MMA Fighting has live Bellator 48 results of Pat Curran vs. Marlon Sandro and rest of the Bellator Summer Series finale card at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn.
In the main event, Sandro (19-2) battles Curran (15-4) in the finals of the Summer Series Featherweight Tournament for a chance to challenge Joe Warren for the title at a later date.
MTV 2 Bouts Pat Curran def. Marlon Sandro via second-round KO(live blog) Cole Konrad def. Paul Buentello via unanimous decision (live blog) Seth Petruzelli def. Ricco Rodriguez via first-round KO (live blog) Rene Nazare def. Juan Barrantes via second-round TKO (doctor’s stoppage) (live blog)
Preliminary Bouts Saul Almeida def. Tateki Matsuda via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28) – The 22-year-old Almeida, a rising prospect from the New England region, controlled Matsudi with ground work for most of the fight. He threatened Matsuda with submissions through the duration of the fight, hunting a kimura at the end of the first round and a rear naked choke at the end of the second. Matsuda survived but was otherwise overwhelmed. Almeida rose to 10-1 with his third straight win.
Ryan Quinn def. Brett Oteri via technical submission (rear naked choke), Rd. 1, 1:49 – Quinn got the takedown early, got Oteri’s back and applied the choke. Oteri tried breaking his grip and never tapped before he went unconscious and the referee stopped it.
Andrew Calandrelli def. Matt Nice via submission (keylock), Rd. 1, 3:55 – Calandrelli was given superstar treatment by this crowd, as he’s a popular local trainer. He peppered Nice early with jabs and a left hook, then took him down and quickly moved into side control, where he applied the fight-ending move.
Nik Fekete def. Mark Griffin via TKO, Rd. 2 (3:12) – Fekete looked like the stronger fighter from the get-go, bullying Griffin around in the clinch and taking him down late in the first. In the second, Fekete scored another takedown early in the round and placed Griffin in a crucifix, eventually scoring the stoppage after a series of unanswered short elbows from the top.
Jeff Nader def. Dan Cramer via TKO, Rd. 3 (1:04) – A great comeback win for Nader, who was completely dominated on the ground in each of the first two rounds. In either round, it looked like he could have been stopped as Cramer pummeled him with strikes, some of which were deflected. But he fought on and early in the third, Nader caught Cramer early with a right hook behind the ear. Cramer was wobbled and Nader caught him at least three more times. On a flush uppercut, Cramer’s legs buckled and referee Kevin Mulhall saw enough and stopped the action. Cramer, who never went down during the flurry, immediately protested, but to no avail.
MMA Fighting has live Bellator 48 results of Pat Curran vs. Marlon Sandro and rest of the Bellator Summer Series finale card at the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Conn.
In the main event, Sandro (19-2) battles Curran (15-4) in the finals of the Summer Series Featherweight Tournament for a chance to challenge Joe Warren for the title at a later date.
MTV 2 Bouts Pat Curran def. Marlon Sandro via second-round KO(live blog) Cole Konrad def. Paul Buentello via unanimous decision (live blog) Seth Petruzelli def. Ricco Rodriguez via first-round KO (live blog) Rene Nazare def. Juan Barrantes via second-round TKO (doctor’s stoppage) (live blog)
Preliminary Bouts Saul Almeida def. Tateki Matsuda via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28) – The 22-year-old Almeida, a rising prospect from the New England region, controlled Matsudi with ground work for most of the fight. He threatened Matsuda with submissions through the duration of the fight, hunting a kimura at the end of the first round and a rear naked choke at the end of the second. Matsuda survived but was otherwise overwhelmed. Almeida rose to 10-1 with his third straight win.
Ryan Quinn def. Brett Oteri via technical submission (rear naked choke), Rd. 1, 1:49 – Quinn got the takedown early, got Oteri’s back and applied the choke. Oteri tried breaking his grip and never tapped before he went unconscious and the referee stopped it.
Andrew Calandrelli def. Matt Nice via submission (keylock), Rd. 1, 3:55 – Calandrelli was given superstar treatment by this crowd, as he’s a popular local trainer. He peppered Nice early with jabs and a left hook, then took him down and quickly moved into side control, where he applied the fight-ending move.
Nik Fekete def. Mark Griffin via TKO, Rd. 2 (3:12) – Fekete looked like the stronger fighter from the get-go, bullying Griffin around in the clinch and taking him down late in the first. In the second, Fekete scored another takedown early in the round and placed Griffin in a crucifix, eventually scoring the stoppage after a series of unanswered short elbows from the top.
