Mike Pyle Says John Hathaway Never Had a Chance

While some fans on this side “of the pond” bemoaned last night’s UFC 120 card saying it was weak, for British fans, who, let’s not forget were the ones, you know, actually paying to attend the London event, it featured several of their beloved stars. Michael Bisping and Dan Hardy are already two of the […]

pyle

While some fans on this side “of the pond” bemoaned last night’s UFC 120 card saying it was weak, for British fans, who, let’s not forget were the ones, you know, actually paying to attend the London event, it featured several of their beloved stars. Michael Bisping and Dan Hardy are already two of the country’s biggest names, love em or hate em, while  John Hathaway has been in hot pursuit (walking through Diego Sanchez certainly didn’t hurt).

Of course, while Bisping outscored Yoshihiro Akiyama for the UD win, the other two British studs didn’t fair too well. Hardy got KTFO by Carlos Condit, and Hathaway, well, the formerly undefeated welterweight ended up getting schooled by the veteran Mike Pyle big time. Hathaway was a heavy favorite to take out Pyle, and after hearing some of the Xtreme Couture fighter’s post fight comments, we’re thinking maybe that was bothering him just a wee little bit (comment via the official UFC site).

“Everything Hathaway’s good at I’m better and tonight I was able to prove that. I knew that coming into this fight my wrestling was better; I knew that my hands were better. I hurt him a few times in the fight; I had him hooked up in some things that nobody’s been hooked up in the UFC, beaten on in the UFC. From my shorts at the weigh-ins, to “Born in the USA” coming out, I just rubbed it in their face and on top of that I smashed their number one boy that they thought was unstoppable. He never had a chance tonight, not for one second.”

Wow. If you threw some money down on Pyle last night, enjoy.

UFC 120: $60K Fight Night Bonuses Handed Out

UFC 120: Bisping vs. Akiyama took place Saturday evening at the O2 Arena in London, England and will be broadcast on Spike TV Saturday in the US.
At the post-fight press conference, UFC officials announced the “Fight Night” winners who all walked away with a cool $60,000 bonus. Earning the awards for their work were […]

UFC_120_PosterUFC 120: Bisping vs. Akiyama took place Saturday evening at the O2 Arena in London, England and will be broadcast on Spike TV Saturday in the US.

At the post-fight press conference, UFC officials announced the “Fight Night” winners who all walked away with a cool $60,000 bonus. Earning the awards for their work were Michael Bisping, Yoshihiro Akiyama, Carlos Condit, and Paul Sass.

The “Fight of the Night” honor was given to main event fighters Michael Bisping and Yoshihiro Akiyama for their three round bout. Bisping showed that he was the better prepared fighter landing strikes often on the Japanese fighter, but Akiyama proved ever dangerous landing some hard strikes of his own including one at the start of the fight. Bisping would walk away with a unanimous decision.

Carlos Condit faced Dan Hardy in the co-main event of UFC 120, KOing the “Outlaw” in the first round with a left sending the Brit to the mat. Condit followed it up with a few more strikes before the referee was able to intervene. For that knockout, Condit was given the “Knockout of the Night” award.

With a total of three submission victories during the evening, all coming on the preliminary card of the event, lightweight Paul Sass‘ triangle-choke submission over Canadian Mark Holst stood out to win the fighter the “Submission of the Night” award. For Sass, it was his eleventh victory and his eight submission win via triangle-choke. The fighter had earned seven straight wins with the same submission beginning with his first professional win.

Update: The “Fight Night” bonuses were mis-reported as $50,000 when they should have been $60,000 according to MMAjunkie.com.

Steve Cantwell Injured; Off UFC 120 Card

Getting injured sucks not only because it’s usually a pretty painful experience, but it can have a serious impact on your ability to perform simple day-to-day duties, let alone try to remain conscious while throwing down in the Octagon. Of course, the typical injury here at Fix is  a serious case of PS3 thumb, making […]

SteveCantwell

Getting injured sucks not only because it’s usually a pretty painful experience, but it can have a serious impact on your ability to perform simple day-to-day duties, let alone try to remain conscious while throwing down in the Octagon. Of course, the typical injury here at Fix is  a serious case of PS3 thumb, making dipping donuts into our coffee somewhat unpleasant. So what the hell do we know about it.

At any rate, word has come from the UFC that light-heavyweight Steve Cantwell injured his knee this week during a pre-fight workout, and as a result, his bout with Stanislav Nedkov has been scrapped from the UFC 120 card. Wow. Any fighter will tell you that making it through training camp without getting injured is damn tricky, so to trash your knee the week of the fight? When the hardcore training is supposedly done? That sh-t’s rough.

Cantwell was looking to end a two fight losing streak after dropping back-to-back UD losses to Luis Cane and Brian Stann. Prior to that the WEC vet had busted the arm of Razak Al-Hassan, way back in December, 2008 (remember now?). This would have been Cantwell’s first bout in over a year.

Tough break for Cantwell but the show must go on. To bet on tomorrow’s bouts head here.

