In Strikeforce, Even Champs Face Difficult Questions in Confusing Times

Filed under: StrikeforceYou can’t exactly call Strikeforce middleweight champ Luke Rockhold and former light heavyweight champ Mo Lawal disgruntled, but neither can you call them satisfied. As they sat down alongside Strikeforce’s Scott Coker for a lit…

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Luke RockholdYou can’t exactly call Strikeforce middleweight champ Luke Rockhold and former light heavyweight champ Mo Lawal disgruntled, but neither can you call them satisfied. As they sat down alongside Strikeforce’s Scott Coker for a little pre-fight Q&A with media members in Las Vegas last week, they did not seem like men who were thrilled about the state of their careers.

Instead, they seemed more like people who were making the best of a bad situation. They were dealing with it. They were getting by. They didn’t have much choice.

It’s a tough time to be a Strikeforce fighter. If you complain too loudly about being stuck in Zuffa’s second-tier organization, you risk the wrath of an upper management that is still trying to pretend that it’s a first-tier organization. If you stay too quiet, you risk becoming the closed mouth that never gets fed a top contender.

As Rockhold put it when he made the case for bringing some UFC fighters over to compete in Strikeforce: “You don’t want to get distracted from what you’re doing, but you’ve got to try and build those fights and let people know that we’re legit.”

Especially when you examine the alternatives, you have to admit that he has a point.

Take Rockhold’s current situation, for example. He’s the new 185-pound champ after taking the belt from Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza in front of a depressingly small crowd in Cincinnati this past fall. Now, for his first title defense, he gets journeyman fighter and UFC castoff Keith Jardine in a January 7 bout that will mark Jardine’s debut at 185 pounds. If Rockhold does nothing — if he plays the role of the quiet company man and acts like he’s happy to be taking a fight that can do almost nothing positive for his career at this point — where will that leave him?

When talking to reporters, Rockhold did his best to put a positive spin on the match-up, but even he had to admit that it was “far-fetched.”

“I was definitely just dumbfounded by that one,” Rockhold said. “It didn’t make much sense. But I started to think about it outside of the box a little bit, and this is my first main event. He does have a big name, so it brings some name value to the card, and it’ll bring some eyes and some ears to the card. Me beating him will show me to the rest of the public.”

That is, if the public is watching. The last time Rockhold fought was at the “Barnett vs. Kharitonov” event in September, which even Coker said was “something that I would say is below what would be acceptable for our standards” as far as the live gate went. The event featured a night full of great fights, but both Showtime and Zuffa took a hands-off approach to promoting it, resulting in a dismal rating on the TV side and an embarrassing live crowd.

Most fighters will tell you that stuff like low ratings and empty seats don’t bother them; they’re simply there to fight and win. But then, most fighters feel compelled to lie about things like that, if only to avoid making their employers look bad. One fighter who rarely feels such an obligation is “King” Mo, who also notched a victory on that same fight card in Cincinnati, and who has never shied away from some real talk.

“When I fought for the belt on CBS I thought, okay, people are going to be watching,” Lawal said. “When [Rockhold] was fighting ‘Jacare’ people didn’t give him a chance, but I thought it may be the perfect time to promote this fight, as well as Daniel Cormier and the guys in the heavyweight tournament, so the world could see the talent we have in Strikeforce and they could see my boys at AKA do some work. When I saw the arena I was like, man, this is a joke. I was kind of mad.”

Maybe anger is the only rational response. After all, the fighters at or near the top of the Strikeforce organization are elite, proven athletes. If guys like Rockhold and Lawal were free agents whose contracts had just expired in an organization Zuffa didn’t already own, you better believe the UFC would be eager to snatch them up and inject some new blood into the middleweight and light heavyweight divisions. But because Zuffa has a contract with Showtime — and because Showtime seems to want to continue airing Strikeforce, though without putting significantly more effort into making it a success — some quality fighters are stuck playing to smaller crowds and taking on lesser-known opponents.

Coker — ever the optimist when it comes to the brand he built from the ground up — stressed the benefits that Showtime’s free preview weekend could bring to this card, noting, “Instead of being in 20 million homes…you’re going to be in 70 or 75 million homes.”

Then again, with a 10 p.m. ET start time on Saturday, you’re also going up against the end of the Lions-Saints NFL playoff game that starts at 8 p.m. ET. You’re also sandwiched between a UFC pay-per-view and frantic streak of UFC events that runs all the way through January and February before pausing for a breath. If you’re an MMA fan — even a hardcore fan who knows enough to know why Rockhold-Jardine is an odd pairing for a main event title fight — you’re probably more likely to sit out a Strikeforce event than you are to miss Carlos Condit-Nick Diaz or the UFC on FOX.