Jeff Nader def. Dan Cramer via TKO, Rd. 3 (1:04) – A great comeback win for Nader, who was completely dominated on the ground in each of the first two rounds. In either round, it looked like he could have been stopped as Cramer pummeled him with strikes, some of which were deflected. But he fought on and early in the third, Nader caught Cramer early with a right hook behind the ear. Cramer was wobbled and Nader caught him at least three more times. On a flush uppercut, Cramer’s legs buckled and referee Kevin Mulhall saw enough and stopped the action. Cramer, who never went down during the flurry, immediately protested, but to no avail.
Filed under: MMA Fighting Exclusive, Bellator, NewsOn Thursday morning in Los Angeles, the UFC announced a milestone deal to get mixed martial arts on network TV. It’s not the first time, of course, but it has been a while. The first promotion to see i…
On Thursday morning in Los Angeles, the UFC announced a milestone deal to get mixed martial arts on network TV. It’s not the first time, of course, but it has been a while. The first promotion to see its product on network air was EliteXC, the short-lived organization that aired on CBS and built itself around MMA rookie Kimbo Slice.
The decision proved disastrous when late replacement Seth Petruzelli knocked Slice out in just 14 seconds of their October 2008 match. It would be the last time EliteXC ran a show on CBS.
While that was essentially the end of that promotion, fight life went on for Petruzelli. The Ultimate Fighter alumni eventually returned to the UFC, but after an 0-2 stretch, he was released. Now 31 years old, he’s moved on to Bellator, where he faces the surging Ricco Rodriguez at Saturday night’s Bellator 48 event. It will be the first of a three-fight deal, but like most deals, not a lot is guaranteed past one fight.
Petruzelli, who will fight Rodriguez at a 230-pound catch weight, hopes that a win will propel him into a future Bellator light-heavyweight tournament, and admits that a lot is riding on this fight.
“It’s definitely nerve-racking,” he said of the current MMA landscape. “You always have to perform to the top of your ability as a fighter or you feel you could get cut, take a pay cut, or fight for a lesser organization. It sucks for a guy like me, but it’s the profession we chose.”
Petruzelli (13-6) has always been considered a colorful character in the fight game. Though he first came to public notice on season two of The Ultimate Fighter, it was his only match in EliteXC that is most remembered.
On that night, Slice was set to face Ken Shamrock when Shamrock injured himself backstage and could not fight. Petruzelli, who was scheduled for a light-heavyweight bout the same night, stepped in to replace him. Despite the weight differential and short notice, Petruzelli easily dispatched Slice.
The win has continued to follow him around. He’s still recognized as “the guy who KO’d Kimbo,” and he was once offered a boxing match against him. That one moment is often the first thing people think when they see him fighting.
For Petruzelli, it’s a good news/bad news scenario.
“I would never want to take that away,” he said. “What it did for my career was huge, but I don’t just want to be known as that guy. I want to be known as a great MMA fighter and martial artist, not the guy who KO’d Kimbo. I don’t want it to define me.”
The win did open up certain avenues for him though. Soon afterward, he opened up a gym, Jungle MMA in Orlando, Florida. It also allowed him to do personal appearances and seminars, which he notes was “nice to make money not being punched in the face.”
But after having his second UFC run extinguished by a pair of losses, Petruzelli says he’s focused on getting good matchups and being an exciting fighter. With his Bellator signing, he believes he’ll accomplish that. A major attraction to him was Bellator’s tournament format, which rewards success above all else.
“It’s a fighters’ organization,” he said. “You have to prove yourself and win to get that belt. Nothing is handed to you. That’s the way it should be in every organization. Politics shouldn’t play a role in fighting. Unfortunately it does a lot, but it shouldn’t.”
In Rodriguez, Petruzelli is facing a fighter riding a 12-fight win streak. During that 2+ year stretch, Rodriguez has been an MMA mercenary, competing in 11 different organizations and four different countries.
A closer look at the opponents he’s beaten raises a few questions though, as Rodriguez has often prized frequent activity and paydays above quality opposition. Among his victims were John Juarez (0-1 at the time he faced Rodriguez), Doug Williams (6-12) and Bobby Martinez (9-12). On the plus side, he’s beaten Sengoku veteran Moise Rimbon, M-1 vet Daniel Tabera and veteran Travis Fulton.
That opponent mix makes it hard to know exactly what level Rodriguez is at, but Petruzelli says that is what makes this fight a good measuring stick.
