(Gary Goodridge submits Augusto Menezes Santos with a reverse full-nelson at IVC 1, 7/6/97. Classic Big Daddy.)
Since our Throwback Thursday series is focusing on the ’90sthis month, we decided to look back at an important (but mostly forgotten) promotion that was running no-holds-barred fights back then — the International Vale Tudo Championship.
Launched in Brazil in 1997, the IVC was like a grittier, nastier version of the UFC, featuring legal head-butts and groin-strikes, 30-minute marathon brawls, and a ring instead of a cage. It was old-school and ugly, just the way we liked it.
And now, through the magic of YouTube, it’s time to revisit those days. Here are 15 of our all-time favorite fights from the IVC’s first ten events, in loose chronological order. Enjoy.
(Dan Severn defeats Ebenezer Fontes Braga via doctor’s stoppage TKO at IVC 1.)
(Gary Goodridge submits Pedro Otavio via strikes in the IVC 1 final, after 16 minutes of creative groin abuse.)
(Gary Goodridge submits Augusto Menezes Santos with a reverse full-nelson at IVC 1, 7/6/97. Classic Big Daddy.)
Since our Throwback Thursday series is focusing on the ’90sthis month, we decided to look back at an important (but mostly forgotten) promotion that was running no-holds-barred fights back then — the International Vale Tudo Championship.
Launched in Brazil in 1997, the IVC was like a grittier, nastier version of the UFC, featuring legal head-butts and groin-strikes, 30-minute marathon brawls, and a ring instead of a cage. It was old-school and ugly, just the way we liked it.
And now, through the magic of YouTube, it’s time to revisit those days. Here are 15 of our all-time favorite fights from the IVC’s first ten events, in loose chronological order. Enjoy.
(Dan Severn defeats Ebenezer Fontes Braga via doctor’s stoppage TKO at IVC 1.)
(Gary Goodridge submits Pedro Otavio via strikes in the IVC 1 final, after 16 minutes of creative groin abuse.)
(Wanderlei Silva KO’s Sean Bormet with a head-kick at IVC 2, 9/15/97.)
(Wanderlei Silva suffers a doctor’s stoppage TKO loss to Artur Mariano in the finals of IVC 2. Crazy, bloody fight.)
(Wallid Ismail submits Johil de Oliveira via punches at IVC 3, 12/10/97.)
(Mike Van Arsdale runs through Francisco Nonato, Marcelo Barbosa, and Dario Amorim at IVC 4, 2/7/98.)
(Jose “Pele” Landi-Jons submits Milton Bahia via punches in the finals of IVC 5, 4/26/98. Landi-Jons had already fought for over 21 minutes that night, scoring doctor’s stoppage TKOs against Gerald Taylor and Jorge Pereira.)
(Chuck Liddell‘s epic 30-minute battle against Landi-Jons at IVC 6, 8/23/98.)
(Wanderlei Silva knocks out Mike Van Arsdale at IVC 6.)
(Renato Sobral KO’s Fernando “Bosco” Cerchiari at IVC 8, 1/20/99.)
(Wanderlei Silva shreds Adrian Serrano in 22 seconds at IVC 9…)
(…and stomps Eugene Jackson in 32 seconds at IVC 10.)
Filed under: UFCLooking back on it, maybe Anthony Johnson should have realized sooner that he wasn’t meant to be a permanent welterweight. Maybe the revelation should have hit him during any one of his notoriously drastic weight cuts, but especially wh…
Looking back on it, maybe Anthony Johnson should have realized sooner that he wasn’t meant to be a permanent welterweight. Maybe the revelation should have hit him during any one of his notoriously drastic weight cuts, but especially when he found himself trapped in a sauna in the days before his fight with Dan Hardy in Seattle last March.
“It was a rough cut,” Johnson admits now. So rough, in fact, that he found himself threatening his own coaches with all manner of bodily harm when they wouldn’t let him out of the sauna for even a second.
“I only had like five or six pounds to go, and when you’re that dehydrated and you’ve been working so hard, your brain…you kind of get out there a little bit,” Johnson said. “My strength and conditioning coach and everybody else were sitting behind the door so I couldn’t get it open. I just wanted a breath of fresh air. That was it.”
When they wouldn’t let him have it, Johnson recalled with a chuckle, he threatened to “put something on y’all that you’ll never forget.” As anyone who’s seen his run of knockout victories in the UFC already knows, that’s a threat with teeth. Or at least it would have been if he hadn’t been so depleted by the weight cut.
“I was too weak anyway,” he said. “That was just my mind…making threats that I knew I couldn’t keep.”
That was the old way for Johnson. That particular brand of suffering constituted a normal part of fight week for him, which strikes his new coaches as more than a little bit insane.
“With really good athletes like Anthony Johnson, the worst thing you can do is cut weight,” said Mike Van Arsdale, who works with Johnson and the rest of the “Blackzilian” squad at Imperial Athletics in Boca Raton, Fla. “You’re cutting away your athletic ability, is what you’re doing.”
According to Van Arsdale, that’s why the offer to fight Vitor Belfort at 185 pounds on Saturday night’s UFC 142 card in Rio de Janeiro was the best thing that could have happened to Johnson.
