A Sullen Dan Hardy Talks About Losing Four Straight In The Octagon

Tweet UFC welterweight Dan ‘The Outlaw’ Hardy (23-7, 1NC) has seen his career reach as high as a UFC title match with current champ Georges St-Pierre back in March 2010, all the way down to being the target of vindictive fans who are quick to criticize the fighters Tweets for not training after losing four […]

UFC welterweight Dan ‘The Outlaw’ Hardy (23-7, 1NC) has seen his career reach as high as a UFC title match with current champ Georges St-Pierre back in March 2010, all the way down to being the target of vindictive fans who are quick to criticize the fighters Tweets for not training after losing four straight in the Octagon.

What seems more hurtful to the British fighter is the fact that he sees a steady stream of fighters being released from the UFC after two losses while he still remains under contract.

In a very honest interview with MMAFighting.com, ‘The Outlaw’ talks about some of the guilt he feels at seeing fighters go, being punked by Anthony Johnson after the two had talked at length of a standup war and then having ‘Rumble’ wrestle him for three rounds, plus a lot more.

If your a Dan Hardy fan, or not, the article offers an interesting look into the current mindset of ‘The Outlaw.’

Here’s a few quotes.

“If I ever tweet something that’s not about training or fighting — anything, whether it’s about a movie I’ve seen or I’m out on the [Las Vegas] strip and see something funny and send a picture of it — I’ll always get some jackass tweet back, ‘Oh, don’t you think you should be working on your wrestling?’” he says. “Every. Time. That really winds me up… ”

“I got in there just expecting this blaze of glory,” he says. All the way through training camp he’d exchanged emails and direct messages on Twitter with Johnson, both of them talking about what a slugfest their fight would be, how they’d steal the show in Seattle. But Johnson was the superior wrestler, and he knew it. Why trade bombs with Hardy if you didn’t have to? And why not let him think he was walking into a kickboxing match, since that would only make him easier to take down.

“He punked me,” Hardy says. “And he punked me good.”

After three rounds of far more wrestling than slugging, an exhausted Hardy sat back in his corner and let the disappointment wash over him. He didn’t need to wait and hear how the judges had scored it. Nobody did. Three in a row, he thought. That ought to do it. When he looked up, there was Johnson strolling over to him like a kid who’d just cheated his best friend out of his lunch money.

“He came over to me right after the fight was over and he hugged me and said, ‘I’m sorry, man. I love you like a brother.’ And I thought, dammit, he punked me. He knew he was going to do it all the way through training camp. He properly played me.”

What’s worse, he couldn’t even really stay mad at Johnson afterward. If anybody understood that desperate need for a win — a desire so strong you’d spend weeks lying just to get it — it was Hardy.

“[Johnson] did the calculated thing. Whether you agree with it or not, he felt like he needed a win and that was the smartest way to get it. I know he got a lot of [expletive] for it, but he got the win and now he’s progressing, in a good place in his career. And me? Not so much.”

With Win Over Nogueira, Frank Mir Feels He May Be One Of The Best Submission Heavyweights In The UFC

Tweet Beating Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira twice is really something to be proud of, and being the first fighter to stop the big Brazilian by technical knockout as well as submission really puts an exclamation point on the sentence. Former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir (16-5) wanted to show fans, and critics, that the first win […]

Photo by Nick Laham/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC for UFC.com

Beating Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira twice is really something to be proud of, and being the first fighter to stop the big Brazilian by technical knockout as well as submission really puts an exclamation point on the sentence.

Former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir (16-5) wanted to show fans, and critics, that the first win over Nogueira was not a fluke. He did that by becoming the first fighter to ever submit ‘Big Nog’ by earning a first round Kimura.

To get it though, Mir was forced to break his opponents arm, explaining in his latest Blog for Sportsnet.ca that he is “right up there” as one of the best submission heavyweights in the UFC.

It was a challenge to get “up” mentally for this fight because I beat him so well last time but I rose to the challenge. I didn’t want anyone saying the first win was a fluke or make excuses. I didn’t really see that I would gain too much from beating him again but, after the fight, I think I did because I scored one of the best subs in UFC history.

Minotauro was a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt before I even started BJJ. He’s one of the very best ever. Does me subbing him in the manner I did make me the best submission heavyweight in UFC history?

I think it allows you to make an argument, sure. I think you’d have to look at my record side-by-side with other guys, and of course there are fighters who’ve done a lot more than I have in submission-only fights, but purely in the UFC, I think I am right up there, yes.

