Monday Morning Video Roundup: Cyborg Beats Up a Japanese Comedian, Kharitonov Smokes Miller, & More


(It was like this, but even more terrifying.) 

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from former Strikeforce Women’s featherweight champion Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos. In the fallout of her sixteen second destruction of Hiroko Yamanaka and subsequent positive steroid test that saw her stripped of her title, “Cyborg” has been laying low, quietly awaiting her April 9th appeal and the chance to smash Ronda Rousey for her insolence.

In the meantime, it looks like the former champ has decided to broaden her training horizons, if you will, now incorporating a regular diet of Japanese game show hosts and comedians to satiate her overwhelming desire to kill. In fact, she recently appeared on the Japanese show Honoo no Taiikukai to demonstrate that she is just as strong without anabolic steroids coursing through her veins by taking on a…male Japanese comedian? Believe it or not, the match was surprisingly competitive for the most part, until Cyborg decided to go all Courtney Korpela on the poor bastard.

Join us after the jump for the full video, along with the Sergei Kharitonov/Mark Miller match from last weekend’s United Glory 15 card, and much more. 


(It was like this, but even more terrifying.) 

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from former Strikeforce Women’s featherweight champion Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos. In the fallout of her sixteen second destruction of Hiroko Yamanaka and subsequent positive steroid test that saw her stripped of her title, “Cyborg” has been laying low, quietly awaiting her April 9th appeal and the chance to smash Ronda Rousey for her insolence.

In the meantime, it looks like the former champ has decided to broaden her training horizons, if you will, now incorporating a regular diet of Japanese game show hosts and comedians to satiate her overwhelming desire to kill. In fact, she recently appeared on the Japanese show Honoo no Taiikukai to demonstrate that she is just as strong without anabolic steroids coursing through her veins by taking on a…male Japanese comedian? Believe it or not, the match was surprisingly competitive for the most part, until Cyborg decided to go all Courtney Korpela on the poor bastard.

Sadly, Cyborg’s exhibition with the comedian was twice as competitive as Sergei Kharitonov‘s kickboxing match against TUF 9 alum Mark Miller from last weekend’s United Glory 15 card. At the same event that saw Semmy Schilt score a UD victory over Brice Guidon in his first kickboxing match in over two years, Kharitonov returned to action for the first time since his Strikeforce Heavyweight tournament Semifinal loss to Josh Barnett.

Miller seemed content to swing for the fences like a man possessed. Unfortunately, his fists would find nothing but air while Kharitonov made mincemeat of the IFL vet without breaking a sweat. The end came just two minutes into the first round via a brutal right hook, improving Kharitonov’s kickboxing record to 3-2. Check out the video below.

Speaking of humiliating defeats; you guys remember the crazy moment during the first episode of TUF 15 where Dominick Cruz called upon rival coach Urijah Faber to pick his best man, only to have noone step forward? Well it turns out that Cruz was so impressed by his own swagger that he decided to re-enact the scene along with the help of such familiar UFC faces as Tyson Griffin, Jeremy Stephens, and Ross Pearson. And on top of that, Cruz decided to showcase his acting talents by playing a double role ala Eddie Murphy and depicting Faber’s wide eyed shock of Cruz’s “Like a Boss” moment. “The Dominator” indeed.

And finally, end your lunch break on a high note by watching this great kickboxing scrap between Giorgio Petrosyan and Artur Kyshenko from last weekend’s Fight Code event in Milan, Italy. For those of you not familiar with Petrosyan, he is a two time K-1 World MAX champion and WKN Intercontinental Middleweight Muay Thai champion. In 70 professional kickboxing fights, he has only been defeated once, and is widely considered to be the number one ranked fighter in all of kickboxing. Quite a claim to back, and though his fight against Kyshenko, a top fiver in his own right, isn’t his greatest performance, it truly showcases his technical abilities as a striker, so just sit back and enjoy.

-J. Jones

While You Were Watching UFC 130: Ultimate Glory and Dream 17 Results


Mark Miller wastes no time knocking out Nikolaj Falin. Props: MMATKO

Chances are that you knew about the United Glory Tournament Finals that took place yesterday in Moscow. It featured some pretty intriguing fights, was available on YouTube and cost less than ten bucks. Of course, many of you figured you could save your money and check Cage Potato this afternoon for some highlights and a quick list of results. Don’t worry, we got your back as usual.

