I mean, sure, Diaz’s win over McGregor at UFC 196 feels so fresh in our minds that some MMA media outlets are still penning think pieces and technique breakdowns on it, and yeah, holding the fight at welterweight again feels like an odd choice considering that both guys are natural lightweights. And I guess if you’re a cynic, you could argue that a win for either Diaz or McGregor at 170 will be utterly pointless in terms of where it puts them in both the welterweight division or either of their respective decisions…
…boy, I really thought I was going to be able to turn that around. I guess I’ll just throw out remind everyone that cash rules everything around us and bugger off.
BREAKING: Frankie Edgar‘s camp has just now offered an official reaction to this fight booking. We now go live to New Jersey…
The professional MMA landscape in Ontario is pretty barren due to a lack of shows, so what do talented fighters do in order to progress their careers? In the case of my Toronto BJJ teammates who fight MMA, just like previous generations of Ontario-based fighters, they end up having to travel in order to get fights.
One such individual is Gabe “Samurai” Sagman (1-1) who is heading 2700 kilometers (that’s 1468 miles for you yanks) to Calgary, Alberta to face Keegan Oliver (3-4) this Friday at King of the Cage: Wrecking Ball. Gabe last fought in November 2014, so he’s primed and ready to get his momentum back.
“For the past month and a half, I’ve been training really hard,” says Gabe.
The professional MMA landscape in Ontario is pretty barren due to a lack of shows, so what do talented fighters do in order to progress their careers? In the case of my Toronto BJJ teammates who fight MMA, just like previous generations of Ontario-based fighters, they end up having to travel in order to get fights.
One such individual is Gabe “Samurai” Sagman (1-1) who is heading 2700 kilometers (that’s 1468 miles for you yanks) to Calgary, Alberta to face Keegan Oliver (3-4) this Friday at King of the Cage: Wrecking Ball. Gabe last fought in November 2014, so he’s primed and ready to get his momentum back.
“For the past month and a half, I’ve been training really hard,” says Gabe.
Check out Brian’s full interview after the jump.
I have had a unique perspective, because I trained alongside Gabe at Toronto BJJ under MMA coach, former UFC veteran Claude Patrick.
One thing that makes Gabe special is that he’s a consummate professional at his trade, a man who coaches and teammates know they can expect to see show up time and time again. There’s no excuses, or story or evasion of the job at hand—just a record of nearly-perfect attendance.
Skilled in all areas of MMA, Gabe has a plan to dispatch Keegan Oliver.
“I want to get in there—ideally, use my movement, out-strike the guy. If there’s an opening for me to take him down, I’ll take it. Obviously my strength is on the ground,” says the Ribeiro BJJ brown belt.
As MMA fighters have morphed into athletes, the conditioning routine Gabe follows outside of his Muay Thai, wrestling or jiu-jitsu training is also worth noting. Working out with his brother, Reuben, Gabe does an impressive array of exercises designed to give him a mix of strength and explosiveness.
What I learned from Gabe is that a person has to do the maximum preparation. It’s impossible to predict the future, but the harder you work, the luckier you get. He’s got the tools to win and that’s backed by his heart.
Says Gabe, “I’m putting on a great show, I’m coming to fight.”
Something was wrong. There was something missing. It wasn’t so much about what happened, as much as it was about what didn’t happen. The MMA field of psychic energy lacked a directed focus. It was split in several directions. There was one thing we should have all been talking about, yet it seemed we were all looking past it. We saw the potential, but ignored its likelihood. What I mean to say is, I certainly didn’t feel like we were collectively counting down to potential MMA history…and yet…the greatest page of MMA History could have been written this March 5th.
Let me back up for a moment. Let’s talk for a second about how we got there.
Something was wrong. There was something missing. It wasn’t so much about what happened, as much as it was about what didn’t happen. The MMA field of psychic energy lacked a directed focus. It was split in several directions. There was one thing we should have all been talking about, yet it seemed we were all looking past it. We saw the potential, but ignored its likelihood. What I mean to say is, I certainly didn’t feel like we were collectively counting down to potential MMA history…and yet…the greatest page of MMA History could have been written this March 5th.
Let me back up for a moment. Let’s talk for a second about how we got there.
Before a “bruised foot and sore vagina” derailed the fight, Featherweight Champion Conor McGregor was putting his undefeated UFC record on the line in what was an attempt to move up a weight division and snatch the Lightweight Championship belt from Rafael Dos Anjos’ tight grasp. Why would this have been history? Well for one, no one had ever held two belts at the same time. (Randy Couture and B.J. Penn won belts in two different weight-classes, but never concurrently). As huge and unprecedented as that would have been, it was more than just that.
