Ishii, Monson Fights Represent the Last Phase of Fedor’s Career

Filed under: DREAM, M-1 GlobalThe best heavyweight in MMA history will make his return to the ring on New Year’s Eve in Japan, when Fedor Emelianenko faces the former Olympic judo gold medalist Satoshi Ishii, and the fan reaction to that fight has been…

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The best heavyweight in MMA history will make his return to the ring on New Year’s Eve in Japan, when Fedor Emelianenko faces the former Olympic judo gold medalist Satoshi Ishii, and the fan reaction to that fight has been decidedly mixed.

On one hand, you have fans who loved seeing Fedor’s glory days in Pride who figure that there’s nothing wrong with seeing him back in Japan on New Year’s Eve, which was once an annual tradition. On the other hand, you have fans who are disappointed that Fedor won’t be facing a high-level opponent, as Ishii is just 4-1-1 in his MMA career and doesn’t have anything close to the kind of MMA resume that Fedor has.

The reality is that this fight — and Fedor’s fight in Moscow last month against Jeff Monson — is just what we’re going to see from the 35-year-old Fedor at this point, as he enters the last phase of his legendary career. We’re not going to see Fedor against Top 10 competition anymore, so we might as well enjoy watching him against the competition he will face, guys like Ishii and Monson who are perfectly respectable but far from elite.

Before I go any further, there’s a little revisionist history to get out of the way: Some people like to claim that Fedor never fought high-quality competition, that all he did was “crush cans” in Japan. That’s really not an accurate account of any stage of Fedor’s career: He beat good opponents like Babalu Sobral and Ricardo Arona in Rings early in his career, beat good opponents like Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira and Mirko Cro Cop in Pride in the prime of his career, and beat good opponents like Tim Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski in Affliction late in his career. It’s true that Fedor liked to mix in easy fights against the likes of Lee Hasdell and Yuji Nagata, but at his best he took on many of the best heavyweights in the world and beat them consistently.

What has changed is simple: Fedor is not at his best anymore, and now he’s not in a position to fight the best heavyweights anymore. The sport’s top heavyweights are signed to exclusive Zuffa contracts, and so they’re not going to be fighting Fedor any time soon.

And really, Fedor shouldn’t be fighting an elite heavyweight right now. After consecutive losses to Fabricio Werdum, Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva and Dan Henderson, taking a step back in quality of competition only made sense for Fedor, because he can’t compete with the truly elite in the sport anymore. That’s not a knock on Fedor, any more than it’s a knock on Michael Jordan to say that he wasn’t as good with the Washington Wizards as he was with the Chicago Bulls. It’s just the reality with aging athletes.

The good news about the Ishii fight is that while Fedor is a heavy favorite, it’s not a mismatch to the same extent that Fedor’s last New Year’s Eve fight was. In that fight, on December 31, 2007, Fedor was still the No. 1 heavyweight in the world, and seeing him easily submit the Korean giant Hong Man Choi in a Japanese freak show felt like a waste of time. Ishii isn’t on Fedor’s level, but Fedor-Ishii in 2011 is a more competitive fight than Fedor-Choi in 2007 was.

The other piece of good news is that this will be Fedor’s fourth fight this year, making 2011 the most active year for Fedor since 2004, when he was the heavyweight champion in Pride. If you’re a Fedor fan, seeing him fight frequently is not a bad thing.

So that’s where Fedor is at this late stage in his career. He’s no longer fighting the best of the best on the biggest stages in the sport, but if you’ve enjoyed watching him fight, there are worse things than seeing him in the ring with Ishii on New Year’s Eve.

 

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Wednesday Morning MMA Link Club: Strikeforce Salaries, 2011?s Greatest Upsets, Tim Kennedy’s Chili Recipe + More

(Chick vs. dude grappling match ends badly for the dude. Props: nate53202)

Some selected highlights from our friends around the MMA blogosphere…

Strikeforce ‘Melendez vs. Masvidal’ Fighter Salaries (MMA Convert)

The Outlaw and the Losing Streak (MMA Fighting)

Top 10 Biggest MMA Upsets in 2011 (The Fight Nerd)

– Meet the Flyweights: Interview With Debuting UFC 125-Pounder Ian McCall (MMA Mania)

Photo Gallery: Satoshi Ishii Trains at Black House for Fedor Emelianenko Fight (Lowkick.Blitzcorner.com)

– Jordan Breen: People Wouldn’t Intensely Hate Jon Jones if He Was White (Fight Opinion)

Josh Barnett Booked for Pro Wrestling Match in Dream’s NYE Event (5th Round)