With Four Fights Left On Her Contract, ‘Cyborg’ Santos Wants To Show Dana White Why Women Should Be In The UFC

Tweet Strikeforce women’s featherweight champion Cris ‘Cyborg’ Santos (11-1) showed she hadn’t missed a step after a year long absence from the cage, demolishing the worlds No. 2 women’s 145 lbs fighter in just sixteen seconds this past weekend. Santos defended her title for a third time, defeating Japanese opponent Hiroko Yamanaka in the co-main […]

Strikeforce women’s featherweight champion Cris ‘Cyborg’ Santos (11-1) showed she hadn’t missed a step after a year long absence from the cage, demolishing the worlds No. 2 women’s 145 lbs fighter in just sixteen seconds this past weekend.

Santos defended her title for a third time, defeating Japanese opponent Hiroko Yamanaka in the co-main event of Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal in San Diego.

Speaking to Tatame.com, the champion spoke about constantly improving herself as a fighter, and using the four fights on her contract as a way of impressing UFC president Dana White enough to add a women to the Octagon.

It’s obvious you always go for the KO. But I believe that, after a year off the circuit, and fighting a tough opponent like Yamanaka you weren’t expecting such a striking win. Am I right?
Of course not, because I haven’t fought for a year and a half and every time you enter the cage you feel that adrenaline. When you keep fighting one bout after the other you feel it, so imagine how does it feel when you haven’t proved your potential for a long time, so you have to do a good fight, it’s complicated. I was prepared to fight five rounds, I thought it would be tougher, but thanks God I got this good outcome, I landed that punch right on the beginning and things worked out. It was quick, wasn’t it? In 16 seconds I could get a win!

Since you’re so dominant on your weight division, do you consider fighting in other weight classes?
Due to my contract, I had to stay a long time of the circuit, and with no opponents. But now I’ve signed a new contract, with four more fights on it, and I believe they’ll find someone for me to fight. Of course I can drop to the division below where there’re more girls fighting, but it’s actually already hard for me to cut weight to fight on the featherweight division.

What message would you sent Dana White, who doesn’t seem much excited about keeping the female divisions in the UFC, when Strikeforce is extinct?
I’ll take these four fights I have left in Strikeforce to win Dana White. It doesn’t matter if I do so by using of my students, but I’ll be in the UFC someday. I know he has his reasons, and there’re really few women on the circuit, but I’ll keep on going, training, putting on good fights to cheer women up.

Check out the full photo gallery for the Strikeforce show at Strikeforce.com

Alistair Overeem Looking At The “Positives” Of Being The Most Tested Fighter In MMA

Tweet Former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Alistair ‘The Reem’ Overeem (35-11, 1NC) is trying to put a positive spin on the recent licensing conditions set on him by the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC) following a recent hearing this past week. Overeem missed an initial drug test date set out by the commission, due to miscommunication […]

Photo by Getty Images

Former Strikeforce heavyweight champion Alistair ‘The Reem’ Overeem (35-11, 1NC) is trying to put a positive spin on the recent licensing conditions set on him by the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC) following a recent hearing this past week.

Overeem missed an initial drug test date set out by the commission, due to miscommunication and his return to Holland to be near his ill mother. Once the Dutch fighter found out he went to his doctor to have a blood test completed, which was not what the NSAC had wanted.

So after a tense hearing, the NSAC granted Overeem a conditional license and required him complete four urine tests in the next six months.

In the fighters latest blog for UFC 141 at Yahoo! Sports, Overeem tries to put a positive spin on the whole situation as well as offering some thoughts on well he and opponent Brock Lesnar match up.

Another positive is that I’m now the most tested fighter in the sport. I will be tested four times in three weeks, and then at least twice more in the next six months in addition to any testing for my next fight.

I have had people – I will politely call them ‘haters’ – accuse me of taking steroids since I was a 185-lb. kickboxer at the age of 17. When I was 20, I’ve fought at a weight of 222 lbs. I am now aged 31, and weigh 35 lbs. more. I don’t think 35 lbs is too much to grow in 11 years from a 20-year-old to 31-year-old.

Facts are, I have been tested with the commission numerous times before when I fought in the U.S. and got tested in Japan. I always passed any testing, so hopefully now with these next tests coming and the fact of me being the most tested fighter in the sport, the critics may be satisfied. And if not, well, that’s not my problem, that is their problem.

