Former WEC Bantamweight Champion Miguel Torres Released from UFC for Tweet

In the days where UFC fighters like Forrest Griffin and Rashad Evans are getting criticized for the things they say, it is Miguel Torres who first gets the axe for his offensive tweet.UFC president Dana White told Sports Illustrated that the former WEC…

In the days where UFC fighters like Forrest Griffin and Rashad Evans are getting criticized for the things they say, it is Miguel Torres who first gets the axe for his offensive tweet.

UFC president Dana White told Sports Illustrated that the former WEC bantamweight champion had been cut from the UFC not for his poor performance in the promotion, but for a tweet.

“This morning I’m on [Michael] Landsburg’s show, up here in Canada, and he hits me with the quote of what he tweeted. Now there’s no explanation for that,” White told Sports Illustrated. “There’s absolutely nothing I could say to make any sense of that. And the fact that he even thinks that’s funny or that’s a joke, it disturbs me. It bothers me.

“Again, you’re dealing with a guy that’s a smart guy, that owns his own business, that’s been one of the top fighters in the world forever. And I cut him today. He’s no longer with the UFC.”

White was then asked if this was Torres’ first offense or second offense.

“No, this was the first time. And then he said he hadn’t heard what happened to Forrest [Griffin, who drew fire for tweeting ‘Rape is the new missionary’ last month]. Really? Where do you live? What business are you in? How do you not hear about these things?

You should have paid more attention. It’s to the point now where, there’s going be times when things happen and mistakes are made. I cannot defend Miguel Torres. I cannot defend what he said. What he said makes no sense other than when he says, ‘It was a joke.’ Well, I don’t think that’s a funny joke. I think it’s disturbing.”

For those who are wondering what Torres’ offensive tweet was here it is:

“If a rape van was called a surprise van, more women wouldn’t mind going for rides in them. Everyone likes surprises,” Torres said via Twitter.

Offensive or not, Torres is no longer with the UFC.

UPDATE: Matt Erickson received a text from Torres stating that he was quoting an episode of Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia which he was watching at the time.

UPDATE: According to Ariel Helwani and somebody close to Torres he was quoting Workaholics and not Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia.

 

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Dana White Discusses Why He Released Miguel Torres Over Tweet

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TORONTO — MMA Fighting spoke to UFC president Dana White Thursday evening about why he decided to release Miguel Torres after the bantamweight fighter tweeted about a “rape van” recently. White explained his reasons for the release, why he didn’t release other UFC fighters who appeared to make light of rape, and what kind of message he is sending to his fighters.

 

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TORONTO — MMA Fighting spoke to UFC president Dana White Thursday evening about why he decided to release Miguel Torres after the bantamweight fighter tweeted about a “rape van” recently. White explained his reasons for the release, why he didn’t release other UFC fighters who appeared to make light of rape, and what kind of message he is sending to his fighters.

 

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Unnamed ‘UFC Champ’ Thwarts Robbery in Chicago; Mugger Gets Shot in Leg and Face Pounded


(You dun goofed, son.)

A story of street justice out of Chicago today that makes Jon Jones’ bout of heroism seem like a boyscout helping an old lady across the street, claims that a “UFC champion” fended off an armed mugger and would-be carjacker on Friday.

According to various reports that originated from a police report of the incident that was released today, a 24-year-old career criminal got his just desserts when he pulled a gun on a seasoned MMA fighter and ordered him out of his vehicle after lightening his wallet.


(You dun goofed, son.)

A story of street justice out of Chicago today that makes Jon Jones’ bout of heroism seem like a boyscout helping an old lady across the street, claims that a “UFC champion” fended off an armed mugger and would-be carjacker on Friday.

According to various reports that originated from a police report of the incident that was released today, a 24-year-old career criminal got his just desserts when he pulled a gun on a seasoned MMA fighter and ordered him out of his vehicle after lightening his wallet.

Here’s the breakdown courtesy of MyFoxChicago:

Police say 24-year-old Anthony Miranda walked up to a car which was parked near 55th and Kenneth about 11:30 p.m. and asked the driver for a lighter.

When the driver said he didn’t have one, Miranda allegedly pulled a handgun, pointed it at the driver and demanded money. And even after getting some money, he ordered the driver out of the car, police News Affairs Officer John Mirabelli said.

At some point, Miranda’s attention was diverted and the victim was able to grab control of the gun and the two wrestled.