It was about Mystic Mac fulfilling another one of his improbable prophesies, briefly recapped below.
2008: A twenty year old Conor McGregor not only predicts he will be in the UFC someday, he predicts he will be UFC champion.
2013: After his first UFC fight, he predicts he’ll drag the UFC back to Ireland after a six year hiatus.
2014: Before headlining UFC Fight Night 46 in Ireland, Conor predicts a first round KO of Diego Brandao
2014: Months later, before UFC 178 Conor predicts he will KO Dustin Poirier in the first round.
2014: Conor predicts Jose Aldo will pull out of their fight.
2014: Conor predicts he will break PPV and gate figures
2015: Prior to UFC 189, Conor offers to bet Dana White 3 million dollars that he will KO Chad Mendes in the second round.
2015: On the set of the Ultimate Fighter, Conor warns Urijah Faber that his stablemate TJ Dillashaw will backstab him in the near future to go with Faber’s nemesis, and former Alpha Male Striking Coach, Duane Ludwig.
2015: Then, prior to UFC 194, for his most eerie prediction yet, he has this exchange with Robin Black:
“I felt when we stared down, his right hand was twitching a little bit, which was a subtle tell for me, he is ready to unload that right hand, but I feel that could be a downfall for him. If he lets that right hand go…I will create traps, and dead space inside that octagon all over the place, and I will walk him into it…that is what I will do with Jose [Aldo], I will lead him into a place where he feels safe, but all of a sudden, it’s a trap and he is in big danger.”
Before each one of those predictions, most of the MMA intelligentsia would shake their head and say ‘You may have made short work of previous opponents, but this next guy is on a whole different level.’ Rashad Evans smirked at Conor when he told Rashad he would KO Poirier in the first round. MMAFighting’s senior editor, Luke Thomas, thought there was no way the UFC would sacrifice their golden boy striker against the skilled wrestler, Chad Mendes after Jose Aldo pulled out this summer. Both Chad and Frankie Edgar said ‘Conor’s good, but Aldo’s a different animal.’
Of course, you don’t need me to tell you who was right and who was wrong, each and every time…so far. Even those who believed Conor would beat Aldo, thought he would do so in a back and forth war. Only Conor was able to see through time and continue his jaw-dropping predictions by continuing to crack the jaws of his opponent. No one thought it was possible that his best performance in the UFC would come against the best competition he’d ever faced in his career, the first, and former, UFC featherweight champion.
When asked at the press-conference, if he had ever envisioned starching Aldo in only 13 seconds, he responded with “of course, if you look at my record, I have a 4 second KO.” So in Conor’s mind, the only part of his prediction that was off, was that he took 9 seconds too long. Mystic Mac was about to go full-blown super saiyan. He was this close to reaching a mythical level of greatness and stardom the UFC had never seen before. And yet…
You’d figure the UFC would have been promoting this to the brink of over-promotion. The UFC promotes the hell out of anything they’re selling, even if it’s their schlockiest card ever due to injuries (think Dillashaw vs. Soto). So what happened? Was the UFC just sitting back and hoping Conor’s promotional magic did all the heavy lifting? After all, Conor’s UFC fights break records with regularity at this point.
So Conor attempting to make UFC history, should have been another surefire record-breaker right? Ok fine. But why didn’t they give it that extra push, like when McGregor finally faced Aldo. For that fight, they practically rolled out a 72-hour long undercard to give a fight of that magnitude the proper promotional underpinning.
But just a few weeks ago… they didn’t even put Conor’s featherweight belt in front of him during the UFC 196 (then UFC 197) press conference. Hell, it didn’t even find its way onto the fight poster until Conor threw a well-deserved hissy fit.
Why was the UFC strangely demoting UFC 196’s previous headliner McGregor/Dos Anjos in importance, rather than doing their usual jobs of enhancing it? Some of the MMA media mused that it was because they were upset with Conor McGregor’s pompous antics and hardline financial negotiating, particularly with the idea of “McGregor Promotions”.
Let me propose an alternative suggestion. I believe the reason the UFC slightly took their foot off the promotional pedal, was because they “didn’t see how (Conor) wins this fight.” Their rationale for not putting Conor’s featherweight belt in the fight poster was “because Conor’s belt was not on the line.”
Think about that for a moment. If Conor would have won, he would have become a two-division champion. So, while the featherweight belt was not on the line, it was still relevant and significant, but only in victory. If he would have lost, then, they were saying, Rafael would not have become the featherweight champ. In other words, the featherweight belt was only significant if Conor would have won, which they had already admitted they didn’t believe was going to happen. In short, they were, to borrow one of Chael’s phrases, ‘nesting for his fall’.
