Rodrigo Botti Talks Blackzilians, Joining Rashad and Overeem, and More

The Blackzilians have yet another man on board.And quite possibly the wisest of the bunch: Rodrigo “The Brave” Botti (3-0).”I have always been inspired to accomplish many things. I have always told myself that I can accomplish many things if I just bel…

The Blackzilians have yet another man on board.

And quite possibly the wisest of the bunch: Rodrigo “The Brave” Botti (3-0).

“I have always been inspired to accomplish many things. I have always told myself that I can accomplish many things if I just believe,” Botti told Bleacher Report.

What makes Botti the wisest?

Few fail to realize that while Botti is certainly an accomplished mixed martial artist, he speaks four different languages, holds a law degree, and has won a number of championships in the art of Brazilian jiu-jitsu.

Needless to say, Botti is excited to bring his talents to Deerfield Beach, FL, to train with some of the best mixed martial artists in the world.

“I am very, very excited to join the Blackzilians,” said Botti. “I feel that I will be able to learn many things from some of the best fighters in the world.

“I believe that I can also bring many things to the table and help teach some of the other guys. I’m most looking forward to learning many things from Rashad Evans, Alistair Overeem, and the great group of guys we have.”

While Botti is certainly bringing world-class talent to an already electrifying pool of fighters, he doesn’t necessarily have the numbers many would expect.

Botti has fought just three times since 2005.

But, in all three bouts, Botti has come out on top by finishing his opponent before the final bell could ring.

“Things haven’t always worked out the way I’ve wanted them to in the past,” said Botti. “I’ve only fought three times in the past few years because I have faced several injuries.”

“I feel that I have overcome these injuries and I’m ready for my future as a Blackzilian. I’m also excited to have the opportunity to fight under Authentic Sports Management. All three of my fights have been wins and I want to continue fighting more and more,” said Botti.

While Botti is uncertain of who his next opponent will be, one thing is for sure—he’ll be ready.

“I really don’t have too much of a life outside of the gym,” said Botti. “I spend all my time there, sometimes up to 10-12 hours a day.”

“I just want to keep bettering myself every single day.”

 

For additional information, follow Garrett Derr on Twitter.

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The East Resurgent: Why Karate, Taekwondo and Judo Are Making a Comeback in MMA

If we were to examine the styles most commonly adopted by Mixed Martial Arts competitors it would be difficult not to conclude that Muay Thai, wrestling and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu lie at the core of our sport.Indeed, it is debatable whether any successful…

If we were to examine the styles most commonly adopted by Mixed Martial Arts competitors it would be difficult not to conclude that Muay Thai, wrestling and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu lie at the core of our sport.

Indeed, it is debatable whether any successful competitor can claim total ignorance of these disciplines, so embedded are they in our new, international fighting culture – if MMA is, as some commentators argue, becoming a “style” in its own right, then our very own Frankenstein’s monster is wielding Thai kicks, shooting thunderous doubles and rending flesh from bone with Rio’s slickest subs.

This much is undoubtedly true, yet, as any martial arts fan will excitedly tell you, the Octagon is becoming increasingly crowded as of late – Thai, wrestling and BJJ are losing their hold on the center of the cage, being forced to share the limelight with techniques drawn from a range of previously marginalized disciplines.

The world’s fastest-growing, fastest-changing sport is on the move once again, leading us to ask which styles fighters are using to broaden their combative horizons, and why? Why are fighters using Karate footwork, Taekwondo kicks and Judo throws over say, movements drawn from Shaolin Kung Fu and Aikido? To find out, we must examine what these re-emerging styles offer the aspiring fighter, also discussing why knowledge of the “big three” alone will never lead a competitor to success from this point onwards.

We will first examine both Karate and Taekwondo, highlighting aspects of these arts which can push an MMA fighter’s game to the next level.

Our first point of note relates to stances and footwork – while Thai fighters have become famous for their plodding, stalking movement, we are now seeing fewer and fewer fighters achieving success with this approach.

The striking game is changing – has already changed, in fact, selecting fighters who use the more hand-oriented “Dutch style” of kickboxing over proponents of pure Muay Thai.

