Fedor’s Manager Says He Wants into the UFC, Questions Dana White’s Integrity

Vadim Finkelstein is an interesting character.He’s best known as the manager of Fedor Emelianenko. This used to mean something, but these days it’s far less prestigious than it used to be. Not according to Finkelstein, however. This guy is still l…

Vadim Finkelstein is an interesting character.

He’s best known as the manager of Fedor Emelianenko. This used to mean something, but these days it’s far less prestigious than it used to be. 

Not according to Finkelstein, however. This guy is still living in 2007. It’s as though Emelianenko’s losses never happened.

Witness:

UFC President Dana White recently said that he has zero interest in signing Fedor…

VF: You need to know Dana. If he says he has no interest in signing Fedor, then in fact, he really wants to. He says one thing, and doing another. How can you not want a fighter who can bring millions? Any fight with Fedor could break all the rating records in the UFC.

The only time Emelianenko would’ve brought “millions” to the UFC would have been potential fights with Randy Couture and Brock Lesnar. But that was back before he lost three fights in a row, and his true value has significantly declined since those days. 

Maybe you should make the first step?

VF: We are open for dialogue. It’s just that Dana White thinks that we will come to him, kneel down and say: “We are ready for any conditions to sign a contract.” Of course, this will never happen. Fedor deserves nothing but respect. But like I said, there’s still a high demand for Fedor. We are ready to have Fedor fighting in the UFC, it’s just that we need a normal offer. And the fact that White is always saying that offered us everything “on a silver platter” is a lie.

We’ll never know exactly what the UFC offered Fedor’s camp during those long-ago negotiations. It’ll be a game of he-said, she-said until the end of time. 

What we do know, however, is that Finkelstein is still holding on to the notion that he can get some type of special contract from the UFC, even with Emelianenko suffering three losses. He’s no longer the fighter he once was. He’s no longer the minimal pay per view draw he once was.

Finkelstein says they need “a normal offer.” No, you don’t need a normal offer. If all they needed was a normal offer, we would’ve seen Emelianenko vs. Brock Lesnar at Cowboys Stadium several years ago, like the UFC wanted.

A “normal offer” is what every fighter in the UFC gets, and that’s not what Finkelstein is after. He’s still looking for co-promotion and other special treatment, and that’s never going to fly.

We’re never going to see Fedor Emelianenko in the UFC, and Vadim Finkelstein is to blame.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Anderson Silva vs. Chael Sonnen: 10 Reasons Silva Will Beat Sonnen at UFC 147

Anderson Silva will face Chael Sonnen in a rematch of their epic UFC 117 middleweight bout this June at UFC 147, set to place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.I won’t waste time regurgitating what took place, because just about everyone already knows. The fol…

Anderson Silva will face Chael Sonnen in a rematch of their epic UFC 117 middleweight bout this June at UFC 147, set to place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

I won’t waste time regurgitating what took place, because just about everyone already knows. The following is a list of 10 reasons why Anderson Silva will beat Chael Sonnen. 

Begin Slideshow

Lloyd "Cupcake" Woodard: "I Want Another Shot at Michael Chandler"

It wasn’t the UFC.But it was still one of the best fights we’ve seen all year.”I was super stoked from the second the weigh-ins began,” Lloyd Woodard (12-1) told Bleacher Report.If you haven’t caught on yet, Woodard is coming off one of the greatest Be…

It wasn’t the UFC.

But it was still one of the best fights we’ve seen all year.

“I was super stoked from the second the weigh-ins began,” Lloyd Woodard (12-1) told Bleacher Report.

If you haven’t caught on yet, Woodard is coming off one of the greatest Bellator performances of all time where he defeated Patricky Freire via Kimura at Bellator 62.

“I wanted to fight bad and I know he wanted to get out there and get things started too,” Woodard said. “We both wanted another shot at Michael Chandler and we both thought we could beat him.”

“I knew he was going to bring it. He’s a great striker and I pride myself in my striking as well. I knew it was going to be a battle and that’s why I brought it the way I did. I always try and bring the heat,” Woodard said.

Woodard certainly brought it in the opening frame but a series of strikes from Freire would quickly change the pace of the fight.

Instead of a dominating first round, Woodard found himself on his back as the opening round came to an end.

“The announcing always makes it sound much worse than it is. He’s got good hands so I can see why they were like that but I wouldn’t say I was badly hurt. But I did get hit,” Woodard said. “The number one mistake was that I started going backwards and I’m a fighter who comes forward.”

“He caught me but I was able to rebound. I went for the knee to return the favor to take him out and all of a sudden he went to taking me down. I didn’t expect that at all. I didn’t think he’d want to go to the ground. It probably scored him some points,” Woodard said.

After the action-packed opening round, just one question remained.

Who won the round?

“When I was fighting I thought he won the first round just because he ended up on top of me at the end of the round,” Woodard said. “I actually went back and watched it and I thought I won due to my striking, my aggression and when I was on top I did a lot more damage than what he did when he was on top.”

1:46 later, Woodard earned the 12th win of his career, pushing him one step closer towards his desired rematch with current lightweight champion, Chandler.

However, “Cupcake” Woodard will now take some additional time to enjoy his first win of 2012 and reminisce on what many consider one of the greatest fights of all time.

“I’m a fight fanatic so I know all of the great fights. That’s such an honor to even be considered in that category. You begin to think about it and you have your Forrest Griffin and Stephan Bonnar fight, the Pat Barry and Cheick Kongo bout,” Woodard said. “There are so many great moments like that and I think it’s impossible to pick just one.”

“It’s just an honor to be apart of one of the best fights of all time.”

