Mark Coleman Joins ‘The Ultimate Fighter 19? as BJ Penn’s Wrestling Coach


(Can assistant swagger-coach Phil Baroni be far behind? / Photo via Getty)

Former UFC heavyweight champion and Hall of Famer Mark Coleman recently got a call from the returning B.J. Penn asking “The Hammer” to join Penn’s coaching staff on The Ultimate Fighter 19. “It’s hard to put it into words. The word ‘honored’, everybody uses it too much, but I really am just honored that this guy would want to use me as his coach,” Coleman told Fox Sport’s Damon Martin.

“Me and BJ Penn have been friends since the beginning of this thing, and I consider him a great friend…I’m honored that he respects me enough to handle this position. I don’t take it lightly. It’s going to be a serious job to me out there. I don’t have a whole lot of idols, but BJ Penn is one of them. I love the guy. For him to ask me to do this, I can’t put it into words. Hopefully, I can do a good job with him and as long as he’s happy with me, I’m good.”

TUF 19 will debut on Fox Sports 1 early in 20014. BJ Penn and Frankie Edgar will coach opposite one another on the show and then fight one another for the third time. Coleman will leave for Las Vegas in a few weeks to help Penn prepare the young fighters for the opportunity of their lives.


(Can assistant swagger-coach Phil Baroni be far behind? / Photo via Getty)

Former UFC heavyweight champion and Hall of Famer Mark Coleman recently got a call from the returning B.J. Penn asking “The Hammer” to join Penn’s coaching staff on The Ultimate Fighter 19. “It’s hard to put it into words. The word ‘honored’, everybody uses it too much, but I really am just honored that this guy would want to use me as his coach,” Coleman told Fox Sport’s Damon Martin.

“Me and BJ Penn have been friends since the beginning of this thing, and I consider him a great friend…I’m honored that he respects me enough to handle this position. I don’t take it lightly. It’s going to be a serious job to me out there. I don’t have a whole lot of idols, but BJ Penn is one of them. I love the guy. For him to ask me to do this, I can’t put it into words. Hopefully, I can do a good job with him and as long as he’s happy with me, I’m good.”

TUF 19 will debut on Fox Sports 1 early in 20014. BJ Penn and Frankie Edgar will coach opposite one another on the show and then fight one another for the third time. Coleman will leave for Las Vegas in a few weeks to help Penn prepare the young fighters for the opportunity of their lives.

“I’m hoping to do my best to turn one of these guys into a champion,” the 48-year-old said. “The closest thing to actually being in the ring and fighting is getting to know a fighter, and training him and actually watching him in there…I’ve always wanted to be able to give back somehow, and one of the few ways I can give back in general is to help kids like this achieve their goals.”

Coleman has not fought since his loss to Randy Couture at UFC 109 in February 2010, and had a hip replacement surgery earlier this year. “The Godfather of Ground and Pound” seems to be looking forward to getting back on the mat with the young guns on TUF 19.

“Here we go,” he said. “I’m going to have to put my hip to the test.”

Penn’s choice of Coleman as his wrestling coach reflects his appreciation and respect for old-school fighters like himself — but should he have picked a younger, more modern wrestling coach to help guide his team to victory? Or at least one with a fully-functioning hip?

Elias Cepeda

‘TUF 18? Episode 6 Recap + Videos: Hooters Girls, Bed Invasions, And an All-Out War

(The entire Raquel Pennington vs. Jessamyn Duke fight, via YouTube.com/TheUltimateFighter)

By Elias Cepeda

At the start of last night’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter, we learn that this week’s paired up opponents — Team Rousey’s Jessamyn Duke and Team Tate’s Raquel Pennington — were supposed to fight once before. Jessamyn was to make her pro debut against Raquel but her coaches made her pull out because they didn’t like the match up for her.

Jessamyn says she’s glad it is finally happening and on this large stage, no less. Raquel is like, whatever, I’m happy to fight you now because I was ready to fight you a while ago.

Raquel gets make over from Julianna Pena, who is supposedly a “little princess.” Raquel talks about the difficulty of having come out as gay to her family and learning to value her own happiness above what others think of her, while we watch her try on high heels, perhaps for the first time, and get a runway walking lesson from Julianna near the pool.