With 4oz gloves and increasingly-skilled competitors, successful fighters increasingly eschew the “rock-em-sock-em robots” approach, looking instead for ways to avoid being hit; Karate is of obvious interest to those who seek to improve their evasive movement – many Japanese styles like Wado-Ryu and Shotokan emphasize diagonal movement and “in and out” footwork, allowing competitors to augment their traditional boxing/kickboxing defense with a sophisticated method of cutting angles, leaving opponents with nothing but air to counter.

Alongside Taekwondo, Karate training also provides strikers with the ability to fire “chambered” kicks, circumventing the need to “switch step” and telegraph the slower, albeit more powerful, Thai kicks we normally associate with MMA. Indeed, a new generation of fighters are beginning to add Taekwondo to their training, following in the footsteps of Anderson Silva, Ben Henderson and Anthony Pettis by diversifying their kicking game and reaping the multiple benefits of improved leg dexterity in the cage.

No-one is suggesting that boxing and Muay Thai have become useless in MMA – fighters arriving in the Octagon with nothing but a Karate or Taekwondo belt around their waist will have their legs battered black and blue, as we would expect; rather, what we are seeing is an MMA “arms race” – as competitors refine commonly trained styles, both up-and-comers and prescient veterans seek to unveil weapons that opponents do not regularly encounter, putting a spanner in the best-laid game plans and maximizing their “ways to win”.

 

Contrary to what we might think, it is not only the Western boxer or seasoned Thai fighter who may want to think about grabbing a phonebook in MMA’s current climate of change – grapplers too must keep their finger on the pulse, paying attention to the interest shown in Judo by many successful competitors, including both Nick and Nate Diaz.

What does a Judo player bring to the table? Ask any BJJ player who has rolled with a champion Judoka, and they will immediately point out three things: strength, balance and posture. Judo players are nigh-on impossible to take down, hard to keep down and a nightmare from the top position, especially when pitted against guard specialists.

This much we know, and have always known about Judo, yet the takedowns found in the “gentle art” have often proved too technical or “gi-centric” to be applied successfully in MMA – until now, that is, as fighters like Manny Gamburyan and Ronda Rousey (in a manner not dissimilar to one Fedor Emelianenko) begin to use Judo in conjunction with a comprehensive “no-gi” skill set, countering Greco-style clinch takedowns with a series of beautiful leg elevation throws and sweeps.

As with Muay Thai, while no fighter will be able to enter the Octagon without solid fundamentals derived from wrestling and BJJ, we may yet see a time in the near future when the Uchi-mata is learned alongside the double-leg shot as a “bread-and-butter” technique.

The point, ladies and gentlemen, is this: one day, each and every useful technique will have been adopted into the MMA canon, and fighters will only be able to get better at what they already know, being unable to add new strings to their bow – that day, however, is a long, long way off.

For brevity’s sake, this article has neglected to analyze the one-thousand-and-one new movements being practiced in MMA, ranging from the beautiful guards associated with Eddie Bravo’s 10th Planet system to flamboyant strikes drawn from systems like Capoeira.

While we may not think of MMA’s infancy when we watch a master like Anderson Silva strutting his stuff, the fact remains that our sport is very, very young – expect to see more Judo, more Karate, more Taekwondo; when these styles become normalised, expect the unexpected, perhaps even some Kung Fu. As MMA fans, we live in an era of perpetual change – sit back and enjoy the sheer dynamism of our sport.

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Dominick Cruz Exhibits His Domination over Urijah Faber on the Ultimate Fighter

The latest installment of the The Ultimate Fighter has not been long in establishing itself as a microcosm of reality. It is a reality show after all, but the reality I refer to is not the exhibition of real people enacting an unscripted performan…

The latest installment of the The Ultimate Fighter has not been long in establishing itself as a microcosm of reality. It is a reality show after all, but the reality I refer to is not the exhibition of real people enacting an unscripted performance.

The reality of which I speak is a reflection of the real. The reality of which I speak is this: Dominick Cruz has Urijah Faber‘s number.