During the fight, Miranda accidentally discharged his gun, shooting himself in the ankle, Mirabelli said.

The victim — who told police he’s a martial arts expert and ultimate fighting champion — was able to pin Miranda down until police arrived. Police arrived to find Miranda with a face full of lacerations and two black eyes. He was taken to Holy Cross Hospital for treatment, police said.

Miranda, a convicted felon, is charged with armed robbery and aggravated discharge of a firearm, a Class X felony.

He was ordered held on $350,000 bond Sunday, according to the CooK County Sheriff’s office.

Records show he has several convictions, including at least one for a residential burglary. 

There’s a pretty good chance that the cops who wrote up the report may be confusing “MMA” with “Ultimate Fighting,” but just to be sure we contacted the management of the city’s only fighter who has worn UFC gold, Andrei Arlovski to ask if “The Pitbull” was the intended victim. As of the time of writing, we have not heard back from his agent.

Some other Chicago-based UFC veterans who could fit the bill include Stephan Bonnar, Miguel Torres, Shonie Carter, Danny Downes, Bart Palaszewski and Jeff Curran.

Unnamed ‘UFC Champ’ Thwarts Robbery in Chicago; Mugger Gets Shot in Leg and Face Pounded


(You dun goofed, son.)

A story of street justice out of Chicago today that makes Jon Jones’ bout of heroism seem like a boyscout helping an old lady across the street, claims that a “UFC champion” fended off an armed mugger and would-be carjacker on Friday.

According to various reports that originated from a police report of the incident that was released today, a 24-year-old career criminal got his just desserts when he pulled a gun on a seasoned MMA fighter and ordered him out of his vehicle after lightening his wallet.


(You dun goofed, son.)

A story of street justice out of Chicago today that makes Jon Jones’ bout of heroism seem like a boyscout helping an old lady across the street, claims that a “UFC champion” fended off an armed mugger and would-be carjacker on Friday.

According to various reports that originated from a police report of the incident that was released today, a 24-year-old career criminal got his just desserts when he pulled a gun on a seasoned MMA fighter and ordered him out of his vehicle after lightening his wallet.

Here’s the breakdown courtesy of MyFoxChicago:

Police say 24-year-old Anthony Miranda walked up to a car which was parked near 55th and Kenneth about 11:30 p.m. and asked the driver for a lighter.

When the driver said he didn’t have one, Miranda allegedly pulled a handgun, pointed it at the driver and demanded money. And even after getting some money, he ordered the driver out of the car, police News Affairs Officer John Mirabelli said.

At some point, Miranda’s attention was diverted and the victim was able to grab control of the gun and the two wrestled.

During the fight, Miranda accidentally discharged his gun, shooting himself in the ankle, Mirabelli said.

The victim — who told police he’s a martial arts expert and ultimate fighting champion — was able to pin Miranda down until police arrived. Police arrived to find Miranda with a face full of lacerations and two black eyes. He was taken to Holy Cross Hospital for treatment, police said.

Miranda, a convicted felon, is charged with armed robbery and aggravated discharge of a firearm, a Class X felony.

He was ordered held on $350,000 bond Sunday, according to the CooK County Sheriff’s office.

Records show he has several convictions, including at least one for a residential burglary. 

There’s a pretty good chance that the cops who wrote up the report may be confusing “MMA” with “Ultimate Fighting,” but just to be sure we contacted the management of the city’s only fighter who has worn UFC gold, Andrei Arlovski to ask if “The Pitbull” was the intended victim. As of the time of writing, we have not heard back from his agent.

Some other Chicago-based UFC veterans who could fit the bill include Stephan Bonnar, Miguel Torres, Shonie Carter, Danny Downes, Bart Palaszewski and Jeff Curran.

My First Fight: Miguel Torres

Filed under: UFCNo fight fan is in any danger of confusing Miguel Torres for Muhammad Ali. One’s a skinny bantamweight MMA fighter with a mullet, and the other is Muhammad Ali. But even though they might be separated by a few decades and many, many pou…

Filed under:

Miguel TorresNo fight fan is in any danger of confusing Miguel Torres for Muhammad Ali. One’s a skinny bantamweight MMA fighter with a mullet, and the other is Muhammad Ali. But even though they might be separated by a few decades and many, many pounds, both owe the genesis of their fight careers to a specific type of childhood anguish: the stolen bike.