UFC 120: Bisping vs. Akiyama Weigh-in Results

The weigh-ins for Saturday’s UFC 120: Bisping vs. Akiyama event are set to kick off at 11AM EST (8AM PST) from London, England.
UFC 120 will take place on Oct. 16th from the O2 Arena in London and is headlined by a middleweight bout between Michael “The Count” Bisping vs. Japanese fighter Yoshihiro Akiyama. The […]

UFC_120_PosterThe weigh-ins for Saturday’s UFC 120: Bisping vs. Akiyama event are set to kick off at 11AM EST (8AM PST) from London, England.

UFC 120 will take place on Oct. 16th from the O2 Arena in London and is headlined by a middleweight bout between Michael “The Count” Bisping vs. Japanese fighter Yoshihiro Akiyama. The event will air live in the UK and Canada, while fans in the US will view the event via tape delay on Spike TV.

You can watch the UFC 120 weigh-ins Live at UFC.com by clicking the link.

The weigh-in results for UFC 120: Bisping vs. Akiyama is as follows:

Main Card

Middleweight bout: Michael Bisping (185) vs. Yoshihiro Akiyama (185)
Welterweight bout: Dan Hardy (171) vs. Carlos Condit (170)
Welterweight bout: John Hathaway (171) vs. Mike Pyle (170)
Heavyweight bout: Cheick Kongo (228) vs. Travis Browne (251)
Welterweight bout: James Wilks (171) vs. Claude Patrick (170)

Preliminary card

Light Heavyweight bout: Cyrille Diabaté (204) vs. Alexander Gustafsson (204)
Heavyweight bout: Rob Broughton (257) vs. Vinicius Kappke de Queiroz (239)
Lightweight bout: Paul Sass (155) vs. Mark Holst (155)
Lightweight bout: Spencer Fisher (155)vs. Kurt Warburton (154)
Light Heavyweight bout: James McSweeney (205) vs. Fabio Maldonado (204)

HEATXC 6 Bragging Rights Weigh In Results

Edmonton’s Mayfield Inn oozed of testosterone early this afternoon as fighters flashed their best stare down glare while weighing in for another stacked Pavelich Sports Inc. production, HeatXC 6: “Bragging Rights”.
The event is headlined by a welterweight bout between Jason High and Keto Allen.
Tomorrow nights HeatXC 6: “Bragging Rights” weigh-in results are as follows:
Jordan Beecroft […]

HeatXC6
Edmonton’s Mayfield Inn oozed of testosterone early this afternoon as fighters flashed their best stare down glare while weighing in for another stacked Pavelich Sports Inc. production, HeatXC 6: “Bragging Rights”.

The event is headlined by a welterweight bout between Jason High and Keto Allen.

Tomorrow nights HeatXC 6: “Bragging Rights” weigh-in results are as follows:

Jordan Beecroft (190.2 lbs) vs. Jared McComb (204.6 lbs)
Justin Blumer (160.8 lbs)vs. Brent Haley (158.4 lbs)

Jake Bluhm (155.8 lbs.) vs. Jevon Marshall (155.6 lbs.)

Mike Glover (140 lbs.) vs. Scott Payne (155.6 lbs.)

Leo Constant (165.8 lbs) vs. Shane Campbell (168.8 lbs)

Billy Torrence (165.8 lbs) vs. Mike Froese (180.0 lbs)

Elliot Duff (198.2 lbs) vs. Cody Krahn (194.4 lbs)

Will Krueger (Absent fr. Weigh-ins) vs. Nick Dragich (263.6 lbs)

MAIN EVENT:

Jason High (170.8 lbs) vs. Keto Allen (170.6 lbs)

Bellator XXXII Weigh-In Results

Bellator Fighting Championships returns to Kansas City for tonight’s event, Bellator 32, at the Kansas City Power & Light District. The official weigh-ins for the event took place on Wednesday.
The event can be seen live nationwide on Fox Sports Net and it’s regional sports network affiliates.
Highlighting Bellator 32 will be two tournament finals.
Heavyweight finalists […]

Bellator 32Bellator Fighting Championships returns to Kansas City for tonight’s event, Bellator 32, at the Kansas City Power & Light District. The official weigh-ins for the event took place on Wednesday.

The event can be seen live nationwide on Fox Sports Net and it’s regional sports network affiliates.

Highlighting Bellator 32 will be two tournament finals.

Heavyweight finalists Cole Konrad meets Neil Grove to crown the first Bellator heavyweight champion. The first Bellator bantamweight champion will also be crowned as fighters Zach Makovsky and Ed West square off in the tournament final.

The weigh-in results for Bellator 32 are as follows:

Main Card

Heavyweight title bout: Cole Konrad (264) vs. Neil Grove (263)
Bantamweight title bout: Ed West (134.25) vs Zack Makovsky (134.25)
Welterweight bout: Ryan Thomas (169.5) vs. Jim Wallhead (168.75)
Catchweight (165 lbs) bout: Chris Page (166.5) vs. Michael Chandler (164.5)

Preliminary Card

Featherweight bout: Ryan Roberts (145.75) vs. Eric Marriott (145.75)
Catchweight (180 lbs) bout: Chad Reiner (176) vs. Rudy Bears (180.75)
Bantamweight bout: Jared Downing (134.9) vs. Danny Tims (135.9)
Featherweight bout: Shane Hutchinson (144) vs. Brian Davidson (145.75)