The current contest between rivals began in earnest when Team Faber’s Daron Cruickshank and Team Cruz’s James Vick squared off. The bout was selected by Faber, who won the right to choose the first fight by handing the first overall selection to his adversary.

Faber tried to play it safe, matching his third selection against Cruz’s fifth. During the early stages of the bout, it appeared as though Faber’s selection was a clever one, as Cruickshank picked apart a hesitant Vick.

Then everything changed. Cruickshank was caught with a knee to the dome and went night night.

The knee did not just change the course of the fight, nor just the course of the show. The moment that knee landed was the moment a reality show became reality—Cruz had defeated Faber.

Things got real.

After eliminating Faber’s third pick, Cruz decided to go for the jugular. He called out his No. 1 selection, Justin Lawrence, and deferred the right to choose an opponent to Faber.

The move left Dana White flabbergasted and Faber’s team quite literally speechless. The suspended animation of live television was dispelled only when Cruz finally intervened, calling Cristiano Marcello out of his chair.

On fight night, Lawrence sat the Brazilian right back down.

Beyond the fact that the win kept matchmaking rights on Cruz’s side, it removed Team Faber’s second fighter from the tournament.

Not one to switch up what was working, Cruz dropped the hammer by calling out Faber’s first selection, Al Iaquinta, to tussle with Myles Jury, Cruz’s third pick.

Team Faber needs a win like nothing else in this matchup. A loss means the team’s top three fighters are out, while Cruz builds a 3-0 lead, all the while keeping an ace up his sleeve in Sam Sicilia.

While Iaquinta looked impressive in the show’s first episode, Jury was the higher-regarded of the two entering the contest. And despite the inversion of expectations created by selection order, Jury enters this fight as the favorite.

A win for Team Cruz would give Dominick a stranglehold in The Ultimate Fighter.

Though it’s still early, the advantageous position Cruz finds himself in is emblematic of his growing dominance over archenemy Urijah Faber.

As two of the most successful fighters in the UFC’s bantamweight stable, Cruz and Faber are quite familiar with each other. Each combatant has defeated the other, with Faber reigning victorious in the first match, back in March of 2007, and Cruz winning the second in July of 2011.

Rather than multiple bouts producing a bevy of warm hugs and mutual respect, animosity has been born and born anew each time the two enter the cage together. They say familiarity breeds contempt, and the relationship between these two 135-pounders does the cliche nothing but justice. 

But what was once a rivalry between equal adversaries is beginning to look more and more like a one-sided affair.

Take a look at the developments:

Cruz has not lost since his first fight with Urijah, nearly five years ago. Faber has gone 8-4 since then.

Cruz is entering his prime as a 26-year-old. Faber is exiting his prime at 32.

The most recent contest between the two saw Cruz winning a convincing decision, shutting down Faber’s wrestling and out-striking “The California Kid.”

The two are scheduled to hook ’em up in a rubber match this July, and just as it stand with The Ultimate Fighter, all signs point to “The Dominator” coming away victorious.

If you’re curious as to what can be gleaned from The Ultimate Fighter in regards to who will win the fight between coaches, the answer is nothing. The show is not the reason Cruz will once again defeat Faber; the show is simply another venue in which Cruz will beat Faber.

The Ultimate Fighter is not the beginning, nor the end, for the rivals—just another chapter. A coming-of-age-story for Cruz, and the backslide towards an unhappy ending for Faber.

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Dominick Cruz Reenacts Awkward Urijah Faber Moment from TUF

UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz isn’t going to let rival Urijah Faber forget one of the most memorable moments so far in season 15 of The Ultimate Fighter. This video—shot by Cruz himself—reminds everyone of the mind games going bac…

UFC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz isn’t going to let rival Urijah Faber forget one of the most memorable moments so far in season 15 of The Ultimate Fighter. This video—shot by Cruz himself—reminds everyone of the mind games going back and forth between the two former WEC champs.

During the second episode of TUF, Cruz’s team gained control after James Vick knocked out Daron Cruickshank in the very first round.

When given the chance to choose an opponent for Justin Lawrence, Cruz gave Faber the control back and told him to pick his “best guy.”

Faber couldn’t make a pick and decided to let someone stand up and take the fight. Nobody responded, and Cruz decided to make the pick himself.

