The Ultimate Fighter 18: Team Rousey vs. Team Tate, Episode 6 Live Results

The Ultimate Fighter settles in for its 18th season with coaches Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate on Wednesday evening at 10 p.m. ET.
The next matchup will see tall and lanky Team Rousey member Jessamyn Duke take on Team Tate rep Raquel Pennington. Both ar…

The Ultimate Fighter settles in for its 18th season with coaches Ronda Rousey and Miesha Tate on Wednesday evening at 10 p.m. ET.

The next matchup will see tall and lanky Team Rousey member Jessamyn Duke take on Team Tate rep Raquel Pennington. Both are veterans of Invicta FC, so this will be an intriguing matchup for anybody who likes women’s MMA and that organization.

This looks to be the fight of the season, so stay tuned for live updates and coverage from the sixth episode.

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Report: Newcomer Tom Niinimaki to Face Rani Yahya at TUF 18 Finale

The UFC signings keep on coming, this time in the form of Finland’s Tom Niinimaki. It is reported that he is slated to make his UFC debut in November at the TUF 18 Finale against veteran Rani Yahya.
Niinimaki (20-5-1), who appeared on B/…

The UFC signings keep on coming, this time in the form of Finland’s Tom Niinimaki. It is reported that he is slated to make his UFC debut in November at the TUF 18 Finale against veteran Rani Yahya.

Niinimaki (20-5-1), who appeared on B/R’s top 10 featherweights outside the UFC, makes his debut on the strength of an 11-fight win streak. The Finn has not been fighting scrubs either, as he owns victories over UFC veterans Walel Watson and Brian Pearman, WEC vet Chase Beebe and European staple Sergej Grecicho.

He doesn’t like leaving his fights in the hands of the judges either. Niinimaki has seven knockouts and eight submissions to his resume, including a kimura of Watson, a rear-naked choke of Pearman and a brutal knockout of Johnny Frachey.

Niinimaki is just one of the great prospects being churned out of Scandanavia. As reported earlier, the UFC has inked Andreas Stahl of Sweden. He will take on Alex Garcia of Canada at UFC Fight Night 33.

This will be a huge step up for Niinimaki, as he takes on a guy who is arguably top 20 in the UFC. Yahya is a world-class submission artist that has beaten the likes of Mizuto Hirota, Mike Brown and Eddie Wineland.

In this fight, the Finn would be wise to use his superior standup against Yahya. Keeping his distance against a guy who owns 15 career submissions would be wise, as he is probably not on the level of Yahya on the ground. That’s saying a lot, as Niinimaki has a good ground game himself.

Stay tuned with Bleacher Report as more news and signings come in. So far, it’s already been a busy day.

 

Follow me on Twitter for MMA news and other random thoughts (@RileyKontekMMA). Or don’t that’s cool too.

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TUF 18 Episode 5 Results and Recap: Battle Between Friends Ends Violently

The remaining cast of UFC bantamweight hopefuls graced television screens across the nation Wednesday evening in episode five of The Ultimate Fighter. 
Featuring a one-sided beatdown between friends as the night’s main course, this episode co…

The remaining cast of UFC bantamweight hopefuls graced television screens across the nation Wednesday evening in episode five of The Ultimate Fighter

Featuring a one-sided beatdown between friends as the night’s main course, this episode continued the season’s trend of high drama and intensity between Team Rousey and Team Tate. 

Let’s break it down. 

 

Fight Recap

While the drama and banter between teams and coaches is fun (sometimes), The Ultimate Fighter is ultimately (see what I did there?) about fighting. 

Sixteen professional fighters enter, two emerge victorious. This is why everybody is here, this is why they suffer and this is what they’re working toward. 

In episode five, Team Tate’s Louis Fisette took on Team Rousey‘s David Grant. 

Creating drama in this matchup, the episode showcased the fact that Fisette and Grant are roommates and friends. Cameras documented the two talking about their upcoming battle, with each man determining that they had to put the camaraderie aside, slug it out and make peace later. 