They wanted to remind everyone, even if Conor lost, he would have still been the featherweight king. He would still be the moneymaking machine that owned 2015 with record breaking PPV’s and gate sales. Essentially, they were implying, this fight doesn’t count, unless Conor wins. It was almost like they didn’t want the whole world watching, just in case, Conor got bludgeoned by the “animal” Dos Anjos (let’s not forget this is same guy who crumbled the last man who tried to take his belt in 66 seconds, with a tornado of muay thai violence). If they wholeheartedly believed Conor was going to win, why wouldn’t they have saved this fight from the get-go to headline the massively epic UFC 200?
Now don’t get me wrong. The UFC is a business in pursuit of a profit, and they were certainly promoting this fight. But, a fight of this magnitude required scaling the tallest mountain and shouting into a megaphone, commanding the whole world to watch. Instead, they were tapping people’s shoulders and whispering into their ears. Promotionally speaking, it completely flied in the face of how they usually did things.
But what if Conor would have won? If he did pull off the victory, they would have gotten to mega-promote Conor and UFC 200 with the money they saved by under-promoting UFC 196. They would have undoubtedly billed him as the #1 pound for pound fighter in the world. Scratch that…they would have billed him as the G.O.A.T.
At least, that’s how the UFC that I’m used to would have done it.
If he would have lost, they would have said, ‘well, we told you this would happen.’ And ‘it doesn’t mean he’s no longer the featherweight champion.’
Basically they were betting on this:
Heads, History is made. Tails, this didn’t happen.
Heads, Mystic Mac lives on. Tails, Conor McGregor remains the featherweight champion.
But now, with an entirely different (and oddly, less significant) fight on the table, it seems the UFC has once again kicked the promotional machine into overdrive. We’ve all seen the press conference, the promos, and so forth. Is it that a matchup between McGregor and Nate Diaz is simply much more marketable than his previously-scheduled battle with Dos Anjos, or is the UFC a little more assured that their golden boy (and I say that with no negative connotations whatsoever) can actually win this fight, and have decided to step up their marketing game as a result?
If you guys haven’t been following the lead-up to tonight’s battle between Kimbo Slice and Dada 5000, hooooo boy have you been missing out.
For starters, the fight is being billed as a matchup to determine the “King of the Streets” despite the fact that, you know, it’s being contested in a cage. Secondly, the trash-talk between the two Miami-based brawlers has been next level bonkers, with Slice calling out Mr. 5000’s “baby nuts” and challenging him to a literal dick-measuring contest at the event’s press conference earlier this week. Oh, and had we mentioned that the fight has been so heavily bet on by “three or four” mystery men that it literally forced bookmakers to shift the odds for the fight? It has been an outstanding series of events, to put it mildly.
Anyways, CagePotato recently weighed in on what this bizarre matchup means for the future of Bellator over at Uproxx, and wouldn’t you know it, we think it’s the best move that the promotion could have possibly made. Head after the jump for a little preview of our assessment and make sure to tune into what will surely be a ludicrous matchup at Bellator 149 tonight.
If you guys haven’t been following the lead-up to tonight’s battle between Kimbo Slice and Dada 5000, hooooo boy have you been missing out.
For starters, the fight is being billed as a matchup to determine the “King of the Streets” despite the fact that, you know, it’s being contested in a cage. Secondly, the trash-talk between the two Miami-based brawlers has been next level bonkers, with Slice calling out Mr. 5000′s “baby nuts” and challenging him to a literal dick-measuring contest at the event’s press conference earlier this week. Oh, and had we mentioned that the fight has been so heavily bet on by “three or four” mystery men that it literally forced bookmakers to shift the odds for the fight? It has been an outstanding series of events, to put it mildly.
Anyways, CagePotato recently weighed in on what this bizarre matchup means for the future of Bellator over at Uproxx, and wouldn’t you know it, we think it’s the best move that the promotion could have possibly made. Head after the jump for a little preview of our assessment and make sure to tune into what will surely be a ludicrous matchup at Bellator 149 tonight.
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The more I think about it, the more I’m starting to realize that the booking of Kimbo Slice vs. Dada 5000 actually signals a rather brilliant shift in ideology by Bellator. Do you guys see it? Bellator knows that this fight is shit, and in fact, that’s why they booked it in the first place.