“All he’s done [by going up in weight] is enable himself to be who he was supposed to be to begin with. If you weigh 220 pounds, you don’t need to be fighting at 170,” Van Arsdale said. “It’s crazy. You’re trying to make 170 in the sauna and you end up sitting there at 189 and already depleted. That’s why I think this is the right weight class for him.”
For Johnson, the decision was simple. He didn’t feel like he needed to flee the welterweight division after two straight victories, he said, but he also couldn’t bring himself to say no to a fight with Belfort at middleweight.
“Everybody’s been talking about me going up to 185,” Johnson said. “It came sooner than I expected, but it’s here now. What am I going to do? I’m not going to back down from any opponent. I’m not going to let people second-guess me or think that I’m scared of 185.”
In Belfort, however, Johnson faces not just a bigger opponent, but one with proven knockout ability in the higher weight classes. In the last couple years he’s starched opponents like Yoshihiro Akiyama and Rich Franklin with his one-punch power, and Johnson knows how dangerous he can be in the opening rounds.
But the real difference-maker, according to Johnson, won’t be the numbers on the scale, but rather the quality of the time each man has spent in the gym. That’s why the decision to join the Blackzilians in Florida was such an important one, he said.
“This is actually a camp that has real fighters and people that really want to win. We support each other through thick and thin. We don’t badmouth each other. It’s just a good environment with top-notch athletes.”
As Van Arsdale explained, it’s the intensity of the practices and the quality of the sparring partners that makes all the difference.
“Put it this way: if you’re going to spar with [kickboxer] Tyrone Spong, and he’s standing right in front of you and there’s no way out of it, you’re forced to rise up. That’s what Anthony’s done,” said Van Arsdale. “You’re going with that guy — and he’s 15 pounds or so heavier than Anthony — how are you not going to get better at kickboxing? And the same thing when you’re wrestling with Rashad Evans and guys from the Olympic Training Center every day in practice, how could you not get better at wrestling?”
Beyond just the quality of talent on the mats each day, it’s the support Johnson gets from his fellow fighters that has showed him what he was missing before, he said.
“I didn’t have a family like I have now. I had a team in certain teams I was a part of, but this is not a team to me. This is a family.”
According to Van Arsdale, both the move up in weight and the move to Florida have already paid tremendous dividends for Johnson, even if he doesn’t think the combat sports community fully appreciates it just yet.
“I don’t really read a lot of the stuff on the internet, but I was curious the other day and I looked on there and saw that Anthony Johnson’s nowhere to be seen in the top ten at 170 or 185, and that’s really funny,” Van Arsdale said. “This guy is good, man. Ever since he went up a weight class, it’s like he jumped up five extra steps. There’s no real way to prepare for him now; you just have to go in there and try to catch him with something, and that’s hard to do.”
And yet, that’s exactly what Belfort has excelled at in his career. Even Johnson admits that, based on the footage he’s studied, there are few strikers more dangerous than “The Phenom” in the opening minutes of a fight. It’s when the fight doesn’t end during those first few minutes that he tends to struggle, Johnson said.
“His hands are always the most dangerous part, especially in that first round. …But I’m sure Vitor doesn’t want to get embarrassed, so he’s going to come in really good shape. I’m putting a lot of pressure on him. I’m beating the hell out of him.”
And the fact that they’re fighting in Belfort’s home country, where the crowd will no doubt be rabid in its support of their countryman? That doesn’t matter to Johnson any more than Belfort’s litany of past knockouts, since neither can get in the cage to help him.
“Vitor, to me, is just like everybody else,” Johnson said. “He’s a human. He’s a fighter just like me. He’s been around for a while, but so what? That doesn’t mean anything to me. I respect him, but this is a fight.”
And at least this time around, Johnson won’t have to battle his own team and his own weight quite so ferociously just to make it into the cage.
Since stepping in for the injury-prone Vitor Belfort against Cung Le, many of us have been wondering if this could be the last we will see of “The Axe Murderer,” and what a sad sight it would be to see him go. Well aware of the position he is in, Silva is training harder than ever, and in light of that, we figured we could showcase some of the brutal tenacity/soccer kicks that spawned our affection for ol’ Wandy in the first place.
(Skip to 3:10 for the start of the fight)
Since stepping in for the injury-prone Vitor Belfort against Cung Le, many of us have been wondering if this could be the last we will see of “The Axe Murderer,” and what a sad sight it would be to see him go. Well aware of the position he is in, Silva is training harder than ever, and in light of that, we figured we could showcase some of the brutal tenacity/soccer kicks that spawned our affection for ol’ Wandy in the first place.
The above video comes from International Vale Tudo Championship 6-The Challenge, which went down in Sao Paolo Brazil way back in 1998. The victory would earn Silva his first shot in the UFC, which unfortunately would be a 44 second blitzkrieg at the hands of Vitor Belfort. Speaking of the UFC, future UFC light heavyweight champ Chuck Liddell was also on the card, earning a unanimous decision win over Vale Tudo legend Jose “Pele” Landi-Jons.