During episode three, one of the more anticipated fights between Team Faber member Cristiano Marcello and Lawrence took place. Lawrence won in the second round by knockout, giving Team Cruz their second victory.

With two of the favorites now out, both from Team Faber, Cruz definitely is gaining control in more ways than one. Faber’s team could be lacking a bit of confidence, but there is still time for both teams to make a statement.

Cruz and Faber will fight for a third time after the season is over later this year. While Faber was victorious during their first meeting in 2007, Cruz has since gone undefeated and beat Faber in their rematch from last year.

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UFC 147: Is It Safe for Chael Sonnen to Fight in Brazil?

The middleweight championship rematch between Anderson Silva and Chael Sonnen has been rumored to go down in Brazil for quite some time. However, now that it’s officially announced, the MMA world is not only eagerly anticipating the match-up, but…

The middleweight championship rematch between Anderson Silva and Chael Sonnen has been rumored to go down in Brazil for quite some time. However, now that it’s officially announced, the MMA world is not only eagerly anticipating the match-up, but also the crowd reaction that awaits Sonnen.

The self-proclaimed “UFC champion” has verbally gone after the entire country of Brazil on numerous occasions, dropping pipe bombs such as:

“Greetings from Sao Paulo! I’m learning the language: breakdancing in the Special Olympics is called Capoiera and cocaine is called brunch”

“Brazil likes to boast that it’s the power seat of MMA, yet it’s so-called champions bow to the man behind ‘Under Siege 2.’…….. Classy”

Naturally, most Brazilians haven’t exactly found this humorous, and due to the country’s unfortunate history of riots during sporting events, the UFC is going to have to dramatically up security around the challenger.

While there is little doubt that the UFC is going to go above and beyond to protect its fighters, especially in a potentially hostile environment, safety is going to be a major concern for this event.

With the UFC growing more and more popular and a huge contract with FOX still getting off the ground, there is no room for any incidents that could give the sport a black eye. If Sonnen is indeed attacked, then the progress the sport has made over the past eight years will take a major blow.

This isn’t a knock on the Brazilian crowds, as we all know that most incidents occur due to just a few people acting foolish, but the risk is real and it needs to be taken seriously.

I hope there is no reason for fans to be concerned and the event goes off without a hitch. However, Sonnen’s lack of respect towards the Brazilian crowd makes this event feel a lot more risky then it should. 

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Why Anderson Silva vs Chael Sonnen Is the Biggest Rematch in UFC History

“Anderson Silva, you absolutely suck, Super Bowl weekend, the biggest rematch in the history of the business. I’m calling you out Silva, but we’re upping the stakes. I beat you, you leave the division. You beat me, I will leave the UFC forever.” Thes…

Anderson Silva, you absolutely suck, Super Bowl weekend, the biggest rematch in the history of the business. I’m calling you out Silva, but we’re upping the stakes. I beat you, you leave the division. You beat me, I will leave the UFC forever.” These were the words of Chael Sonnen in a post-fight interview after his UFC 136 victory over Brian Stann.

He didn’t have the date right, he has since backed off the “loser leaves town” premise and obviously Anderson Silva by no means “sucks,” but Sonnen did get one thing right—Anderson Silva vs Chael Sonnen will be the biggest rematch in the history of the UFC.

Rather than meeting on Super Bowl weekend, it appears the rematch will be a summer blockbuster. According to UFC.com the date and venue have now been set and we will finally see the rematch we’ve been waiting for on June 23 at Joao Havelange Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The massive soccer stadium seats approximately 47,000 but the live attendance record set by UFC 129 of over 55,000 is expected to be eclipsed by the landmark bout. According to Dana White we can expect this to be the event of the year:

“This will be the biggest sporting event of the year. Bigger than the NFL, the NBA, you name it – UFC 147 will be the biggest.  The whole world wants to see this fight between Silva and Sonnen.  We are broadcast in over 150 countries in 22 languages in half a billion homes.  Wherever those fans are, they are going to be watching this fight.”

Let’s take a look at this match up that is now almost two years in the making and why it will be the biggest rematch in the history of the business.

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