Apparently Grant found this process to be easier, because he absolutely demolished Fisette inside the Octagon. 

In Round 1, Grant outstruck Fisette before taking him to the mat, where he worked a smothering and vicious top game. For well over three minutes, Grant smashed Fisette with a variety of punches and elbows, bloodying his opponent and nearly earning a stoppage at the round’s end. 

Unfortunately for Fisette, the bell only prolonged the inevitable, as Grant again worked the fight to the mat in Round 2 and immediately transitioned to back mount. From here, Grant softened Fisette with strikes before sinking in the fight-ending rear-naked choke just one minute into the round. 

For six minutes, Grant obliterated Fisette in all facets of the game. He looked bigger, stronger, faster and more technical everywhere, and Fisette was badly outclassed as he exited the competition. 

With the victory, Team Rousey retained control of the matchup selection, and the UFC women’s bantamweight champion arranged an excellent fight for us to look forward to next week. 

 

Fight Announcement: Jessamyn Duke vs. Raquel Pennington 

This matchup has me all kinds of excited.

Duke remains a favorite in the women’s bracket, but Pennington is experienced, gritty and super determined from everything we’ve seen so far in Season 18, so this one should be fantastic. 

 

Episode Recap

Ahh, the annoying fun stuff. With men and women sharing a house for the first time in The Ultimate Fighter history, Season 18 has been filled with immaturity and ridiculousness so far, and episode five did not disappoint on this front. 

So, what went down? 

— Ronda’s mom visited the training facility and showed no shyness in blasting Team Rousey‘s work ethic. As Ronda sat idly by and smiled, Mamma Rousey explained that her daughter’s team was not working hard enough, even calling out Jessica Rakoczy, who is currently nursing a shoulder injury after her win last week. Weird, but not unexpected from a fierce competitor like the elder Rousey

— In a game of truth or dare, Team Rousey‘s Anthony Gutierrez called Fisette the “weakest link” in the house. Fisette proceeded to prove him right by crumbling against Grant. 

— Team Tate’s Josh Hill was dared to use a cheesy pickup line on Roxy Modafferi, and the result was exactly as perfect as one would expect. Going with the classic, “Nice shoes. Wanna f***?,” Hill elicited a response of “You can’t handle this” from the quirky Modafferi. The house erupted in laughter. 

— Is all this talk about cutting weight foreshadowing problems in the future? The episode took a few minutes to detail Gutierrez’s and Cody Bollinger‘s troubles maintaining a strict diet, with both fighters assuring us they have the situation under control. Bollinger clocked in at a healthy 157.5 pounds, 21.5 pounds over his 136-pound limit, so we will have to wait and see if this was relevant info or simply filler material for the show.

— Did I mention that David Grant looked good? He looked super good. 

— Ronda Rousey is going to look (and act) exactly like her mother in 30 years. It’s uncanny. 

That adequately wraps this one up, folks. If you feel shortchanged in any way by my recap and you want a little more depth and detail, be sure to check out Nathan McCarter’s play-by-play

Otherwise, hit me up on Twitter @HunterAHomistek, and we’ll talk TUF, music, cooking or anything else that suits you. 

Party on, friends. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

TUF 18: Jessamyn Duke Fighter Blog, Episode 5

Note: All quotes and material were obtained firsthand by Bleacher Report through one-on-one between Jessamyn Duke and Bleacher Report’s Riley Kontek.
When episode 5 begins, you see Team Rousey has finally gotten our first win thanks to Jessica Rak…

Note: All quotes and material were obtained firsthand by Bleacher Report through one-on-one between Jessamyn Duke and Bleacher Report’s Riley Kontek.

When episode 5 begins, you see Team Rousey has finally gotten our first win thanks to Jessica Rakoczy, and we were obviously excited. The ball was finally in our court. I hated that it had come at the expense of Roxanne Modafferi, somebody we all loved. As you saw, she took the loss pretty hard, but she is “The Happy Warrior” and got back to her normal fun self pretty quickly.