Overeem and Lesnar are set to headline UFC 141 on December 30th in Las Vegas, Nevada at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Tachi Palace Fights Champ Ian McCall Looking To Be The “Torchbearer” For UFC Featherweight Division

Tweet With the official announcement this past weekend by Ultimate Fighting Championship president Dana White, fighters competing at 125-pounds now have a new level to aspire too. Before the division was added to the UFC, fighters would have to compete in Japan or as part of the Lemoore, California based Tachi Palace Fights promotion which […]

With the official announcement this past weekend by Ultimate Fighting Championship president Dana White, fighters competing at 125-pounds now have a new level to aspire too.

Before the division was added to the UFC, fighters would have to compete in Japan or as part of the Lemoore, California based Tachi Palace Fights promotion which emphasized the smaller fighters on their cards.

One of those fighters in particular, TPF flyweight champ Ian ‘Uncle Creepy’ McCall (11-2), is a direct benefactor of the UFC announcement, being named as one of the four fighters competing for the first UFC flyweight title.

McCall is scheduled to face former UFC bantamweight contender Demeitrious Johnson, while Joseph Benavidez will square off against Yasuhiro Urushitani, which will all expected to take place on March 4 at the Allphones Arena in Sydney, Australia.

“It’s the fight that I wanted,” McCall said of Johnson. “He’s accomplished so much lately that I want to go in there and make a statement and put on a good fight, and I know that fighting him will let me do that.”

“Tachi, they were the last stand for 125,” McCall said of the California-based promotion. “They were showcasing them, and I was kind of the torchbearer for the organization – or at least of the flyweight class.

“If it weren’t me, I’m sure it would be someone else. But right now, I feel like I’m the torchbearer for the weight class…. ”

“It was just a couple days (of knowing), so it’s not like it was a long ordeal,” he said. “But my head felt like it was going to explode because they were like, ‘Don’t tell anyone! Don’t even tell your wife! Don’t say anything to anyone!’

“I was shaking the whole time in the corner like one of my chihuahuas because they had me so scared to say anything.”

McCall is on a four fight win streak, and is 5-1 in his last six bouts. His last three wins have come under the Tachi Palace Fights banner with his last coming this past August where he beat Darrell Montague for the TPF flyweight title.

Check out the rest of the article with ‘Uncle Creepy’ at MMAjunkie.com

Patrick Côté Hopeful For Octagon Return This March In Montreal

Tweet Former UFC middleweight contender Patrick ‘The Predator’ Côté (16-7) is hoping that he’s done enough to get back into the top promotion, winning three straight since his dismissal after a third straight Octagon loss in October of 2010. If the UFC calls him back, Côté says he’d like to do it at the recently […]

Former UFC middleweight contender Patrick ‘The Predator’ Côté (16-7) is hoping that he’s done enough to get back into the top promotion, winning three straight since his dismissal after a third straight Octagon loss in October of 2010.

If the UFC calls him back, Côté says he’d like to do it at the recently unconfirmed event expected to take place in Montreal, Quebec this coming March.

Speaking to MMAWeekly Radio, Côté expressed his desire to return to the Octagon, as well as a desire to face Michael Bisping in the future, saying the Brit has “no power at all in his punch.”

“I actually only did one bad fight in my career and that was against Tom Lawlor. If you take all of my fights in the UFC, all of the fights are pretty entertaining, or I had bad luck like I broke my knee or I got stomped on my head. I feel great, and I think I did what I had to do, three wins in a row so let’s do this…”

“You can fall, but the most important thing is how you get back on your feet. That’s what I did, three wins in a row after that.”

“I want to get back there. In my head I know I can beat more than half of the fighters at 185 pounds, especially a guy like Mike Bisping. He has too much hype around him. It’s just my opinion,” Cote said.

“As much as I like Jason Miller, I thought he looked terrible. It was pretty bad. In the second round he got tired like that, in the main event, especially in a fight like that. It was pretty bad, but in the other way we saw that Bisping has no power at all in his punch. I think he punched him 100 times and he didn’t rock him once…”

“I want to be back in the UFC, and especially in Montreal at the end of March.”

Côté was released from the UFC following a decision loss to Tom Lawlor at UFC 121 in October of 2010. It was his third straight loss in the Octagon, having been submitted by Alan Belchar at UFC 113 and losing to Anderson Silva after suffering a knee injury in the title bout at UFC 90.

If ‘The Predator’ returns it will be his fifth run with the UFC, having taken fights outside of the top promotion between Octagon appearances several times before in the past.