– Why There Will Never Be a Dominant UFC Heavyweight Champion (BleacherReport.com/MMA)

Cooking With Tim Kennedy: Killer Texas Chili (MiddleEasy)

– Update on Zuffa vs. New York Lawsuit (MMA Payout)

– Fourth Time’s a Charm: Kenny Florian Back at Lightweight Seeking UFC Gold (FightLine)

– Jorge Masvidal Fought With an Injured Right Hand Against Gilbert Melendez (Five Ounces of Pain)


(Chick vs. dude grappling match ends badly for the dude. Props: nate53202)

Some selected highlights from our friends around the MMA blogosphere…

Strikeforce ‘Melendez vs. Masvidal’ Fighter Salaries (MMA Convert)

The Outlaw and the Losing Streak (MMA Fighting)

Top 10 Biggest MMA Upsets in 2011 (The Fight Nerd)

– Meet the Flyweights: Interview With Debuting UFC 125-Pounder Ian McCall (MMA Mania)

Photo Gallery: Satoshi Ishii Trains at Black House for Fedor Emelianenko Fight (Lowkick.Blitzcorner.com)

– Jordan Breen: People Wouldn’t Intensely Hate Jon Jones if He Was White (Fight Opinion)

Josh Barnett Booked for Pro Wrestling Match in Dream’s NYE Event (5th Round)

– Why There Will Never Be a Dominant UFC Heavyweight Champion (BleacherReport.com/MMA)

Cooking With Tim Kennedy: Killer Texas Chili (MiddleEasy)

– Update on Zuffa vs. New York Lawsuit (MMA Payout)

– Fourth Time’s a Charm: Kenny Florian Back at Lightweight Seeking UFC Gold (FightLine)

– Jorge Masvidal Fought With an Injured Right Hand Against Gilbert Melendez (Five Ounces of Pain)

And In Karma News… Brett Rogers Denied Travel Visa; NYE DREAM Bout With Tim Sylvia Cancelled


(Penny for your thoughts, Brett.)

Heavy.com is reporting that the planned heavyweight bout between Brett Rogers and Tim Sylvia has been scrapped because “Da’ Grim” was denied a travel visa to Japan due to his recent dust-up with his wife that landed him behind bars and on trial for domestic assault.


(Penny for your thoughts, Brett.)

Heavy.com is reporting that the planned heavyweight bout between Brett Rogers and Tim Sylvia has been scrapped because “Da’ Grim” was denied a travel visa to Japan due to his recent dust-up with his wife that landed him behind bars and on trial for domestic assault.

Although a plea bargain that saw all of the charges against the onetime Strikeforce fighter reduced to misdemeanors, it looks like probation will prevent him from leaving the country until the terms of his sentencing have been fulfilled, including completion of an anger management course and substance abuse counselling.

I think I speak for everyone here when I say that it couldn’t have happened to a nicer guy. Hopefully he doesn’t go on a holiday bender and renew old habits.

According to the report, the Japanese promotion tried to set up a rematch between Sylvia and Fedor Emelianenko, but opted instead to match “The Last Emperor” up with former Olympic Judo gold medalist Satoshi Ishii.

 

Fedor Emelianenko to Face Satoshi Ishii in Japan on New Years Eve

Fedor Emelianenko Strikeforce eye MMA photos
(What? Was Zuluzinho not ready for a rematch?) 

Fresh off a unanimous decision victory over Jeff Monson that snapped the only multiple fight losing streak of his career, word has just broke that Fedor Emelianenko will be fighting in Japan for the first time since his armbar victory over Hong Man Choi at Yarennoka – New Years Eve 2007. As luck would have it, “The Last Emperor” will be fighting on New Years Eve once again, this time under the DREAM banner and against 2008 Olympic gold medal winning Judo practitioner Satoshi Ishii.

Not exactly the freak show bout that Japan (and Fedor) have been known to dabble in, but to call it a mismatch would be somewhat of an understatement. After winning the gold medal in Beijing, China over three years ago, Ishii has built up a 4-1-1 MMA record, with wins over the likes of Ikuhisa Minowa and former K1 great Jerome Le Banner, but has not fought since his draw with pill popper and occasional fighter Paulo Filho back in September. Ishii’s lone loss came in his MMA debut at the hands of fellow Judoka gold medalist Hidehiko Yoshida.

Fedor Emelianenko Strikeforce eye MMA photos
(What? Was Zuluzinho not ready for a rematch?) 