The next fight was between Davey Grant of our team and Louis Fisette of Team Tate. We felt Davey was ready to fight because he was peaking in training and just a beast in the gym. He was the obvious choice to fight next.

We thought Louis would be a great match for him and thought Davey would win easily. Louis lost his fight to get into the house against Chris Holdsworth. Holdsworth is legit, and we knew Louis was a tough guy, but we thought Davey was just better. 

You also saw in this episode that Team Tate was playing Truth or Dare outside, which my team wasn’t really involved in, because we had just gotten home from training. Anthony Gutierrez, who is my teammate, did get involved in the game though. He was asked who was the weakest in the house, and he said Louis. He gave a good answer to Louis as to why he thought he was the weakest, and I honestly think he did not intend any disrespect. Louis is obviously a very tough guy, but the fact he lost just made him a natural target for being labeled the weakest. 

There was also a portion of the episode which focused on how hard it was for everyone to watch their weight and resist food temptations in the house. Both Anthony and Cody were shown as struggling to keep their weight down. Eating clean and preparing to cut weight is always something you have to think about as a fighter, but on TUF its way more intense. Aside from the people that had already fought or the few that were actually walking at fight weight, anyone could be called to fight and have to make weight on extremely short notice.

In order to do that safely and effectively, you have to be monitoring it continuously. Not everyone in the house was doing that. That said, I felt like everyone there was a professional fighter, and they didn’t need me to act like their mom, so I just expected that they knew what they were doing, and it was not on me to make sure they kept their weight down. Anthony and Cody fed off each other and were always eating so that’s why they were the big focus of the episode in that regard.

This week you all got to meet Ronda’s mom, who came as a guest coach.  I loved her! She’s intense and a great competitor, which is great because that really motivated us. People don’t like having the mirror put up in their face to show their weaknesses, but she didn’t care and did it to everyone, which was extremely beneficial.

She was a great motivator. You saw the scene with her and Davey where she brought up how he would fight if somebody had threatened to hurt his kids. She has a great way of finding what motivates you and bringing it out.  Of course everybody with children like Davey, Peggy and Jessica could relate to that and they said they would do whatever it took to protect them. However, even if you don’t have children, we all have people we love.  I have three little nieces and if somebody was trying to get to them through me, I would fight with all my power to protect them. It was a great motivator and reminder as to how I should channel those emotions and feelings and fight like that all the time when in the cage—Every. Single. Second. 

As you saw on this episode Team Tate pulled off what they referred to as a “prank,” where they left a figurine of The Count with a coupon for an eyebrow wax in our locker room and wrote Edmond’s name on it. Honestly, it turned my stomach. That’s not a prank; it’s an unwarranted personal attack on Coach Edmond. Pranks are supposed to be mindless and funny. That wasn’t funny or tasteful. It was hurtful and mean and what I expect from high school bullies. What a horrible example to be setting; that making fun of someone’s appearance is funny and OK. We heard that it was Dennis Hallman who did that, but if you see the episode, Miesha Tate and Bryan Caraway were in involved. It was just stupid and I would hope that anyone watching the show sees the difference from pranking and bullying. 

Obviously, we didn’t show Edmond, because it would have enraged him. Team Tate was just trying to get him kicked off the show and get him off focus. He was really important to our team because even though Ronda was the head coach, Edmond really ran the practices and was our main strategist. Plus, Ronda had already told Dana White that we would knock off the bullsh*t, so we didn’t respond. Team Tate really took advantage of the fact that we were going to stand by our word to Dana, and as a result, really tried to bully us. 

We got down to fight time and you could see in Davey’s eyes that he was ready to get out there and win. The fight was competitive for about the first thirty seconds to a minute, but after that, Davey just imposed his will. Once he cracked Louis hard with a few punches, it was pretty much all over. Davey is just a monster, but to Louis’ credit, he didn’t give up. He was saved by the bell in the first round but he took a pretty bad beating.