Torres’ bike had been a gift from his uncle. It wasn’t exactly top of the line, but it had the word ‘Ambush’ written across the side, which was undeniably cool for reasons Torres couldn’t quite explain. He’d made it even cooler by covering much of the bike in duct tape.

“You know, so it was camouflaged,” he says.

One Friday afternoon he rode his bike down to a local shrimp joint to get a basket of french fries to split with his friends, but the proprietor wouldn’t let him bring his bike inside. Torres didn’t have a lock, so he left it just outside, where he could see the front tire through the window.

“But this was when [arcade game] Mortal Kombat first came out,” he says with a sigh. “I came in for the food, but all I heard was ‘Finish him!'”

You know where this is going. Torres had some change in his pocket, and what kid in the early 90s could resist the magnetic pull of a good video game — especially Mortal Kombat? Torres tried to keep an eye on that bike tire through the window, but he got absorbed in the game, taking on one challenger after another. When he glanced over his shoulder at the end of it all, no more bike.

“It was the first time I’d ever had anything stolen from me,” he says. “I was crushed. I ran around the whole block screaming, ‘Where’s my bike!?'”

When that didn’t yield the result he was hoping for, Torres went home to “lift weights.” And by weights, he means bricks. It was the closest thing he could find to a weight set in his neighborhood, and all he knew was that he needed to get stronger if he was going to be ready when he finally came face to face with the bike thief. He also convinced his parents to let him take some Taekwondo lessons, “until I found out it was all bulls–t.”

He’d go to school and his friends on the wrestling team would taunt him, calling him ‘karate boy’ and challenging him to show them his stuff.

“Then they’d take me down and get me in just the worst holds you can imagine. It sucked.”

But little by little, Torres was learning different art forms from whatever sources he could find. A little taekwondo here, some wrestling there, even a trip to a local boxing gym where they sparred on bare feet on a concrete floor. During one such session Torres so angered an older sparring partner with his frantic Jeff Speakman routine that the man threw off his gloves and double-legged him onto the concrete floor before choking the teenage Torres with his own t-shirt.

Afterward, “the guy told me, ‘That’s jiu-jitsu.’ I was like, I have to learn that.”

Somewhere along the way Torres became a martial arts junkie. He read all the books, held himself to a rigid diet he didn’t fully understand, took challenge matches wherever he could find them. All that was left was to find a real fight, a pro fight, something that would test him. This is where Finke’s came in.

If you look at Torres’ record, it’ll tell you that his first fight was against Larry Pulliam at Finke’s Full Contact Challenge in March of 2000. That sounds pretty official, at least until you realize that Finke’s was the name of a local bar in Highland, Indiana, and the “Full Contact Challenge” was more or less a gimmick to try and drum up a crowd for those slow Monday nights.

“I had this idea about how it would be, but I walked in that bar and it was almost empty. It was just these shady characters — bikers, gang-bangers. They gave me this form to fill out, and it was basically a cheap contract saying I wouldn’t sue if I got hurt or killed. After that, it was: real name, stage name, height, weight, and age. That was it. There was no scale to check your weight. No athletic commission. You could wrap your hands if you wanted or you could not wrap your hands. All they checked was mouthpiece and cup.”

Even that requirement proved difficult for some of the fighters. Some of them had brought boil-and-bite mouthpieces — the cheap ones that you can form to your teeth after a quick dunk in hot water — but they hadn’t even bothered to take them out of the package before fight night. Maybe it was just as well, because they ended up passing the mouthpieces back and forth, among other things.

“There were guys literally saying, ‘Hey, if you let me use your mouthpiece, I’ll let you use my cup,'” Torres says. “And they’d be there after the fights swapping mouthpieces and cups. Guys who weren’t even wearing jockstraps were just shoving someone else’s cup in their shorts.”

As Torres was warming up backstage, one of his coaches stretched him out while attempting to impart various Eastern philosophies. Ebb and flow. Yin and yang. That sort of stuff. His boxing coach had different advice, and it involved “[expletive]ing this guy up” and then befriending the strippers who’d been hired to serve as ring girls. Only maybe it wasn’t quite so delicately put.

“That was the last thing I heard before I went in there. And in my mind I had this idea of what a fight should be, just this war. I had images of me hitting him and him hurting me and me getting cut and bleeding, but coming back and winning the fight. Like a Rocky movie or a kung fu movie. I thought the whole 15-minute fight would be like that. I was thinking of all the Bruce Lee books I’d read, The Art of War. All that.”

