UFC 132 Fight Card: Hooters Octagon Girl Grand Prix (Round 1, Match-Up 3)

Tenika Aquino (left)

Hometown: San Diego, California
Aquino works at Hooters of Natomas, California. She haa worked at Hooters for three years and her favorite thing to do at work is to hula hoop.
Aquino is also a graphic design st…

Tenika Aquino (left)



Hometown: San Diego, California

Aquino works at Hooters of Natomas, California. She haa worked at Hooters for three years and her favorite thing to do at work is to hula hoop.


Aquino is also a graphic design student, who loves listening to music, working out and hanging out with her best friends. She is also admittedly addicted to shopping and her cell phone. 


Aquino owns two toy Yorkshire terriers and is a fan of the San Diego Chargers. She dreams of traveling the world one day.


Hali Konomos (right)


Hometown: Tampa, FL


Konomos is 23 years old and just started her Master’s degree program in Rehabilitation & Mental Health Counseling at the University of South Florida. School is very important to Konomos and is a huge part in achieving her goal of becoming a Licensed Mental Health Counselor.


Konomos has worked at the  North Tampa Hooters for five years as a server, bartender, trainer and classroom teacher.


When not working, Konomos enjoys laying on the sand at the beach in a bikini, soaking up the sun, drinking a nice cold Coors Light and listening to some Kenny Chesney.


Konomos also loves to travel. Her favorite place she has ever been to was Greece.


Konomos never misses a game during football season and she is also a Red Sox fan.

UFC 132 Fight Card: Hooters Octagon Girl Grand Prix (Round 1, Match-Up 3)

Tenika AquinoSan Diego, CaliforniaABOUT ME!Hi, my name is Tenika from Hooters of Natomas in California, but you can call me Teenie! I have worked at Hooters for three amazing years. My favorite thing to do at work is hula hoop! I am a graphic design st…

Tenika Aquino

San Diego, California

ABOUT ME!

Hi, my name is Tenika from Hooters of Natomas in California, but you can call me Teenie! I have worked at Hooters for three amazing years. My favorite thing to do at work is hula hoop! I am a graphic design student, who loves listening to music, working out, and hanging out with my best friends. Like most girls, I am addicted to shopping and my cell phone. I adore my two toy yorkshire terriers and the San Diego Chargers!! I dream of traveling the world one day and being successful at everything I accomplish.

Hali Konomos

Tampa, FL

ABOUT ME!

Hi, everyone! My name is Hali, I’m 23 years old and I live in Tampa, FL. I just started my Master’s degree in Rehabilitation & Mental Health Counseling at the University of South Florida and I love it. School is very important to me and is a huge part in achieving my goal of becoming a Licensed Mental Health Counselor. I have worked at North Tampa Hooters for 5 years as a server, bartender, trainer, and classroom teacher. I have been fortunate enough to have some amazing opportunities because of my job. Some of you USF Bulls fans may have seen me on the field for “Hit Hootie” during the football games or “Find Hootie” at the basketball games. And some of you golf-lovers may have met me in the Hooters tent at the Transitions Golf Tournament. When I’m not working my favorite place to be is at the beach laying on the sand in a bikini, soaking up the sun, drinking a nice cold Coors Light, and listening to some Kenny Chesney. I also love to travel. The most amazing place I have ever been to was Greece. It is a beautful country full of history and the culture there is so relaxed and friendly. During football season I never miss a game (Go, Bucs and Bulls!!) and as far as baseball goes I’m a Red Sox fan. Work hard, play harder, and live life to the fullest! =)

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UFC 130’s 5 Moves Forward: "Rampage," Johnson, Story and Stann Winners

UFC 130 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas shuffled the contender decks this Memorial Day Weekend. Here are five moves that are shaping up and shaking up the UFC’s weight classes.     1) “Rampage” Next for Jon J…

UFC 130 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas shuffled the contender decks this Memorial Day Weekend. Here are five moves that are shaping up and shaking up the UFC’s weight classes.    

1) “Rampage” Next for Jon Jones for Real

The UFC knows the value of continuing Jon Jones’ momentum relies heavily on who the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship defends his belt against first. If a fractured hand Jackson nursed while securing a clean, stock win against Matt Hamill Saturday night heals in time for him to fight Jon Jones next, he should be chosen over Lyoto Machida as the no. 1 contender more for his blockbuster appeal than his razor-thin decision against Machida last November at UFC 123. 