Fresh off a unanimous decision victory over Jeff Monson that snapped the only multiple fight losing streak of his career, word has just broke that Fedor Emelianenko will be fighting in Japan for the first time since his armbar victory over Hong Man Choi at Yarennoka – New Years Eve 2007. As luck would have it, “The Last Emperor” will be fighting on New Years Eve once again, this time under the DREAM banner and against 2008 Olympic gold medal winning Judo practitioner Satoshi Ishii.

Not exactly the freak show bout that Japan (and Fedor) have been known to dabble in, but to call it a mismatch would be somewhat of an understatement. After winning the gold medal in Beijing, China over three years ago, Ishii has built up a 4-1-1 MMA record, with wins over the likes of Ikuhisa Minowa and former K1 great Jerome Le Banner, but has not fought since his draw with pill popper and occasional fighter Paulo Filho back in September. Ishii’s lone loss came in his MMA debut at the hands of fellow Judoka gold medalist Hidehiko Yoshida.

Emelianenko, on the other hand, is no stranger to the kind of offense Ishii will bring; he has not only medaled in the Russian National Judo Championships, but is a four time World Combat Sambo champion as well. And along with an experience advantage over Ishii that borders on brobdingnagian, Fedor can also fall back on the fact that he has a pair of Phantasm-esque murderballs for hands and an arsenal of submissions that would give any member of the Gracie family an erection. So yeah, Fedor should be able to take this one with relative ease.

DREAM “Genki Desu Ka! New Year! 2011 will also conclude (finally) DREAM’s bantamweight tournament, featuring the semifinals and final match-ups of the four remaining participants: Antonio Banuelos, Masakazu Imanari, Bibiano Fernandes and Rodolfo Marques.

Genki Desu Ka! is set to transpire December 31st from the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.

-Danga 

Fedor Emelianenko vs. Satoshi Ishii Signed for New Year’s Eve Event in Japan

Filed under: DREAM, M-1 Global, NewsFedor Emelianenko will face former Olympic judo gold medalist Satoshi Ishii on a New Year’s Eve match co-promoted by M-1 Global and DREAM in Saitama, Japan.

The promotions confirmed the fight’s booking in a joint ne…

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Fedor EmelianenkoFedor Emelianenko will face former Olympic judo gold medalist Satoshi Ishii on a New Year’s Eve match co-promoted by M-1 Global and DREAM in Saitama, Japan.

The promotions confirmed the fight’s booking in a joint news release on Monday afternoon.

It will be the first time Emelianenko fights in Japan in exactly four years, since defeating Hong-Man Choi. That fight led to his arrival in the US and Affliction before he eventually moved on to Strikeforce.

Emelianenko (32-4, 1 no contest) recently snapped a three-fight losing streak by defeating Jeff Monson in a unanimous decision at an M-1 event in St. Petersburg, Russia.

The fight with Ishii had been rumored for some time, but for a time it wasn’t expected to happen until officials pulled it together during the past week.

Ishii will be at a severe experience disadvantage, having fought just six times in his career. He’s 4-1-1 overall, and most recently fought at a independent show in Brazil where he fought to a draw with former WEC middleweight champion Paulo Filho. In 2008, Ishii captured an Olympic judo gold medal in the 100+ kilogram weight class.

The New Year’s Eve event — titled Fight For Japan: Genki Desu Ka Omisoko 2011 — will take place at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan and air on HDNet.

Among the other fights officially confirmed are a lightweight bout between Shinya Aoki and Satoru Kitaoka, and a featherweight bout pitting Tatsuya Kawajiri and Kazuyuki Miyata.

 

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Ask the Potato: The Best Fight Never Made, The Biggest Letdown and More


We’d tell you how we can do this to that poor girl, but it’s already been asked.

We’re back with yet another installment of Ask the Potato. You know the drill by now. You ask us somewhat serious questions. We give you bitter, sarcastic responses. Those Black Friday discounts we got yesterday have us feeling pretty stoked, so we’re not going to be nearly as facetious as usual. Sarcasm? Only one way to find out…

RSparrow asks: Who’s the black guy that’s always at the weigh ins? Like some kinda hype man, wtf?


We’d tell you how we can do this to that poor girl, but it’s already been asked.

We’re back with yet another installment of Ask the Potato. You know the drill by now. You ask us somewhat serious questions. We give you bitter, sarcastic responses. Those Black Friday discounts we got yesterday have us feeling pretty stoked, so we’re not going to be nearly as facetious as usual. Sarcasm? Only one way to find out…

RSparrow asks: Who’s the black guy that’s always at the weigh ins? Like some kinda hype man, wtf?