This is just one of many problems for Strikeforce fighters. As the UFC cranks up the dial on its own events schedule from ‘intense’ to ‘insane,’ something’s got to give. It’s only reasonable that Strikeforce would be the first to get thrown overboard when resources get scarce. The top fighters will quickly run out of top opponents, and the public will continue to regard the UFC champs as the de facto MMA champs. Meanwhile, all Rockhold can do is beg for the UFC to send him a contender and let him prove himself, but without annoying the powers that be in the process.

“All the top ten guys or whatever are in the UFC,” Rockhold said. “I’d love to see some of the guys jump over, because I don’t think we get enough credit in Strikeforce. I think we’ve got ‘Jacare,’ me, and [Tim] Kennedy — I think all three of us can beat anybody in the top ten. I think if they want to build Strikeforce…a huge thing would be to bring over a top contender from the UFC and throw him in the mix here with all of us.”

Of course, when you pan over to Coker for his response on the likelihood of any of that happening, you get an answer that tells you everything you need to know: “You have to talk to Dana about that one.”

And Uncle Dana, if you haven’t noticed, is sort of busy with this whole UFC thing at the moment. Strikeforce fighters? They can leave a message at the beep.

 

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‘King’ Mo Lawal Talks ‘Rampage’ Jackson: We’re Going to Fight Eventually

Filed under: UFCNow that “King” Mo Lawal is just a few months away from the end of his Strikeforce contract, he’s begun to eye a future in the UFC and a potential opponent to start things off against.

Not surprisingly, that opponent is Quinton “Rampa…

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Mo LawalNow that “King” Mo Lawal is just a few months away from the end of his Strikeforce contract, he’s begun to eye a future in the UFC and a potential opponent to start things off against.

Not surprisingly, that opponent is Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, who enjoys poking fun at the man he calls “King Ho” in interviews, recently telling our own Ariel Helwani, “I’ll fight that chump.”

Lawal had it out with Jackson in a heated conversation captured on video two years ago, and the two have chipped away at each other several times since in interviews and over Twitter. Now Lawal says he’d like to meet Jackson at the UFC’s event in Japan this February, when his Strikeforce contract is conveniently set to expire, but Jackson seems less thrilled about the prospect, according to Lawal.

“This fool Rampage calls me out, and then people get mad when I respond? He’s a b—h in my eyes, because he didn’t respond. Maybe he’ll respond later, but the word is he wants to fight [Mauricio] ‘Shogun’ [Rua]. That’s whatever. But he called me out, so I’m going to respond,” Lawal told MMA Fighting.

As Lawal pointed out, Rua already has a fight scheduled with Dan Henderson for November. If Jackson really wants to fight in front of the Japanese fans when the UFC heads to Tokyo, he could do a lot worse than to take on Lawal, who also has a strong following across the Pacific.

But, Lawal insisted, he wouldn’t even be setting his sights on Jackson if the former UFC champ hadn’t taken a shot at him in a recent interview.

“When’s the last time you heard me mention Rampage’s name before he mentioned mine?” said Lawal. “I don’t care about him. He wasn’t even on my radar. But now, he wants to say something about me, he’s on my radar now. We’re going to bang eventually.”

As for whether it will happen in Japan, and whether Lawal’s next fight will really be in the UFC rather than Strikeforce, he admitted he had “no idea.”

“Who knows? We’ll see. My contract is up in February. …I’d like to fight, but I have no idea.”

 

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Fighter vs. Writer: UFC 136 Picks with ‘King’ Mo Lawal

Filed under: UFCLast time on Fighter vs. Writer, Michael Bisping picked with his heart rather than his head at UFC 135, and it cost him the victory against yours truly.

With UFC 136 nearly upon us, I challenged former Strikeforce light heavyweight cha…

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Mo LawalLast time on Fighter vs. Writer, Michael Bisping picked with his heart rather than his head at UFC 135, and it cost him the victory against yours truly.

With UFC 136 nearly upon us, I challenged former Strikeforce light heavyweight champion and noted agent provocateur of Twitter, “King” Mo Lawal. There are few fighters more knowledgeable about the fight game (or more confident in their own knowledge of the fight game) than Lawal, so I have my work cut out for me.