The welterweight tournament, which began in October of 2010, came to an end with a scrap between Golden Glory teammates Tommy Depret and Siyar Bahadurzada. To those of you who have concerns that two teammates fighting each other would lead to a boring fight, relax and take notes. Tommy Depret gave current SHOOTO light heavyweight champion Siyar Bahadurzada trouble in the opening round, but once the second round started, this fight was all Bahadurzada. Bahadurzada used his superior hands and clinchwork to get finish off Depret. Yes, we have a video of this after the jump.


Mark Miller wastes no time knocking out Nikolaj Falin. Props: MMATKO

Chances are that you knew about the United Glory Tournament Finals that took place yesterday in Moscow.  It featured some pretty intriguing fights, was available on YouTube and cost less than ten bucks. Of course, many of you figured you could save your money and check Cage Potato this afternoon for some highlights and a quick list of results. Don’t worry, we got your back as usual.

The welterweight tournament, which began in October of 2010, came to an end with a scrap between Golden Glory teammates Tommy Depret and Siyar Bahadurzada. To those of you who have concerns that two teammates fighting each other would lead to a boring fight, relax and take notes.  Tommy Depret gave current SHOOTO light heavyweight champion Siyar Bahadurzada trouble in the opening round, but once the second round started, this fight was all Bahadurzada.  Bahadurzada used his superior hands and clinchwork to get finish off Depret. Yes, we have a video of this after the jump.

Also of note, TUF Season 9 veteren Mark Miller returned to action in a kickboxing match.  In his first fight since undergoing open heart surgery, Mark Miller knocked out his opponent less than ten seconds into the fight. Just something to think about next time you skip going to the gym over a headache. Also of note, Strikeforce heavyweight tournament competitor Sergei Kharitonov squared off against Mighty Mo in a kickboxing match. Since this is Strikeforce we’re dealing with, it probably wouldn’t surprise you to read that Kharitonov not only lost, but sustained an injury that will sideline him for a pretty long time. Fortunately for Strikeforce, that didn’t happen. Kharitonov knocked out Mighty Mo in the first round. Video is below:

SPOILER ALERT: DREAM 17 took place last night in Japan. However, the fights will not air until HDNet plays a taped version of the event June 3. If you want to watch the event and be surprised, stop reading now. And no, this article doesn’t have videos of the fights

For those of you still here, Shinya Aoki delivered an impressive performance against McKee Nelson Rich Clementi. While Clementi showed a lot of heart, he was by no means ever in control of this fight. Aoki finished Clementi with a neck crank from back control in the second round. 

As for the Bantamweight Grand Prix, Masakazu Imanari and Hideo Tokoro will be fighting in the finale. Imanari locked in a heel hook over WEC veteran Kenji Osawa, while Tokoro squeezed out a very close split decision victory over Atsushi Yamamoto. The finale of the grand prix is set to take place on July 16. Also, both Caol Uno Joachim Hansen took home decision victories against Akiyo Nishiura and Mitsuhiro Ishida, respectively.

Full results:

Ultimate Glory Tournament Finals, courtesy of BoxeoMundial.com:

Igor Jurkovic defeats Pavel Zhuravlev via TKO in round 2 (kickboxing).
Denis Stojnic defeats Mladen Kujundzic via submission in round 1.
Errol Zimmerman defeats Mourad Bouzidi by unanimous decision (kickboxing).
Rasul Mirzaev deafeats Roman Kishev via submission.
Mark Miller defeats Nikolaj Falin via KO in round 1 (kickboxing).
Dion Staring defeats Roman Savochka via TKO in round 1.
Sergei Kharitonov defeats Mighty Mo via KO in round 1 (kickboxing).
Ali Cenik and Zabit Samedov fight to a draw (kickboxing).
Jason Jones defeats Shamil Abdoulmouslimov via KO in round 3.
Artur Kyshenko defeats Nieky Holzken via unanimous decision (kickboxing).

Tournament Finales:
MMA: Siyar Bahadurzada defeats Tommy Depret via TKO in round 2.
Kickboxing: Gokhan Saki defeats Brice Guidon via unanimous decision.