Raquel takes off the heels and gets back into the gym to work on her Muay Thai kickboxing — specifically defending against the clinch of the taller Jessamyn. Coach Tate tells Raquel not to respect Jessamyn’s punching power because she thinks the beanpole ex-model has not yet learned to hit with power. By contrast, Tate says that Raquel is the strongest girl on her team, and she’s concerned that Raquel will get going to a fast start.

After a commercial break, the teams are taken to something called The Green Valley Ranch, which seems to be a high-end bordello. A bunch of scantily clad Hooters Girls await them and pour them drinks. A pool party ensues, featuring gratuitous slo-mo shots of Tate entering the water and bikini-clad backsides. Luckily, the TUF YouTube channel has released video of that too:


(The entire Raquel Pennington vs. Jessamyn Duke fight, via YouTube.com/TheUltimateFighter)

By Elias Cepeda

At the start of last night’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter, we learn that this week’s paired up opponents — Team Rousey’s Jessamyn Duke and Team Tate’s Raquel Pennington — were supposed to fight once before. Jessamyn was to make her pro debut against Raquel but her coaches made her pull out because they didn’t like the match up for her.

Jessamyn says she’s glad it is finally happening and on this large stage, no less. Raquel is like, whatever, I’m happy to fight you now because I was ready to fight you a while ago.

Raquel gets make over from Julianna Pena, who is supposedly a “little princess.” Raquel talks about the difficulty of having come out as gay to her family and learning to value her own happiness above what others think of her, while we watch her try on high heels, perhaps for the first time, and get a runway walking lesson from Julianna near the pool.

Raquel takes off the heels and gets back into the gym to work on her Muay Thai kickboxing — specifically defending against the clinch of the taller Jessamyn. Coach Tate tells Raquel not to respect Jessamyn’s punching power because she thinks the beanpole ex-model has not yet learned to hit with power. By contrast, Tate says that Raquel is the strongest girl on her team, and she’s concerned that Raquel will get going to a fast start.

After a commercial break, the teams are taken to something called The Green Valley Ranch, which seems to be a high-end bordello. A bunch of scantily clad Hooters Girls await them and pour them drinks. A pool party ensues, featuring gratuitous slo-mo shots of Tate entering the water and bikini-clad backsides. Luckily, the TUF YouTube channel has released video of that too:

Raquel was bummed she couldn’t eat from the buffet because she was cutting weight, but she did push Tate into the water. Jessamyn says that if she was fighting anywhere else, any other time, she would not have gone to a pool party the day before weighing in, so she skips the festivities. Duke stays at the house alone and says she appreciated the quiet time and used it to focus on her fight.

Back at the pool part, Ronda decides not to fuck with the Tate family and everyone has a good time, with no Armenian-infused tension.

The part where a nation begins to root for Anthony to get knocked out

Team Rousey’s Anthony Gutierrez returns from the pool party, hopped up on liquor and frustrated that none of the hired girls at the ranch would give him the time of day. So, he takes out his frustration on the house. He screams, he stomps around, he throws things at the door of Raquel’s room as she tries to sleep and then proceeds to open up the door, jump on the girls’ beds, and drag Raquel out of hers.

Raquel has a fight coming up and is cutting weight. There could not be a worse time to mess with someone’s sleep or general peace of mind than right now. Anthony should know this well as a fighter himself. Raquel promises revenge. We’re hoping for the ol’ super-glue-on-the-eyelids or bludgeoning-with-a-chair-while-he-sleeps routine.

Instead, Julianna, Sarah Moras, and Raquel just go into Anthony’s room the next morning while he is sleeping, jump on his bed to wake him up, and then flip his mattress over while he’s still on it. Which was probably pretty easy for them because he’s a very, very small man.

Jessamyn readies for war

Back in the Team Rousey training room, coach Edmond advises Jessamyn to use her reach and keep Raquel at the end of her jab. Coach Rousey says that JD is raring to fight.