As usual, we’ll start at the top of the card and work our way down. Mr. Lawal, you have the honors…




Frankie Edgar vs. Gray Maynard

Lawal: Maynard via decision. “I love both fighters. Frankie’s a soldier, and so is Gray. Gray’s Team Thirsty. But I think Gray can pull off the decision, get a few takedowns early on and then coast. But if Frankie starts fast, he could be in trouble.”
Fowlkes: Edgar via decision. He surprised me last time with how well he dealt with Maynard’s wrestling skills, and that was after getting dropped and nearly finished. I think he sticks and moves his way to a win, and we can all finally move on our lives.

Jose Aldo vs. Kenny Florian

Lawal: Florian via decision. “This whole card is fighters I like, but man, I think Kenny’s going to pull it off. The southpaw stance, the elusiveness, inside leg kicks, and takedowns. I think he pull it off that way.”
Fowlkes: Aldo via decision. I just don’t see Florian being able to wrestle his way to a win before Aldo tenderizes his thighs with those kicks. The champ is too fast and has too many weapons at his disposal. Another weight class where Florian is better than everybody but the very best.

Chael Sonnen vs. Brian Stann

Lawal: Sonnen via decision. “I like Brian Stann, but I got to go with the wrestler on this one. Chael’s my boy. …His double-leg is tricky. No one’s figured out how to stop it. They all try and guillotine him and it never works. They get taken down. I don’t know how Brian Stann’s going to be able to stop that.”
Fowlkes: Stann via decision. I agree that the takedown will be hard to stop, but if Stann can manage it I think this becomes his fight to lose. Sonnen’s been off for over a year, and Stann’s had a lot of time to hang out in the gym and plan on how to shut down the double-leg.

Leonard Garcia vs. Nam Phan

Lawal: Nobody. “I think this fight’s going to be a disappointment. Not a disappointment, but there’s going to be more game-planing, and it’ll be more technical than people think. It’s a toss-up. It’s going to come down to who made the adjustments.” Even when pressed, Lawal refused to make a pick. You know what that means. Now he can only get the win on this one if it ends in a draw or, as has actually happened before, doesn’t take place at all.
Fowlkes: Phan via decision. I expect Garcia to show up telling himself he’s not just going to brawl, but then I expect him to get hit once and forget all about that. If Phan can avoid getting sucked into a street fight, like I think he can, he outpoints Garcia clearly enough this time that even the worst judges can’t miss it.

Melvin Guillard vs. Joe Lauzon

Lawal:
Guillard via TKO. “Stoppage. First round. I think he’s much better, much more dynamic, and he’s more mature now. He’s a different fighter.”
Fowlkes: Guillard via TKO. I don’t know if it’ll come in the first round, but it will come. I don’t see Lauzon being able to get him on the mat, at least not for very long, and Guillard is too fast and too powerful on the feet.

Mo Lawal picks: Maynard, Florian, Sonnen, Nobody, Guillard
Ben Fowlkes picks: Edgar, Aldo, Stann, Phan, Guillard

 

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AKA Goes Undefeated at Strikeforce, to Mild Surprise of at Least One Team Member

Filed under: StrikeforceCINCINNATI — Heading into Saturday night’s Strikeforce event, American Kickboxing Academy middleweight Luke Rockhold predicted a perfect 4-0 night for himself and his teammates. It was an ambitious prediction that ended up bein…

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CINCINNATI — Heading into Saturday night’s Strikeforce event, American Kickboxing Academy middleweight Luke Rockhold predicted a perfect 4-0 night for himself and his teammates. It was an ambitious prediction that ended up being accurate, but it also seemed at least somewhat like the kind of thing you say to boost everyone’s confidence rather you really believe it or not.

But Rockhold, who took a close decision over Ronaldo Souza to claim the Strikeforce middleweight title, insisted he knew all along that his squad would end the night undefeated.

“I don’t speak nonsense,” he told reporters at the post-fight press conference. “I was just really confident in my team.”

One of Rockhold’s coaches — AKA’s Javier Mendez — wasn’t quite so sure, however.

“I was confident, honestly, with 3-1,” Mendez told MMA Fighting. “I was hoping for four, but my concern was Mike Kyle.”

As Mendez explained, it wasn’t that he thought Kyle was outmatched against Marcos Rogerio de Lima on the prelim portion of the card. Instead, he was worried about whether Kyle had been healthy enough to adequately prepare for the fight.

“He just got through going through a broken hand. He didn’t get to spar [in training],” Mendez said. “We didn’t want him sparring because we were afraid he would re-break his hand. So I was concerned with him. I wasn’t concerned with Mo [Lawal], wasn’t concerned with Daniel [Cormier], but I was most confident in Luke.”