DREAM 17, courtesy of MMAJunkie.com:

Masakazu Imanari def. Kenji Osawa via submission (Achilles lock) – Round 2, 0:58 (Japan bantamweight-tourney semifinal round)
Hideo Tokoro def. Atsushi Yamamoto via split decision (Japan bantamweight-tourney semifinal round)
Shinya Aoki def. Rich Clementi via submission (neck crank) – Round 2, 2:17
Katsunori Kikuno def. Daisuke Nakamura via unanimous decision
Caol Uno def. Akiyo “Wicky” Nishiura  via unanimous decision
Takeshi Inoue def. Koichiro Matsumoto via TKO (strikes) – Round, 6:51
Joachim Hansen def. Mitsuhiro Ishida via split decision
Kenji Osawa def. Takafumi Otsuka via split decision (Japan bantamweight-tourney first round)
Masakazu Imanari def. Keisuke Fujiwara via unanimous decision (Japan bantamweight-tourney first round)
Hideo Tokoro def. Yoshiro Maeda via TKO (corner’s stoppage) – Round 2, 0:43 (Japan bantamweight-tourney first round)
Atsushi Yamamoto def. Yusaku Nakamura via TKO (strikes) – Round 1, 8:43 (Japan bantamweight-tourney first round)

Fighting With Heart: Mark Miller Readies for Comeback Fight

It’s long been a cliche, a fighter saying he’s willing to die in the cage. For Mark Miller, he never knew how close he could have been to making that literal.

At 39, Miller returns to the fight game on Saturday in Moscow in a kickboxing match at the U…

Mark MillerIt’s long been a cliche, a fighter saying he’s willing to die in the cage. For Mark Miller, he never knew how close he could have been to making that literal.

At 39, Miller returns to the fight game on Saturday in Moscow in a kickboxing match at the Ultimate Glory World Series. But his comeback, fighting for the first time in more than five years, has little to do with his age. The nearly foot-long scar down the center of his chest tells the bigger story.

When Miller gets in the ring against Nikolaj Falin, he will become the first known professional fighter to return after open-heart surgery.

“There’s always moments of doubt in anyone’s life – but I’m also bull-headed and completely stubborn,” Miller told host Ariel Helwani last week on “The MMA Hour.” “I don’t care if I die in the ring at this point. I have to get back to it.”

When applying for a license in Florida before a fight in 2006, Miller said, his echo cardiogram came back with some red flags. Told by a cardiologist that a congenital heart defect he was born with had finally caught up to him, requiring surgery, reality set in for the “Fightshark.”


“The first prognosis was my cardiac output was like 20 percent. Regular people, it’s usually around 65 percent,” Miller said. “It was so low that I could’ve been walking down the street, training, whatever – and I could just fall over and die. … It was to the point where any stress on the heart probably could’ve caused a real problem at that point.”

But from the first moment he knew he would have to go under the knife, Miller’s focus was on finding a way to fight again.

“They had told me that even with the surgery they were going to do, because my heart was so massively enlarged, there was a chance I wouldn’t be able to fight,” Miller recalled. “They told me, ‘It’s a 50-50 chance at this point. Do you still want to do the surgery this way?’ I was like, ‘Yeah. It’s better than no chance.’ My entire focus was being able to come back to fight after the heart surgery.”

After surgery in 2007, Miller was told it would likely be a year before he could fight again – if he was cleared. He was told to wait 12 weeks before doing any kind of training, so he waited 13. His proverbial heart pushed his comeback from his physical heart, and Miller said he was ahead of all the timetables set for him.

Then his father died. And a month later, his mother passed, too. And two months after that? Miller’s brother died, as well. Then his marriage fell apart. And he needed knee surgery. All that should have been enough to make anyone wave a white flag. No one would have blamed him for giving up, but …

“The focus was on coming back to fight. That was always my beacon, no matter what happened to me,” Miller said. “There were times I thought maybe the universe is trying to send me a message. Maybe I shouldn’t be trying to come back, because it’s just one thing after another. But that was always my light at the end of the tunnel, was the fight. The fight was always what drove me – coming back to do what I had always done.”

Miller spent some time training in Las Vegas, and has talked openly about the fast-living problems he had there with plenty of partying. Telling Helwani he’s on “the program” and now taking his life one day at a time, Miller has been training with renowned striking coaches Rob Kaman and Buddy McGirt for his comeback.

He said he’s been cleared by doctors, and he’s passed his own personal tests to let himself know he’s ready to get back in there, 8 1/2-inch scar be damned. Besides, Miller said, he wouldn’t fight if he believed he would be putting his three sons in jeopardy.

“I have no problems – I’ve been medically cleared,” Miller said. “I’ve put myself through my own tests, and medically I’ve also been put through tests. It’s not just, ‘Hey, OK, I feel good, let’s go fight.’ I still have responsibilities to my three sons to not go do something stupid, no matter how bad I want it.”

But after all the time away, after all the out-of-the-ring hardships, it was always the lure of returning to the ring, be it kickboxing, his first love, or MMA, that kept him pushing forward.