Duke says that she believes Raquel is the toughest girl left in the tournament and so if she beats her, she’ll be able to win the whole thing. Raquel says that she has had to distance herself from Jessamyn the past few days in order to prepare for their fight.

“No fight is easy but this one is simple. Be focused, be first,” Rousey tells Jessamyn in the locker room before the fight.

“You’re too strong for her. You’re too mentally tough. Just go, go, go, go,” Raquel is prodded in her locker room by a coach.

“The first round has to be yours,” Tate tells her.

Round 1

The first round proves to be a torrid affair as both women go hard. Raquel lands early and often with a hard inside leg kick while Jessamyn tries to keep her at bay with her jab and head kicks. Raquel forces her way inside and presses Jessamyn against the cage only to be caught in a standing guillotine.

Jessamyn looks to have a good grip on it as she works to secure the choke for the better part of a minute but Raquel defends well and works her way out of it and returns to the center of the Octagon. From there, both fighters throw and land with about the same frequency.

Jessamyn tries to use her length through kicks and Raquel counters off those kicks with effective punches of her own. Jessamyn lands a couple knees to the head but Raquel walks through them and returns fire.

Round 2

Both fighters begin by popping out the jab. Jessamyn finds success with some body kicks but Raquel begins to find her own range with an over hand right off of a jab.

Jessamyn gets the clinch and lands several hard knees to the head and body before Raquel punches her way out. Raquel begins to land the more powerful shots, mostly punches. Then, she initiates her own clinch, landing nasty knees to Jessamyn’s body and head.

They must have hurt but the knees also served to piss Jessamyn off as she pushes off and returns fire with knees and punches of her own. Raquel then really finds her mark with her right and left hands, teeing off on Jessamyn against the cage and hurting the Team Rousey fighter.

Jessamyn does not wilt, however, and gets back to the center of the mat before clinching with Raquel again and landing a few more nasty knees to her head. Raquel answers with another crushing right hand. Raquel lands a left push kick that sends Jessamyn careening backwards. Then, Raquel lands a rear round house leg kick. Jessamyn follows up with a head kick of her own.

Jessamyn lands a jab, then a left hook, followed up by knee after knee from the Thai plum clinch while pressing Raquel against the cage until the round ends.

The fight is scored dead even after two so we head into a sudden death round to decide a winner!

Round 3

Coach Tate’s prediction to her fighter Raquel proved to be true in the third round as Raquel’s striking power started to make the difference for her. Jessamyn continued her attack of head kicks and jabs but none of them landed as hard as Raquel’s hard lefts and rights, as well as her stiff leg kicks.

As the round progressed, Jessamyn began to eat more and more power shots to the head but kept moving forward, undeterred. With both her eyes bruised and her face cut, Jessamyn gave it one last flurry of effort in the final thirty seconds of the fight, landing punches and knees.

In the end, however, it was not enough and Raquel won the round and the fight on the judges’ scorecards.

Coach Tate shakes the hand of everyone in Jessamyn’s corner after the fight. Well, everyone except for Coach Rousey who, as Tate extends her hand, puts up a single finger and tells Meisha to “go fuck yourself.”

We may not have seen much of her in this episode, but “Rowdy” Rousey is always there. Don’t you forget it.

Coach Tate regains fight selection rights because of the win and selects Josh Hill (former male model) vs. Michael Wooten (current British guy). Thanks for joining us, ‘Taters. See ya next week!

Team Rousey Women
Shayna Baszler (eliminated by Julianna Pena in the quarterfinals, episode 2)
Jessamyn Duke (eliminated by Raquel Pennington in the quarterfinals, episode 6)
Peggy Morgan
Jessica Rakoczy

Team Rousey Men
Chris Beal (eliminated by Chris Holdsworth in the quarterfinals, episode 3)
Davey Grant
Anthony Gutierrez
Michael Wootten

Team Tate Women
Julianna Pena
Sarah Moras
Raquel Pennington
Roxanne Modafferi (eliminated by Jessica Rakoczy in the quarterfinals, episode 4)

Team Tate Men
Cody Bollinger
Chris Holdsworth
Josh Hill
Louis Fisette (eliminated by Davey Grant in the quarterfinals, episode 5)

‘TUF 18? Episode 6 Recap + Videos: Hooters Girls, Bed Invasions, And an All-Out War

(The entire Raquel Pennington vs. Jessamyn Duke fight, via YouTube.com/TheUltimateFighter)

By Elias Cepeda

At the start of last night’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter, we learn that this week’s paired up opponents — Team Rousey’s Jessamyn Duke and Team Tate’s Raquel Pennington — were supposed to fight once before. Jessamyn was to make her pro debut against Raquel but her coaches made her pull out because they didn’t like the match up for her.