“It’s going to tell me if I’m just a stepping stone for him or I belong at the top of the fight game,” he said. “He’s on a streak. Those guys are good, but were they the top? Not so much. If he does the same thing to me, then I know where I stand, I guess. But I don’t foresee that happening.”
Petruzelli expects Rodriguez, who has 24 of his 47 career wins by submission, to concentrate completely on takedowns and ground work.
“He knows that he doesn’t want to stand up with me, and I know that he wants to take me down, so it’s pretty much going to come down to, can he take me down, or can I defend it?” he said. “I’m sure there’s no secrets. He knows I’m going to be trying to knock him out.”
In fact, that’s how Petruzelli sees it ending, with a first- or second-round knockout. It is, he hopes, the restart of his major MMA career. One day in the future, he won’t be fighting anymore, and he wants people to have a few more memories of him than the one he made in 14 seconds on one October night.
That said, the subject is never too far away. Just last weekend, Slice made his pro boxing debut, knocking out a journeyman named James Wade. But if things had been different a couple years ago, that pro debut might have been against Petruzelli, who had boxing promoters approach him about facing Slice in a ring shortly after that infamous night. It never happened, of course, and the two men went their separate ways.
“I wish he would’ve gone straight to boxing years ago instead of wasting time trying to sprawl and learn jiu-jitsu,” he said. He waits a beat, then offers, “I still would box him.”
The link between them won’t be broken anytime soon, but at least they’re trying. In a perfect bit of symmetry, they are two fighters restarting their careers, trying not to run from the past, trying to make new memories.
Filed under: Bellator, NewsAll 18 fighters scheduled for Saturday night’s Bellator 48 card made weight for the show, which will take place at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn.
The main event features the final bout of Bellator’s Summer Series fea…
All 18 fighters scheduled for Saturday night’s Bellator 48 card made weight for the show, which will take place at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn.
The main event features the final bout of Bellator‘s Summer Series featherweight tournament, which pits Pat Curran against Marlon Sandro.
Both fighters checked in at 145 pounds for the final. The victor will eventually take on the winner of an upcoming match between Joe Warren and Patricio “Pitbull” Freire.
Curran (15-4) won the season two lightweight tournament in 2010 but lost to reigning champion Eddie Alvarez in a five-round decision. After dropping to featherweight, he beat Luis Palomino and Ronnie Mann to advance and face Sandro.
Sandro signed with Bellator in June and won his first two tournament bouts, defeating Genair da Silva and Nazareno Malegarie, both by decision.
In the co-main event, heavyweight champ Cole Konrad weighed in at 264.5 to face the 255-pound Paul Buentello in a non-title match. Konrad hasn’t been in the cage since defeating Neil Grove via submission and capturing the championship last October. An April bout between Konrad and Buentello was postponed after a Buentello injury, and now he gets his chance to return.
In another featured bout, Ricco Rodriguez looks to extend hist 12-fight win streak against Seth Petruzelli. Both fighters made it under the 230-pound catch weight.
Main Card
Pat Curran (145) vs. Marlon Sandro (145)
Cole Konrad (264.5) vs. Paul Buentello (255) Seth Petruzelli (224) vs. Ricco Rodriguez (229.75)
Rene Nazare (156) vs. Juan Barrante (155.25)
Preliminary Card
Nik Fekete (205) vs. Mark Griffin (205)
Matt Nice (155.5) vs. Andrew Calandrelli (155.5)
Brett Oteri (170) vs. Ryan Quinn (170)
Saul Almeida (146) vs. Tateki Matsuda (145.25) Dan Cramer (205) vs. Jeff Nader (204)
Filed under: BellatorBellator’s summer series comes to an end on Saturday night with the final fight of its eight-man featherweight tournament, featuring Marlon Sandro taking on Pat Curran. Also on the card is Bellator’s heavyweight champion, Cole Konr…
Bellator‘s summer series comes to an end on Saturday night with the final fight of its eight-man featherweight tournament, featuring Marlon Sandro taking on Pat Curran. Also on the card is Bellator’s heavyweight champion, Cole Konrad, in a non-title fight with Paul Buentello, and former UFC heavyweight champion Ricco Rodriguez taking on Seth Petruzelli.
What: Bellator 48
When: Saturday, the MTV2 televised card begins at 9 PM ET.
Where: Mohegan Sun Arena, Uncasville, Connecticut
Predictions on the four televised fights below.