“I’m not going to say it’s the most important thing,” Miller said. “Obviously my family and my children, my family around me is very important. But as far as life goes, (fighting) was my life. That’s what I had always done and I wasn’t going to be able to go out on my terms. I also used fighting as a focus to get through the surgery, to rehab and come back stronger than ever. It was a goal. That was what got me through everything, and that was what got me through the surgery that night.”

Miller said he would be open to a return to MMA if the right fight came along. But he believes he has more opportunities in the world of kickboxing in the near-term. And he said this is a very real comeback – he’s not just out to prove he can get back in there, then hang up the gloves. “I’m full-tilt, full-bore ahead at this point,” he said.

And even though many would say the deck is stacked against him thanks to the layoff, the surgery and his age, Miller said that’s no concern to him at all.

“If you have a prime ’55 Cadillac sitting in the garage for a couple years, it’s still a prime ’55 Cadillac,” he said. “I feel awesome. I know this is a cliche, but I actually am the best I’ve ever been … I’m the rebooted version.”

And a ’55 Cadillac is still a ’55 Cadillac, even if it comes with an 8 1/2-inch “Badge of Honor” scar.

 

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Glory World Series to Air Live on YouTube Pay-Per-View

Filed under: Fighting, MMA Media Watch, NewsGlory World Series will be offered live on YouTube pay-per-view on May 28, officials announced on Thursday.

According to a press release issued by the organization, this would mark the first combat sports pa…

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Glory World Series will be offered live on YouTube pay-per-view on May 28, officials announced on Thursday.

According to a press release issued by the organization, this would mark the first combat sports pay-per-view offered live on YouTube pay-per-view. The event will cost $7.95 (USD) and can be ordered here.

Glory World Series will showcase both MMA and kickboxing fights. The event will feature two tournament finals: Siyar Bahadurzada vs. Tommy Depret in a MMA welterweight final and Gohkan Saki vs. Brice Guidon in a heavyweight kickboxing final. The winners of each tournament will earn $150,000 (USD) respectively.

Also, former UFC fighter Houston Alexander will meet Jason Jones in a light heavyweight MMA bout and current Strikeforce heavyweight Sergei Kharitonov will meet Mighty Mo in a heavyweight kickboxing bout.

Another interesting fight on the card involves Mark Miller, who will be returning to kickboxing for the first time since undergoing open heart surgery in 2007. “The Fight Shark” will meet Nikolaj Falin in a heavyweight kickboxing bout.

In total, there will be six MMA fights and six kickboxing fights on the card, which will be held in Moscow. Check out the full card here.

 

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The MMA Hour With Rampage, Edgar, Chou, Rebney, Miller, Escovedo

Filed under: UFC, FanHouse Exclusive, VideosThe MMA Hour returns on Monday with another loaded show. Here’s a list of who will be stopping by:

* Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, who faces Matt Hamill at UFC 130.

* UFC lightweight champion Frankie Edgar wil…

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The MMA Hour returns on Monday with another loaded show. Here’s a list of who will be stopping by:

* Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, who faces Matt Hamill at UFC 130.

* UFC lightweight champion Frankie Edgar will discuss when he expects to return to action.

* Former Strikeforce matchmaker Rich Chou will discuss what’s next for him.

* Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney will look back at the organization’s fourth season and ahead to what’s next.

* New UFC featherweight Cole Escovedo, who makes his Octagon debut against Renan Barao at UFC 130.

* Kickboxer Mark Miller, who returns to action at the May 28 Ultimate Glory event after undergoing open heart surgery in 2007.

* And Matt Mitrione will return for another edition of “The Mitrione Minute.” Will he discuss his altercation with Tito Ortiz at the UFC Fight Summit? Tune in to find out.

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

*** You can now 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. Download previous episodes of The MMA Hour on iTunes: audio feed here; video feed here.

Rafaello Oliveira, Junior Assuncao Headed to Recife FC

Filed under: Fighting, NewsAfter receiving his walking papers from the UFC this past March, Rafaello Oliveira will resurface at Recife FC 3 on Dec. 2 in Recife, Brazil, the lightweight recently confirmed with MMAFighting.com.

Coming off a loss to TUF …

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After receiving his walking papers from the UFC this past March, Rafaello Oliveira will resurface at Recife FC 3 on Dec. 2 in Recife, Brazil, the lightweight recently confirmed with MMAFighting.com.

Coming off a loss to TUF 9 runner-up Andre Winner at UFC Fight Night 21, Oliveira is set to meet another contestant from season nine, Kevin Knabjian.

The other featured bout on the card is Junior Assuncao facing Knabjian’s teammate and fellow TUF 9 contestant Mark Miller.