Jessamyn says she’s glad it is finally happening and on this large stage, no less. Raquel is like, whatever, I’m happy to fight you now because I was ready to fight you a while ago.

Raquel gets make over from Julianna Pena, who is supposedly a “little princess.” Raquel talks about the difficulty of having come out as gay to her family and learning to value her own happiness above what others think of her, while we watch her try on high heels, perhaps for the first time, and get a runway walking lesson from Julianna near the pool.

Raquel takes off the heels and gets back into the gym to work on her Muay Thai kickboxing — specifically defending against the clinch of the taller Jessamyn. Coach Tate tells Raquel not to respect Jessamyn’s punching power because she thinks the beanpole ex-model has not yet learned to hit with power. By contrast, Tate says that Raquel is the strongest girl on her team, and she’s concerned that Raquel will get going to a fast start.

After a commercial break, the teams are taken to something called The Green Valley Ranch, which seems to be a high-end bordello. A bunch of scantily clad Hooters Girls await them and pour them drinks. A pool party ensues, featuring gratuitous slo-mo shots of Tate entering the water and bikini-clad backsides. Luckily, the TUF YouTube channel has released video of that too:


(The entire Raquel Pennington vs. Jessamyn Duke fight, via YouTube.com/TheUltimateFighter)

By Elias Cepeda

At the start of last night’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter, we learn that this week’s paired up opponents — Team Rousey’s Jessamyn Duke and Team Tate’s Raquel Pennington — were supposed to fight once before. Jessamyn was to make her pro debut against Raquel but her coaches made her pull out because they didn’t like the match up for her.

Jessamyn says she’s glad it is finally happening and on this large stage, no less. Raquel is like, whatever, I’m happy to fight you now because I was ready to fight you a while ago.

Raquel gets make over from Julianna Pena, who is supposedly a “little princess.” Raquel talks about the difficulty of having come out as gay to her family and learning to value her own happiness above what others think of her, while we watch her try on high heels, perhaps for the first time, and get a runway walking lesson from Julianna near the pool.

Raquel takes off the heels and gets back into the gym to work on her Muay Thai kickboxing — specifically defending against the clinch of the taller Jessamyn. Coach Tate tells Raquel not to respect Jessamyn’s punching power because she thinks the beanpole ex-model has not yet learned to hit with power. By contrast, Tate says that Raquel is the strongest girl on her team, and she’s concerned that Raquel will get going to a fast start.

After a commercial break, the teams are taken to something called The Green Valley Ranch, which seems to be a high-end bordello. A bunch of scantily clad Hooters Girls await them and pour them drinks. A pool party ensues, featuring gratuitous slo-mo shots of Tate entering the water and bikini-clad backsides. Luckily, the TUF YouTube channel has released video of that too:

Raquel was bummed she couldn’t eat from the buffet because she was cutting weight, but she did push Tate into the water. Jessamyn says that if she was fighting anywhere else, any other time, she would not have gone to a pool party the day before weighing in, so she skips the festivities. Duke stays at the house alone and says she appreciated the quiet time and used it to focus on her fight.

Back at the pool part, Ronda decides not to fuck with the Tate family and everyone has a good time, with no Armenian-infused tension.

The part where a nation begins to root for Anthony to get knocked out

Team Rousey’s Anthony Gutierrez returns from the pool party, hopped up on liquor and frustrated that none of the hired girls at the ranch would give him the time of day. So, he takes out his frustration on the house. He screams, he stomps around, he throws things at the door of Raquel’s room as she tries to sleep and then proceeds to open up the door, jump on the girls’ beds, and drag Raquel out of hers.