 

For additional information, follow Garrett Derr on Twitter.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Dangerous Hyperbole Surrounding Testosterone Replacement Therapy

This article reflects the opinion of the author.
Steroid use can be a dangerous game of “Can you top this?” Pro wrestling fans will remember the 1980s, when the success of ludicrously ripped acts like the Road Warriors and Hulk Hogan convinced promoter…

This article reflects the opinion of the author.

Steroid use can be a dangerous game of “Can you top this?” Pro wrestling fans will remember the 1980s, when the success of ludicrously ripped acts like the Road Warriors and Hulk Hogan convinced promoters that swollen muscles were the key to monetary success. What followed were a ridiculous menagerie of overly muscled human action figures, wrestlers like Hercules Hernandez, who rewrote the book on human anatomy.

The result was tragic. Swollen hearts were an unfortunate byproduct of those swollen muscles. Wrestlers from that generation started dropping like flies. Most of our heroes, the wrestlers from that era we grew up on, like Rick Rude, Hawk and Curt Hennig, are dead and gone. No one who was a wrestling fan can possibly minimize the real danger in the drug’s misuse.

But testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is not the same thing as steroid abuse. It’s just not. If you don’t trust the doctors who prescribe it to millions of men, trust your eyeballs. The UFC’s top stars don’t look like bodybuilders. They have lean and functional physiques.

The pythons Hulk Hogan was so proud of? That’s a show muscle—the bicep is a muscle for people who want to look strong, not people who want to be strong. After all, its sole purpose is to lift up the lower part of your arm. That’s it. Functional strength is built in your back, thighs and butt. Not in your arms.

The purpose of testosterone therapy isn’t to build giant and jacked super warriors, complete with comic-book-style physiques and powerhouse punching prowess. TRT is designed to bring people, typically men in their 30s and above who have seen the amount of testosterone their bodies produce dip, back up to normal levels of testosterone.

It doesn’t give athletes an unfair advantage over their opponents. If properly managed by the state athletic commission, a fighter will never even take particularly large doses. In Nevada, for example, a fighter looking to get approval for TRT has to submit at least five different tests to the commission. That doesn’t leave much room for abuse (for more on the ins and outs of drug testing, please see Mike Chiappetta’s exhaustive article at MMA Fighting).

That’s what makes critiques of the procedure so baffling. Take Fight Opinion’s Zach Arnold, an outspoken opponent of TRT, even if the fighter is under a doctor’s care and carefully scrutinized by the state:

The media frenzy towards the UFC if a fighter, on a UFC-regulated show, cripples or kills another fighter while using testosterone will be voluminous. Let’s not go down this path in combat sports. Clean up the mess now before someone pays a permanent price. Once a major incident happens, the stain will be hard to erase and the damage will be done.

This is where Zach and I need to part ways. The men and women who compete in the cage do so with the knowledge that things could go badly, very badly, at any moment. That’s what makes them so admirable—they understand the risks, accept them and enter that cage despite them.

So far, the sport has been lucky enough never to have a death inside the UFC’s Octagon. Even serious injuries have been few and far between. If it happens, and boxing’s tragic history tells us it inevitably will, it won’t be because an older fighter has increased his energy level with TRT. It will be because the sport is inherently and unavoidably dangerous.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 146: Mayhem Miller Says He’ll Quit If He Doesn’t Beat C.B. Dolloway

It’s no secret that Jason “Mayhem” Miller came dangerously close to being fired after his poor effort against Michael Bisping in December. I was the camera operator when Dana White told Heavy’s Megan Olivi that he wasn’t sure if Miller would get anothe…

It’s no secret that Jason “Mayhem” Miller came dangerously close to being fired after his poor effort against Michael Bisping in December. I was the camera operator when Dana White told Heavy’s Megan Olivi that he wasn’t sure if Miller would get another chance in the company.

It was apparent to us, standing there in White’s suite at the Palms Casino Resort, that Miller was on the cusp of losing his job after one fight back in the company and a great season of The Ultimate Fighter.

Thankfully, Miller has been given a reprieve. But he’ll still find his back up against the wall when he faces C.B. Dolloway at UFC 146. A loss by either man will likely send them packing from the company. According to Miller, who appeared last night on Spike TV’s MMA Uncensored Live, the UFC won’t even need to fire him if he loses to Dolloway. He’ll quit.

I’m on my own chopping block. If I lose to him, I’m quitting. I don’t even deserve to be in there. There’s not an easy fight in the UFC. He doesn’t deserve to be in there with me, and I’ll prove it. I’ll prove it in under a round, because…I tend to get tired in the second round. We’re both in a similar spot in our career I guess. We’re both on the chopping block. That’s fine. I’m really happy with that.

It’d be quite unfortunate to see Miller released from the UFC after just two fights. But if he puts on the kind of stinker performance he did against Bisping, it would be warranted.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Bellator: The 25 Best Fighters

Bellator Fighting Championships has quickly become the next best thing in mixed martial arts fight production over the last couple of years. Everyone knows the king of the hill is the The Ultimate Fighting Championship with their top talent stable of f…

Bellator Fighting Championships has quickly become the next best thing in mixed martial arts fight production over the last couple of years. Everyone knows the king of the hill is the The Ultimate Fighting Championship with their top talent stable of fighters and top-notch marketing machine.

Bellator is the reliable No. 2 with the intriguing tournament season and champion format that they have always thrilling fans with new and hungry talent. The Bellator roster of fighters is an absolute cobra pit of talent waiting to strike out and make a name for themselves at all cost.

Here are the 25 best fighters in Bellator.

Begin Slideshow