Pat Curran vs. Marlon Sandro The summer featherweight tournament has been a lot of fun, and this is probably the best final we could have gotten: Sandro is a dangerous striker and a lot of fun to watch, but he’ll be challenged by Curran, who previously won a Bellator lightweight tournament and looks great after dropping 10 pounds.
So how does this one go down? I wouldn’t be shocked if Curran uses his superior size and wrestling to take Sandro down repeatedly and grind out a decision, but I think it’s more likely that they stay standing, Sandro lands the more significant strikes, and Sandro takes the decision.
Beating Curran would strengthen Sandro’s claim to being the best featherweight outside the UFC and set up some more big Bellator fights in the future, against either the promotion’s featherweight champion, Joe Warren, or against the winner of Bellator’s last featherweight tournament, Patricio “Pitbull” Freire. Pick: Sandro
Cole Konrad vs. Paul Buentello Although this is a non-title fight, Buentello is the toughest test to date for Konrad, Bellator’s heavyweight champion. Konrad has never faced anyone with Buentello’s experience, and if Buentello is in shape and motivated, his punching power could cause some problems for Konrad.
But Konrad is a great wrestler who won the NCAA heavyweight title, and I don’t think Buentello’s takedown defense will be good enough to stay off his back. Look for Konrad to take Buentello down in all three rounds and stay on top of him long enough to grind out a fairly boring decision. Pick: Konrad
Ricco Rodriguez vs. Seth Petruzelli Rodriguez won the UFC heavyweight championship by beating Randy Couture in 2002, then went through a long period of losing big fights and getting into trouble outside the cage. But over the last couple years he has appeared to get his head screwed on straight, and he’s currently on a 12-fight winning streak.
But none of the 12 men Rodriguez has beaten in his current streak are as good as Petruzelli, who’s best known for beating Kimbo Slice in a nationally televised EliteXC bout. Petruzelli is a good enough striker that he could give Rodriguez trouble standing up, but Rodriguez will have a big advantage on the ground and should be able to submit Petruzelli. Pick: Rodriguez
Juan Barrantes vs. Renê Nazare Nazare is a very accomplished Brazilian jiu jitsu practitioner who’s 9-0 as a professional MMA fighter. The 7-5 Barrantes isn’t in Nazare’s league and won’t last long. Pick: Nazare
You know how sometimes you work on something for a long time, but toward the end you’re just making it worse, but you’ve already put time and energy into it so you don’t want to trash it? Yeah, that’s never happened to me before.
From Wikipedia: The Casino of the Sky has a functional planetarium utilizing fiber optics to display the sun, moon, and stars accompanying the lighting effects of the Wombi Rock, which is a three-story high crystal mountain crafted of alabaster and more than 12,000 individual plates of hand-selected onyx from quarries in Iran, Pakistan, and Mexico; which were transported to Carrara, Italy and fused into glass.
Now look, we may not be able to fully comprehend the functional value of this “Wombi Rock” but that sounds fucking BALLER. Turns out the Mohegan Sun Casino outside Uncasville, Connecticut is the second largest casino in the United States, and we have someextravagantcasinos.
So when Bellator pops off for the third and last time of the summer this Saturday, don’t talk to me about “minor league” and “small potatoes”. With a talent pool that is constantly getting deeper with the excellent scouting from the BFC office, a tournament format that keeps fans coming back, and a spot waiting for them on SpikeTV (*fingers crossed*) Bellator is big time, baby.
Come on in and let’s run down the show, starting off with that Featherweight Tournament Final…
You know how sometimes you work on something for a long time, but toward the end you’re just making it worse, but you’ve already put time and energy into it so you don’t want to trash it? Yeah, that’s never happened to me before.
From Wikipedia: The Casino of the Sky has a functional planetarium utilizing fiber optics to display the sun, moon, and stars accompanying the lighting effects of the Wombi Rock, which is a three-story high crystal mountain crafted of alabaster and more than 12,000 individual plates of hand-selected onyx from quarries in Iran, Pakistan, and Mexico; which were transported to Carrara, Italy and fused into glass.
Now look, we may not be able to fully comprehend the functional value of this “Wombi Rock” but that sounds fucking BALLER. Turns out the Mohegan Sun Casino outside Uncasville, Connecticut is the second largest casino in the United States, and we have someextravagantcasinos.
So when Bellator pops off for the third and last time of the summer this Saturday, don’t talk to me about “minor league” and “small potatoes”. With a talent pool that is constantly getting deeper with the excellent scouting from the BFC office, a tournament format that keeps fans coming back, and a spot waiting for them on SpikeTV (*fingers crossed*) Bellator is big time, baby.
