at Strikeforce Challengers 18.

* UFC light heavyweight Krzysztof Soszynski will talk about what’s next for him.

* UFC lightweight Ben Henderson will discuss his win at UFC on Versus 5 and what’s next for him.

* MMA agent Malki Kawa will discuss Jon Jones‘ upcoming title fight and the business side of MMA.

* MMA Fighting’s Ben Fowlkes will discuss the passing of MMA trainer Shawn Tompkins and Sunday night’s UFC Live on Versus 5 event.

And of course, we’ll be taking your calls. Give us a shout at: 212-254-0193, 212-254-0237 or 212-254-0714.

*** You can also stream the show live on your iPhone or iPad by clicking here.

Watch the show live below beginning at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT. Subscribe to The MMA Hour on iTunes: audio feed here; video feed here. Download previous episodes here. Listen to the show via Stitcher here.

 

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