As it turned out, Rockhold’s fight was the biggest nail-biter of the night for the AKA crew. He and Souza went back and forth for five rounds, the outcome was difficult to call as they stood in the center of the cage awaiting the judges’ decision.

“I felt good about it,” Rockhold said afterward. “I might have got a little rocked, but I came back strong and I think I won some rounds.”

Mendez was similarly confident, but even he couldn’t justify giving all five rounds to Rockhold, as judge Bruce Snell did.

“I thought we had it for sure, based on the fifth round, how he came out and what he did. It was pretty close there, but when he came out and did the most damage, being the aggressor, I knew he had it,” Mendez said. “But the score of 50-45 for Luke? Whoever that was, no. That was wrong. I thought it was 48-47 for Luke.”

However you score it, the AKA squad went home unbeaten thanks to the decision wins for Rockhold and Kyle, and knockout victories by Lawal and Cormier. With that, the whole team returned to San Jose, Calif. with smiles on their faces and a renewed swagger in their step. Just ask the new Strikeforce middleweight champ.

“AKA,” Rockhold grinned. “Watch out. Don’t step on our turf.”

 

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A Friendship Born on the Mats and Forged in the Poverty of the Past

Filed under: StrikeforceCINCINNATI — Now that they’re over, it’s easy for Daniel Cormier and Mo Lawal to laugh about their lean years in the world of amateur wrestling. When they were walking around broke most of the time, however, it wasn’t quite so …

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CINCINNATI — Now that they’re over, it’s easy for Daniel Cormier and Mo Lawal to laugh about their lean years in the world of amateur wrestling. When they were walking around broke most of the time, however, it wasn’t quite so funny.

“Wrestling — even wrestling at the highest level — we weren’t getting paid nothing,” Lawal said at Thursday’s Strikeforce press conference.

In fact, Cormier added, they were making so little on their USA Wrestling stipend that once they both went to the bank and cashed their paychecks all in dollar bills, just to make it seem like more. And now?

“Let’s just say we can’t cash our checks from this weekend all in ones,” Cormier grinned.

Cormier and Lawal go back a long way, to when both were college wrestlers in Oklahoma and neither thought he’d ever make much of a living at it. Back then, Cormier was almost like a big brother and mentor to Lawal.

As Cormier remembers it: “[Lawal] wanted to learn so much that he was just hanging on you. He was like, teach me this, teach me that. Then he just got so much better. He was at Central Oklahoma. He had no connection to Oklahoma State. But he would come up in the summer to wrestling camps. He was like a sponge. It was like, well, Mo’s here. Guess we got to wrestle with him. Then he got so good we wanted him around.”

But when it came to making the move into MMA, it was Lawal who led the way, spurred on by another mentor who had learned all he cared to about getting by on what little money is available for amateur wrestlers in the United States.

Matt Lindland told me, ‘Look, you’re wasting your time wrestling,'” Lawal said. “I was like, what do you mean? He told me, ‘You’re going to be broke.'”

Once Lindland started telling him what he made from fighting, as well as from seminars and sponsorships, Lawal knew it was time to make the leap. As a wrestler, he said, he was lucky to make $25,000 in a good year.

“At one point I was making $500 a month and I thought I was balling,” Lawal said.



When he took up MMA, that all changed. Soon Cormier couldn’t help but notice.

“It’s hard to miss his chain. It’s hard to miss him buying a Cadillac with ostrich skin seats. He has ostrich seats, ‘King Mo’ in the headrest. I was like, I have to get some of this.”

Making the switch from wrestling to MMA required some obvious adjustments, like getting used to being punched in the face, but it wasn’t as if neither of them knew what that was like before putting on the four-ounce gloves. As Cormier explained, when they went to wrestle in Russia they’d frequently end up in fist fights on the mat.

“We had plenty of fights,” Cormier said. “We fought Russians. You can find mine on YouTube. Mo was fighting the guy right before.”

But once they got into MMA, their wrestling base allowed them to dictate where the fight took place, which is helpful when your stand-up skills haven’t yet caught up with your ground game.

Now Cormier’s on the verge of taking on Antonio Silva in the Strikeforce heavyweight Grand Prix and Lawal, a former Strikeforce champion, is getting set to take on Roger Gracie in his first fight since losing his title.

They’ve both come a long way, but neither has forgotten where he came from. They never get the chance. Not with the other around as a constant reminder.