Plans for the UFC’s first showcase of Jon Jones the champion have changed nearly as much as the title has changed hands since Chuck Liddell’s two-year reign over the division ended in 2007 (six). Rashad Evans’ August meeting scheduled with Phil Davis at UFC 133 hasn’t slowed talk of Evans-Jones although it’s ensured Evans is immediately unavailable. In addition to compelling beef with Jones, Evans holds a win over Jackson, who holds a win over Machida, who holds a win over Evans. 

The consistent title changes and tough timing have disguised how healthy it is to have three former champions and a rising star wild card on deck to challenge the throne. The silver lining here is that of the last six 205-pound champions in the UFC, Jones and Jackson stand out currently as the most popular.

The UFC has the opportunity for a rare bout between a history-making 23-year-old champion in Jones and a foil of a veteran champion in Jackson. The window of opportunity for that bout is now because Jackson, 32, eyeing retirement at 35 suggests it will take big money fights to truly garner his big money performances. 

2) Demetrious Johnson’s Mighty Case for a Title Shot

“Mighty Mouse” Demetrious Johnson competed with former WEC Bantamweight Champion Miguel Torres for every second of his captivating 15-minute SPIKE TV preliminary scrap with Miguel Torres. A Matt Hume protégé, Johnson has four consecutive victories including back-to-back against former champions in Torres and K-1 HERO’s 2005 Middleweight Grand Prix Champion Norifumi “Kid” Yamamoto. The 24-year-old has exceeded expectations in an underdog role for his last three bouts. With 135-pounds hosting it’s first UFC main event at UFC 132 in July between champion Dominick Cruz and Urijah Faber, Johnson is the perfect uncelebrated but serious challenger for a champion riding the biggest win of his career and looking to further establish themselves via real opposition. 

For Torres, coming off a well-played contest, Yamamoto is a fight that contains intrigue stemming back to their time being internationally acclaimed outside of the UFC.

3) Brian Stann’s Flagship Fight

Brian Stann disposed of Sengoku Middleweight Champion Jorge Santiago in their Fight of the Night honored contest 31 seconds shy of the second round’s end. “All-American” displayed marked improvement in the facet of his game already considered his strength—his striking. His looks standing left Santiago confused and eventually broken, signaling Stann is a fighter capable of outclassing top-10 opponents. 

The Marine’s marketability surely will fast track him to a title shot; however, Anderson Silva’s unparalleled reign leaves the former WEC Light Heavyweight Champion with few opponents that can advance Stann’s contender position while he continues evolving as a fighter ready for someone of Silva’s caliber. Stann will be happy to report for regularly duty but he should compete in a title eliminator bout opposite Wanderlei Silva, Mark Munoz or Michael Bisping, whichever fighter emerges from their contender bouts with Chris Leben, Demian Maia and Jason Miller respectively with the most momentum. 

For Santiago, he endured the worst outcome possible in his UFC return, but the resilient Brazilian would benefit from mixing it up with another hard luck, solid middleweight in Dan Miller. 

4) Getting Rick Story Straight

A sturdy chin and poise to fire punches back in the face of adversity Rick Story demonstrated versus Thiago Alves coupled with a six-fight win streak undoubtedly places the Brave Legion rep in contender talks. The 26-year-old passed a significant wrestling test against Johny Hendricks and now a striking test versus Alves. If he can neutralize the submission grappling of Jake Shields, another former title challenger to Georges St. Pierre’s UFC Welterweight Championship, Story could solidify he’s ready for the no. 1 contender spot.

Story has been bold in calling his shots at welterweight. That attitude is welcome when it’s from confidence in skills instead of confidence in an ability to sell a fight, which is why Rick Story is a “Horror” for other contenders and a dream for fans. 

For Alves, the loser of Chris Lytle-Dan Hardy would stand well against his muay Thai.  

5) UFC Heavyweights Could Use Strikeforce Bump

Frank Mir pushed around and beat up Roy Nelson to a decision in co-main event action, while Travis Browne scored the Knockout of the Night with a thrilling and unique superman punch KO versus Stefan Struve in round one. The winning heavyweights are at two entirely different junctures in their UFC career yet they have one thing in common: their best fights are in Strikeforce. 