We knew he was hurt between rounds, and the coaches told Davey to keep up the pressure. In the second round, once Davey got that big slam on Louis, it was just a matter of time before the fight was over. He took his back, sunk in the choke and got the tap. It was just a really impressive performance from Davey, and I think it showed everyone else in the house that he was a threat to win the entire competition.

After the fight, I was stoked. I knew if Davey won, I would be picked to fight next. There was talk of me fighting Sarah Moras before, but the coaches ended up having me fight Raquel Pennington. I figured this would be a great fight, and I was just really excited to get in the cage and compete.

When I was fighting for Invicta, Raquel’s name was thrown around as a potential opponent for my pro debut but it just didn’t work out. So this wasn’t the first time I had thought about fighting her. 

I knew Raquel wanted to fight me too. I heard that Miesha Tate had that matchup as well, so it really just worked out well. That would leave Peggy Morgan, my teammate, to fight Sarah Moras in the final quarterfinal, as they were the only two females left.

I was ready to fight and chomping at the bit. I was feeling great in training and just excited to get in there and scrap with Raquel, who I know is a tough opponent. My mindset was to just get into the cage, give my all and trust that my skills would guide me to victory. 

 

**Tune in next week to hear Jessamyn’s thoughts on the continued tension between coaching staffs, more in-depth stories from the house and her thoughts on the fight between Davey Grant and Louis Fissette as well as the next female fight pick.

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The Ultimate Fighter 18, Ep. 5 Live Results: David Grant vs. Louis Fisette

The Ultimate Fighter returns Wednesday at 10 p.m. ET for another installment of its 18th season.
David Grant (Team Rousey) battles Louis Fisette (Team Tate) in this week’s male bantamweight matchup, but there is sure to be some in-house goings on as we…

The Ultimate Fighter returns Wednesday at 10 p.m. ET for another installment of its 18th season.

David Grant (Team Rousey) battles Louis Fisette (Team Tate) in this week’s male bantamweight matchup, but there is sure to be some in-house goings on as well. Team Rousey will try to even the score as Team Tate is up 2-1 heading into the fight.

Come back for live coverage of the next episode of The Ultimate Fighter

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TUF 18: Ronda Rousey’s Mom Lashes out at Fans Who Call Daughter ‘Cry Baby’

The UFC’s female bantamweight champion, Ronda Rousey, has cried on almost every episode of the current season of The Ultimate Fighter reality TV show, where she’s coaching opposite her nemesis, Miesha Tate.
Now, her mom has blogged about he…

The UFC’s female bantamweight champion, Ronda Rousey, has cried on almost every episode of the current season of The Ultimate Fighter reality TV show, where she’s coaching opposite her nemesis, Miesha Tate.

Now, her mom has blogged about her daughter’s experience on the show, telling fans who accuse her of crying too much to shut up.

Ann Maria Rousey DeMars, a former world judo champion and sports psychologist, wrote on her blog that during her visit to the set, she got the impression that the show’s promoters were deliberately trying to provoke her daughter “to create a certain image for television”:

Maybe they’ll show some of that on the episode, maybe not. For those of you who say she cries too much—she’s always cried like that all of her life. Who the hell are you people to enforce a crying quota? If she cries over sad movies, happy endings and losing her car keys, what’s it to you? I’m the opposite of that. I’ve cried three times in the last twenty years, and one of those was when Ronda’s father died. So, she can have my share of the quota and it averages out.

The first time we saw Rousey crying on TUF was following Shayna Baszler’s loss to Tate’s student, Julianna Pena. We saw her crying again in the following episode when her student, Chris Beal, lost to Chris Holdsworth.

There’s been a lot of talk about how Rousey will come across on the show, with Tate saying that the show will reveal the true colours of her “emotionally unstable” opponent.

So far, the show has revealed tension between both fighters, with much of it centered around Tate’s boyfriend, Bryan Caraway, and Rousey’s trainer, Edmond Tarverdyan—neither of whom play football.

The show will run until November 30, when the two winners will face off in the finale. Rousey and Tate are set to fight at the co-main event of UFC 167 in December.

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