“I’ve known Mo for a long time,” Cormier said. “I’m not talking about ‘King’ Mo. I’m talking about Muhammad Lawal with the afro. I’m talking about ashy Muhammad Lawal.”

“I wasn’t ashy,” Lawal interrupted.

Cormier shot him a look.

“Okay, the one thing he wasn’t was ashy, but he did have the afro.”

 

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With Media Focus on Nick Diaz and UFC, Strikeforce Fighters Battle for Attention

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Mo LawalCINCINNATI — He couldn’t have been the only one who was thinking it, but “King” Mo Lawal was the first to say it at the Strikeforce pre-fight press conference on Thursday afternoon.

“I was hoping there would be more people out here, more media, more questions, but really I guess ya’ll don’t care about us that much,” Lawal said. In his eyes, Saturday’s Strikeforce event on Showtime looks to be a strong card that many fans will likely miss “because everybody’s worried about other issues instead of the fights this weekend — I’m just being real.”

Looking around at the sparsely attended presser — as well as at the frenzy of online attention being paid to the Nick Diaz fiasco in the UFC — you have to admit that he has a point.

At least on paper, this may be one of the best Strikeforce cards in recent memory. But is anybody paying attention? And if not, is Zuffa, the parent company of both Strikeforce and the UFC, planning to do anything to change that?

“It’s disappointing,” said Josh Barnett, one of the four Grand Prix semifinalists on the card. “I’d really like it if we could get a little bit of back-up from the UFC on this. Just a blurb. I’ve talked to some of the fighters and the conversation has come up, why can’t Dana [White] do one little video blog, one little piece saying, please come watch these fights because they’re good fights? I don’t know. Maybe he doesn’t think they’re good fights.”

On some level, the drop-off is understandable. With Diaz bailing on this week’s UFC 137 press conference and being pulled from the title fight with Georges St. Pierre, UFC president Dana White has had his share of fires to put out.

Then again, the UFC did schedule several media events during the same week as the Strikeforce Grand Prix, but all of them were to promote a UFC fight card that’s still more than a month away. If you take that as an indicator of where Zuffa’s priorities lie, it’s not a good sign for Strikeforce.

As Lawal sees it, the lack of attention from both the media and Strikeforce’s parent company is an insult to the heavyweights in the Grand Prix, as well as to “Jacare” Souza and Luke Rockhold, who will vie for the Strikeforce middleweight title at the U.S. Bank Arena on Saturday night.

“[Rockhold]’s fighting for a title, you got two fights in the heavyweight tournament. …It’s not to me, but it’s a slap in the face to them,” Lawal said.

Of course, calling out the Zuffa brass right now seems like a risky proposition, since it’s still unclear what White and company plan to do with Strikeforce or its fighters. This is the same organization that just snatched a title shot away from Diaz for the kind of antics he used to regularly get away with in Strikeforce, after all.

Criticizing them could have its risks, though Lawal said he refuses to be swayed from calling it as he sees it, regardless of what happened to someone who simply failed to live up to his promotional responsibilities.

“I don’t give a [expletive],” he said. “I’m going to speak my mind. What are they going to do, say ‘Respect the organization or you’re going to be out forever?’ Get the [expletive] out of here with that [expletive]. I’m just keeping it real. Make sure you put that in there.”

Diaz no-showing a press conference, however, that’s a different story, Lawal said.

“I don’t know what happened, but it’s not like he was speaking his mind, saying ‘I think this press conference is dumb.’ He just didn’t show up. Now, speaking out and telling the truth is a different story than not doing something that helps the fight. That’s on Diaz. I think he’s a hell of a fighter, but like I said, here we are talking about Diaz instead of this event.”

As for Rockhold, he didn’t expect to get much press for his middleweight title fight to begin with, he said. As he put it, “People don’t know who I am. They’re going to find out, though.”

And sure, this weekend’s event was being buried in the headlines by Diaz and other UFC news, but he’s finding a way to stay optimistic.

“Yeah, it’s being overshadowed, but at least it’s overshadowed by Strikeforce guys,” Rockhold said. “Nick Diaz, Alistair Overeem — at least we’re being overshadowed by our own people.”

But then, if this is all the attention even a stacked Strikeforce card can muster from fans and its own parent company, what does that say about the future for these fighters? If a former Strikeforce employee’s antics garner more attention than actual fights by the current employees, how much longer until there is no Strikeforce at all? And what then?

“I don’t want to jump to any conclusions here, but we might be looking at the end of something,” said Rockhold. “We’re going to have to perform and go out with a bang, and I think this is a good opportunity.”