Mir likely concludes his trilogy with Brock Lesnar next when Lesnar recovers from diverticulitis. Facing the biggest star in MMA is a lucrative plus; however, defeat could irrevocably damage Mir’s longevity as a contender because key losses are valued more when the division doesn’t have the requisite depth to reestablish former champions with legitimate threats in the upper-echelon of the division like Antonio Silva, Sergei Kharitonov and Josh Barnett. 

For Nelson, there’s not many prospects left at heavyweight although a chance to avenge a controversial loss to Andrei Arlovski allows him to have a contest relevant to his career while reinventing it by losing weight. 

Browne appears incredibly promising to the heavyweight class thanks to his 6’7 frame and Alliance Training Center’s movement-oriented boxing. Good prospects like Shane Del Rosario and Daniel Cormier are legit counterparts that generate excitement for an up-and-comer like the Hawaiian. Instead, Browne can take a stern challenge from a grizzled guy like Mike Russow to raise his stock. 

Danny Acosta is the lead writer at FIGHT! Magazine. Follow him on twitter.com/acostaislegend

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UFC 132 Fight Card: Hooters Octagon Girl Grand Prix (Round 1, Match-Up 2)

Claudia Gestro Home state: Florida Born in Florida, Gestro now works at the Lake Forest, California Hooters. Gestro loves sports, especially basketball, and she would love to be a Sports Reporter covering the NBA. She has already earned a degree in Bro…

Claudia Gestro

Home state: Florida

Born in Florida, Gestro now works at the Lake Forest, California Hooters.

Gestro loves sports, especially basketball, and she would love to be a Sports Reporter covering the NBA. She has already earned a degree in Broadcast Journalism to prepare for such a career, but it has also helped her to become more outgoing and bring excitement to social situations.

Gestro enjoys making people smile and helping them have a good time. She loves dancing, working out, watching sports and playing with her dog named Bella.

Tyler Suess

Hometown: Freeport, Illinois

Suess has been a Hooters Girl for five years and a pageant girl for nine.

Suess enjoys traveling, camping, cars and bikinis.

Three words Suess would use to describe herself are passionate, quirky and independent. She is a born leader and loves working the crowd.

UFC 130 Results: Jackson and the Senior Fight Club Don’t Break Dance No More

Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, Wanderlei “The Axe Murderer” Silva, Antonio “Minotauro” Nogueira and Co. still got some moves—but leave the headspins and the helicopters to the young guns.A few street-dance maneuvers, maybe.But…

Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, Wanderlei “The Axe Murderer” Silva, Antonio “Minotauro” Nogueira and Co. still got some moves—but leave the headspins and the helicopters to the young guns.

A few street-dance maneuvers, maybe.

But any dolphin or back dive inside the octagon could be the equivalent of a kamikaze.

Reality check: The above-mentioned fighters are more chronologically advanced (a politically correct term) than most, and they’ve been through more wars and have suffered more wear and tear. (Boxing legend Erik Morales, at 34 years old, may still be “young enough” among his fighting contemporaries, but everybody sees that inside the ring he has aged dramatically more than most as a result of his 57 pugilistic battles.)

They no longer have youth on their side, and wounded warriors at their actual and fighting age take more time to heal.

It’s a given that they’re slower now and gas out earlier in varying degrees.

Expect the younger fighters to fight at a faster pace while sustaining the up tempo considerably longer.

And hunger, especially when facing the legends of the sport, is another serious consideration.

The thrill in watching the young dogs fight the old ones in the junkyard is in this: anticipating how the latter can temper their youthful energy with intelligence to pull out a victory over the slower, but craftier veterans.

And this is something that Matt Hamill (10-3)—chronologically two years older at 34 but a generation younger as far as MMA career and accumulated damage are concerned—failed to accomplish last Saturday night at UFC 130, proving that the athlete in Ramp-aged (32-8) still occupies a higher place in this exacting sport than some emerging prospects.

This, despite all the terrible beatings Jackson has taken, especially way back in PRIDE, in the hands and knees of the fighter originally nicknamed “Cachorro Louco.”

The seeming lack of fire from the vets inside and outside the octagon may not be just a matter of motivation; it could be a natural byproduct of aging in calendar and fight years.

We know that soon Jackson and Co. will be all bark and no bite, and…

How many fighters belong to the same gene pool as Randy Couture?

Your guess is as good as mine.

And unless you’ve been living under a Wi-Fi-proof rock with no underground cable connection, you must know by now that our Captain America has retired and is just using his mighty shield as an umbrella on a beach somewhere.

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