We are living in the era of nostalgia-driven, “ironic” entertainment — an era where more so-bad-it’s-good films, television shows, comics, and whathaveyou are being churned out than ever before, with the lone goal of gaining a “cult following” through pure, intentional ineptitude. Knowing that they may never top the UFC in terms of actually talent, Bellator isn’t simply lowering its standards, it’s adapting its business model to cash in on a proven trend among millennials that is already being exploited by every other entertainment industry. It’s as if Scott Coker wandered into one of the monthly screenings of The Room held at the Regent Theater, saw how people were reacting to it, and thought “Hey, maybe I can do this with MMA.”
So as someone who views Dream’s Super Hulk Grand Prix as the pinnacle of modern mixed martial arts, I was all in on the idea of Kimbo vs. Dada from the day one.
Read the rest of our thoughts on Slice vs. Dada over at Uproxx.
(Like all great artists, McGregor is a man who operates in periods. Picasso had his Blue Period, Dali had his Dada period, and McGregor has clearly entered his “Gay Persian discotheque owner from the 80’s” period.)
And so, it begins.
Following their incredible first round finishes of Jose Aldo and Donald Cerrone, respectfully, featherweight champion Conor McGregor and lightweight champion Rafael Dos Anjoswill do battle at UFC 197 with the latter’s gold on the line. To describe the bout as anything other than “unprecedented” would be an injustice, to say the very least.
In the co-main event of the evening, Holly Holm will get her wish and defend her title against the ever-present top contender Miesha Tate, hoping to become the first female not named Ronda Rousey to defend the bantamweight title in the process. Again, the word “unprecedented” comes to mind.
Earlier today, the first press event for UFC 197 was held, giving both pairs of fighters a chance to lock eyes. Check out the staredowns after the jump.
(Like all great artists, McGregor is a man who operates in periods. Picasso had his Blue Period, Dali had his Dada period, and McGregor has clearly entered his “Gay Persian discotheque owner from the 80′s” period.)
And so, the wait begins.
Following their incredible first round finishes of Jose Aldo and Donald Cerrone, respectfully, featherweight champion Conor McGregor and lightweight champion Rafael Dos Anjoswill do battle at UFC 197 with the latter’s gold on the line. To describe the bout as anything other than “unprecedented” would be an injustice, to say the very least.
In the co-main event of the evening, Holly Holm will get her wish and defend her title against the ever-present top contender Miesha Tate, hoping to become the first female not named Ronda Rousey to defend the bantamweight title in the process. Again, the word “unprecedented” comes to mind.
Earlier today, the first press event for UFC 197 was held, giving both pairs of fighters a chance to lock eyes. Check out the staredowns after the jump.
As to how both the main eventers see the fight going? Well, Dos Anjos opted for a more straightforward approach, telling MMAFighting that “I will be calm and kick his ass for good. I want to finish him. I want to submit him, actually. Sometimes you knock someone out and the way they go down isn’t nice, but when you submit someone… I want to make him quit, I want him asking me to stop. That’s what I want.”
As for McGregor, well, you might be shocked to learn that he went for the more barbarics approach, stating “I will behead Rafael dos Anjos. I will drag his head through the streets of Rio de Janeiro through a parade of people. It will become a national holiday as well, I would imagine.”
But then, things started to sort themselves out on Wednesday’s edition of when Dana White told the UFC Tonight gang that “If anyone can hold two belts, it’s Conor McGregor.” With that ringing endorsement now out there in the universe, it was pretty much a given that McGregor would challenge lightweight champion Rafael Dos Anjos next, which recent reports now indicate will be the case.
But then, things started to sort themselves out on Wednesday’s edition of when Dana White told the UFC Tonight gang that “If anyone can hold two belts, it’s Conor McGregor.” With that ringing endorsement now out there in the universe, it was pretty much a given that McGregor would challenge lightweight champion Rafael Dos Anjos next, which recent reports now indicate will be the case.
Details after the jump.
As first reported by Bleacher Report’s Jeremy Botter (citing multiple sources), McGregor will in fact be moving up to lightweight next to take on Dos Anjos in the main event of UFC 197 on March 5th in Las Vegas.
And not only that, but Botter also confirmed that Holly Holmwill be getting her wish to fight once more before rematching Ronda Rousey, squaring off against former title challenger Miesha Tate in UFC 197′s co-main event. Which, wow. It’s getting harder and harder to be a cynical, biased, UFC h8ing MMA blog these days when looking at the absolutely amazing run they’ve been on lately. (Luckily, there’s still their Nazi-esque outfitting policy to take shots at or we’d probably have to close up shop.)
It’s worth mentioning that Ariel Helwani hinted at “a couple of big fights” being looked at for March 5th back in December, only to be immediately shut down by Dana White for being “full of shit.” Here’s hoping that he has the balls to hit Dana with a zinger like this the next time they’re face-to-face.