As for Lawal, he just shrugged when asked what lay ahead for himself and the other fighters on the Strikeforce roster.

“I have no idea,” he said. “No one does. Do you?”

 

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Mo LawalCINCINNATI — He couldn’t have been the only one who was thinking it, but “King” Mo Lawal was the first to say it at the Strikeforce pre-fight press conference on Thursday afternoon.

“I was hoping there would be more people out here, more media, more questions, but really I guess ya’ll don’t care about us that much,” Lawal said. In his eyes, Saturday’s Strikeforce event on Showtime looks to be a strong card that many fans will likely miss “because everybody’s worried about other issues instead of the fights this weekend — I’m just being real.”

Looking around at the sparsely attended presser — as well as at the frenzy of online attention being paid to the Nick Diaz fiasco in the UFC — you have to admit that he has a point.

At least on paper, this may be one of the best Strikeforce cards in recent memory. But is anybody paying attention? And if not, is Zuffa, the parent company of both Strikeforce and the UFC, planning to do anything to change that?

“It’s disappointing,” said Josh Barnett, one of the four Grand Prix semifinalists on the card. “I’d really like it if we could get a little bit of back-up from the UFC on this. Just a blurb. I’ve talked to some of the fighters and the conversation has come up, why can’t Dana [White] do one little video blog, one little piece saying, please come watch these fights because they’re good fights? I don’t know. Maybe he doesn’t think they’re good fights.”


On some level, the drop-off is understandable. With Diaz bailing on this week’s UFC 137 press conference and being pulled from the title fight with Georges St. Pierre, UFC president Dana White has had his share of fires to put out.

Then again, the UFC did schedule several media events during the same week as the Strikeforce Grand Prix, but all of them were to promote a UFC fight card that’s still more than a month away. If you take that as an indicator of where Zuffa’s priorities lie, it’s not a good sign for Strikeforce.

As Lawal sees it, the lack of attention from both the media and Strikeforce’s parent company is an insult to the heavyweights in the Grand Prix, as well as to “Jacare” Souza and Luke Rockhold, who will vie for the Strikeforce middleweight title at the U.S. Bank Arena on Saturday night.

“[Rockhold]’s fighting for a title, you got two fights in the heavyweight tournament. …It’s not to me, but it’s a slap in the face to them,” Lawal said.

Of course, calling out the Zuffa brass right now seems like a risky proposition, since it’s still unclear what White and company plan to do with Strikeforce or its fighters. This is the same organization that just snatched a title shot away from Diaz for the kind of antics he used to regularly get away with in Strikeforce, after all.

Criticizing them could have its risks, though Lawal said he refuses to be swayed from calling it as he sees it, regardless of what happened to someone who simply failed to live up to his promotional responsibilities.

“I don’t give a [expletive],” he said. “I’m going to speak my mind. What are they going to do, say ‘Respect the organization or you’re going to be out forever?’ Get the [expletive] out of here with that [expletive]. I’m just keeping it real. Make sure you put that in there.”

Diaz no-showing a press conference, however, that’s a different story, Lawal said.

“I don’t know what happened, but it’s not like he was speaking his mind, saying ‘I think this press conference is dumb.’ He just didn’t show up. Now, speaking out and telling the truth is a different story than not doing something that helps the fight. That’s on Diaz. I think he’s a hell of a fighter, but like I said, here we are talking about Diaz instead of this event.”

As for Rockhold, he didn’t expect to get much press for his middleweight title fight to begin with, he said. As he put it, “People don’t know who I am. They’re going to find out, though.”

And sure, this weekend’s event was being buried in the headlines by Diaz and other UFC news, but he’s finding a way to stay optimistic.

“Yeah, it’s being overshadowed, but at least it’s overshadowed by Strikeforce guys,” Rockhold said. “Nick Diaz, Alistair Overeem — at least we’re being overshadowed by our own people.”

But then, if this is all the attention even a stacked Strikeforce card can muster from fans and its own parent company, what does that say about the future for these fighters? If a former Strikeforce employee’s antics garner more attention than actual fights by the current employees, how much longer until there is no Strikeforce at all? And what then?

“I don’t want to jump to any conclusions here, but we might be looking at the end of something,” said Rockhold. “We’re going to have to perform and go out with a bang, and I think this is a good opportunity.”

As for Lawal, he just shrugged when asked what lay ahead for himself and the other fighters on the Strikeforce roster.

“I have no idea,” he said. “No one does. Do you?”

 

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