That’s a pretty vague question, RSparrow. You could be referring to just about anybody. We’ll go out on a limb here and assume you’re talking about Burt Watson. If you’re unfamiliar with UFC’s “babysitter to the stars”, do yourself a favor and check out Ariel Helwani’s in depth interview:

RwilsonR asks: What is the best fight that was never made? 
 
It depends on what you mean by “best”. Do you mean what duo would have produced the most exciting scrap? Do you mean the fight that would have mattered most in the rankings? Or do you mean what fight would have meant the most to the overall landscape of the sport? There are plenty of correct answers to your query, but we’ll start the conversation with two: 
 
Three years after his departure from the UFC, Royce Gracie signed to put undefeated record to the test at Pride 2 against the Mark Kerr. “The Smashing Machine” had yet to taste defeat and was in his prime, and a pairing against the sport’s first hero would have been a blockbuster. Weeks away from the clash, Royce would pull out of the fight citing back issues.  A win for Royce would have further cemented his legacy in the sport and quelled talk of him departing when tougher competition emerged. A victory for the hulking Kerr would have served as a true passing of the torch moment in MMA.

When Affliction tossed their gaudy, skull-clad hat in the promoters ring, they used their foothold as sponsors to secure the best free agents available. Though they signed several respectable Octagon outcasts, their crowned jewel was undoubtedly Fedor Emelianenko. In late 2007 Randy Couture broke free from the UFC in a heated dispute, and a dream match-up with Fedor teetered on the brink of reality. Serious talk of the bout began and commercials were even shot before the UFC filed an injunction to silence that noise. It was then that the words “champions clause” first entered into our vocabulary. The bout would have been a coup for Affliction, who hosted two financially crippling events before folding up shop on the heels of a busted Fedor-Barnett headliner, which for that reason alone could qualify as an answer to your question.

KarmaAteMyCat asks: Hector Lombard or Anderson Silva? What have you Potato…

Look, we hate to be like that NFL fan who boldly predicts that the Packers will win every week. Even that guy’s mom hates that guy. But sometimes that jackass makes a good point. What we’re getting at is this: Until Anderson Silva loses, we’re going to keep predicting that he wins. 
 
RwilsonR asks (again): Which fighter is the biggest letdown in MMA history? Is it Paulo Filho?

Call us crazy, but no- It isn’t Paulo Filho. Sure, he’s now famous for having stupid tattoos, (allegedly) doing a lot of Roofies and pulling out of fights. But back in his WEC days, he was a legitimate top five middleweight who many were saying could beat Anderson Silva. Even though those days are in the rear-view mirror, he can’t be the biggest letdown to us because he actually did live up to the hype surrounding him at one point in time.

Rather, our pick is Satoshi Ishii. Remember when the decorated judoka was one of the hottest free agents in MMA, despite never having competed? Well, Ishii has parlayed that into a decision loss to forty year old Hidehiko Yoshida, getting disqualified from an exhibition bout, “notable” victories over Minowaman and Jerome Le Banner and a draw to the aforementioned Paulo Filho. He’s now rumored to be Fedor’s opponent for his (somewhat annual) New Year’s Eve freakshow fight. Definitely not the career trajectory we were predicting for Ishii.  

@UFC4 asks (via Twitter):  Wait, Dan Miller‘s kid needs a kidney transplant and @danawhite or @lorenzofertitta aren’t paying for it?

We’re actually a little surprised by this too. We don’t mean that in a “I can’t believe that selfish prick isn’t going to pay for this!” kind of way; we mean it in a “Dana’s actually proven to be rather generous in these situations before” kind of way. We’re the first ones to point when Dana’s horns poke out of that beautiful bald head, but he’s been known to cover them up with a white hat on multiple occassions. Not long ago, he ponied up to help a young girl get life saving surgery. He didn’t send out a press release to toot his own horn, either. He just did it. The truth is, we’re just guessing that he hasn’t already contributed. Dan says that someone already made an incredible $20,000 donation. Were not saying it came from Dana, but we can’t rule out him stepping up to the plate either.

The more important question, readers, is have YOU donated yet?

That’s all for now, folks. Tune in next week as we answer even more of your (hopefully at least kind of) MMA related questions. You know the drill: You can send us questions through our Facebook page. You can tweet them to our Twitter account, as well as hashtag questions with #AskThePotato. You can register for our forums and post your questions there. Or you can just post them in the comments section of this article. Hopefully, you haven’t been asking us questions on that Google+ page we set up, because we still haven’t figured that thing out.