Come on in and let’s run down the show, starting off with that Featherweight Tournament Final…
Pat Curran vs Marlon Sandro
Curran had an unlikely (some would say controversial) run through the 155 pound tournament last year that led him to an unsuccessful bid to become Bellator’s lightweight champ. His progress through the featherweight brackets has been much smoother, including a sweet peruvian necktie on Peruvian Luis Palomino and a three round beatdown on a twelve year old English boy. Curran has blossomed as a striker in Bellator, using punches, kicks, and knees to good effect since he joined the roster, but his wrestling background will be important in the Sandro fight. Curran must avoid Sandro’s bombs, stay smart on defense, and use his speed to jump off his offense. If he can wrestle Sandro down and maintain control, he can be the first guy to win Bellator tournaments in two weight classes.
Marlon Sandro has made his way through the tournament comfortably as well, after entertaining scraps with Genair da Silva and Nazareno Malegarie. The former Sengoku kingpin was expected to be the challenger for the featherweight title when he signed with Bellator, and he’s now one fight away from a shot at Joe Warren. After his surprising upset loss to Hatsu Hioki, Sandro will have to deal with fighters trying to grind him down with defensive wrestling and take away his thunderous power on the feet. Sandro is durable, well-rounded, and experienced, and he needs very little opportunity to land a KO punch. Sandro has the power to test Curran’s chin as it has never been tested before — Curran has never been knocked out, but the Monster from Rio is absolutely capable of leaving Paddy Mike staring up at Wombi Rock when the fight is over.
Cole Konrad vs. Paul Buentello
Cole Konrad claimed the Bellator heavyweight title by doing his best impression of the proverbial immovable object. He’s a huge athlete with a very good wrestling pedigree, but his striking is rudimentary at best, his cardio is unimpressive, and his submission game is a work in progress, polar bear choke or not. Perhaps the biggest question mark for Konrad is how training has been going at Team DeathClutch since Lesnar has been out.
Across from him in the cage, Paul Buentello holds a significant advantage in the stand up game, with better technique and power than Konrad. Thing is, Buentello probably will not be standing for most of this fight. Once on the ground, the Headhunter doesn’t have the strength to get out from under 300 pounds of Konrad, nor does he have the BJJ skills to win off his back. If Buentello can’t stop the takedowns from Konrad, it’s going to be a long night for everyone.
Seth Petruzelli vs. Ricco Rodriguez
Pay attention to where Rodriguez weighs in — he’s been talking about hitting light heavy for about a year now, and this is his third catchweight in a row. It looks like 205 is a bit too far down for Suave, and the biggest boys at 265 have too much size on him. That won’t be a problem for Rodriguez in this bout, as the Silverback is a jumped-up 205er himself. With a bit of a size advantage and a very solid ground game, Rodriguez should be able to stay away from any Kimbo Killers and work his own game.
Also on the card: BJJ champ Rene Nazare returns to action in Bellator, expect him to show off against Juan Barrantes. Nazare is 9-0 with 7 stoppage wins, and he continues to improve at 28. Something tells us this fight will not go the full fifteen.
On the undercard:
John Clarke vs. Dan Cramer
Andrew Calandrelli vs. Matt Nice
Brett Oteri vs. Ryan Quinn
Nik Fekete vs. Mark Griffin
Saul Almeida vs. Tateki Matsuda
It’s no coincidence that Chael Sonnen‘s suspension and Lindsay Lohan‘s house arrest were both lifted today. Learning Lesson: if you’re going to f*ck up in life, do it in California. BJ Penn took to his.
It’s no coincidence that Chael Sonnen‘s suspension and Lindsay Lohan‘s house arrest were both lifted today. Learning Lesson: if you’re going to f*ck up in life, do it in California.
BJ Penn took to his Twitter to blast Testosterone Replacement Therapy and calls PED use a cancer in the sport.
Pennsylvania Athletic Commision overturns Charles Oliveira vs. Nik Lentz to a No Contest due to Oliveira’s accidental kick to Lentz who was on the ground.
Kimbo Sliceto make pro boxing debut on August 13th in a show produced by Gary Shaw Productions and Tony Holden Promotions.
Ricco Rodriguez vs. Seth Petruzelli is set for Bellator 48 on August 20th.
Strikeforce Challengers 18 headlined by Jorge Gurgel vs. Joe Duarte at the Palms in Las Vegas. Tickets on sale to the public this Saturday.