Instead what happened was that Pulliam came forward, was backed off by a Torres head kick attempt — “the worst kick you can imagine,” he says — and then came forward again, straight into a Torres left hook. That was all it took. Pulliam went down, attempted to get back to his feet, then collapsed again. The ref had no choice but to stop it.

“I looked at my corner like, that’s it?” Torres says. “I didn’t want to get out of the ring. I was so upset. I wanted to fight again.”

The crowd loved it. So did his coaches. But Torres left the ring with a disappointed feeling in the pit of his stomach. That disappointment continued when Finke’s employees explained that, while he was old enough to fight in their establishment, he wasn’t old enough to drink there.

“I thought at least I’d get to hang out in the bar. But no, they kicked me out because I was underage. They were all hanging out, drinking with the strippers, but I was outside in the car eating McDonald’s.”

Torres stayed there waiting for his coaches to return for, by his estimation, “about four hours.” Not exactly the victory party you imagine for yourself after your first professional win, but Torres was already hooked. Even though ‘MMA fighter’ wasn’t much of an actual job description in the spring of 2000, Torres “knew right away that this was what I wanted to do.”

He’d go on to fight many more bouts at Finke’s while trying to keep it a secret from his family, but word spread about the skinny Mexican kid who never lost a bout. Not long after, Torres’ father was injured by a crane at a construction site where he was working. When Torres went to see him in the hospital one day he found that his father had had a visit from a work friend who told him all about seeing his son fight down at the sports bar. The secret was out.

“So I told him all about it,” Torres says. “He said, ‘How much are they paying you?’ I was like, I don’t fight for money. I fight for the art, for respect. I was an idealist. And my dad, from his hospital bed, he reached out and smacked me on the back of the neck.”

Torres’ father’s friend had told him all about how the guys from the construction crew loved these fight nights, how they paid $25 a head to get in, how the young Torres was quickly becoming a major draw.

“My dad said, ‘You’ve got to get paid. This guy’s making money off you, and you’re the one getting hurt.’ So I went back and talked to the promoter and told him I wanted to start getting paid.”

And he did. For his next fight, Torres made the princely sum of $100. It was enough to fill his Camaro up with gas and still have enough to take a girl out on a date. Plus, it was money he’d earned with his art, his skills. It was perfect. It was everything he thought he needed at the time, and it was just the beginning.

Check out past installments of My First Fight, featuring “Mayhem” Miller, Rashad Evans, and more.

 

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UFC 139 Results: What’s Next for Former WEC Champion Brian Bowles?

Former WEC bantamweight champion Brian Bowles was hoping to get back into the title picture at UFC 139. Instead, Bowles was outworked by Urijah Faber and lost their fight by submission. Despite the loss, Bowles is still a top five bantamweight in the U…

Former WEC bantamweight champion Brian Bowles was hoping to get back into the title picture at UFC 139.

Instead, Bowles was outworked by Urijah Faber and lost their fight by submission.

Despite the loss, Bowles is still a top five bantamweight in the UFC.

Bowles only has two losses which have come to Faber and current champ Dominick Cruz.

What Bowles needs to do now is build himself back up to being a title contender.

Despite being a former champion, Bowles has only had 12 MMA fights.

This means there are plenty of fights left for him to take.

One fight that sticks out for Bowles is Demetrious Johnson.

Johnson and Bowles are similar when you look at their wins and losses.

Johnson is coming off of a loss to Dominick Cruz and is 9-2 overall.

It would be an interesting fight style-wise.

Despite being an undersized bantamweight, Johnson is known for out wrestling and outworking his opponents.

Johnson has also never been stopped in his career.

Nine of Bowles’ 10 wins have come by knockout or submission.

The bout would also be a good test to see where both men stand in the division.

Other bouts that could be interesting for Bowles are Brad Pickett, Eddie Wineland, and Miguel Torres.

Pickett is another big name in the bantamweight division who is coming off of a loss.

Wineland is another former champion who is in need of a win.

Bowles has already defeated Torres once before.

But a rematch between the two could move the other one up the ranks significantly.

There are many routes the UFC and Bowles could go. But perhaps taking on Johnson is the best one. 

 

Be sure to stay tuned to Bleacher Report for all things UFC 139. B/R is your home for complete coverage of the November 19 fight card, including results and post-fight analysis.

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