Raquel has a fight coming up and is cutting weight. There could not be a worse time to mess with someone’s sleep or general peace of mind than right now. Anthony should know this well as a fighter himself. Raquel promises revenge. We’re hoping for the ol’ super-glue-on-the-eyelids or bludgeoning-with-a-chair-while-he-sleeps routine.

Instead, Julianna, Sarah Moras, and Raquel just go into Anthony’s room the next morning while he is sleeping, jump on his bed to wake him up, and then flip his mattress over while he’s still on it. Which was probably pretty easy for them because he’s a very, very small man.

Jessamyn readies for war

Back in the Team Rousey training room, coach Edmond advises Jessamyn to use her reach and keep Raquel at the end of her jab. Coach Rousey says that JD is raring to fight.

Duke says that she believes Raquel is the toughest girl left in the tournament and so if she beats her, she’ll be able to win the whole thing. Raquel says that she has had to distance herself from Jessamyn the past few days in order to prepare for their fight.

“No fight is easy but this one is simple. Be focused, be first,” Rousey tells Jessamyn in the locker room before the fight.

“You’re too strong for her. You’re too mentally tough. Just go, go, go, go,” Raquel is prodded in her locker room by a coach.

“The first round has to be yours,” Tate tells her.

Round 1

The first round proves to be a torrid affair as both women go hard. Raquel lands early and often with a hard inside leg kick while Jessamyn tries to keep her at bay with her jab and head kicks. Raquel forces her way inside and presses Jessamyn against the cage only to be caught in a standing guillotine.

Jessamyn looks to have a good grip on it as she works to secure the choke for the better part of a minute but Raquel defends well and works her way out of it and returns to the center of the Octagon. From there, both fighters throw and land with about the same frequency.

Jessamyn tries to use her length through kicks and Raquel counters off those kicks with effective punches of her own. Jessamyn lands a couple knees to the head but Raquel walks through them and returns fire.

Round 2

Both fighters begin by popping out the jab. Jessamyn finds success with some body kicks but Raquel begins to find her own range with an over hand right off of a jab.

Jessamyn gets the clinch and lands several hard knees to the head and body before Raquel punches her way out. Raquel begins to land the more powerful shots, mostly punches. Then, she initiates her own clinch, landing nasty knees to Jessamyn’s body and head.

They must have hurt but the knees also served to piss Jessamyn off as she pushes off and returns fire with knees and punches of her own. Raquel then really finds her mark with her right and left hands, teeing off on Jessamyn against the cage and hurting the Team Rousey fighter.

Jessamyn does not wilt, however, and gets back to the center of the mat before clinching with Raquel again and landing a few more nasty knees to her head. Raquel answers with another crushing right hand. Raquel lands a left push kick that sends Jessamyn careening backwards. Then, Raquel lands a rear round house leg kick. Jessamyn follows up with a head kick of her own.

Jessamyn lands a jab, then a left hook, followed up by knee after knee from the Thai plum clinch while pressing Raquel against the cage until the round ends.

The fight is scored dead even after two so we head into a sudden death round to decide a winner!

Round 3

Coach Tate’s prediction to her fighter Raquel proved to be true in the third round as Raquel’s striking power started to make the difference for her. Jessamyn continued her attack of head kicks and jabs but none of them landed as hard as Raquel’s hard lefts and rights, as well as her stiff leg kicks.

As the round progressed, Jessamyn began to eat more and more power shots to the head but kept moving forward, undeterred. With both her eyes bruised and her face cut, Jessamyn gave it one last flurry of effort in the final thirty seconds of the fight, landing punches and knees.

In the end, however, it was not enough and Raquel won the round and the fight on the judges’ scorecards.

Coach Tate shakes the hand of everyone in Jessamyn’s corner after the fight. Well, everyone except for Coach Rousey who, as Tate extends her hand, puts up a single finger and tells Meisha to “go fuck yourself.”

We may not have seen much of her in this episode, but “Rowdy” Rousey is always there. Don’t you forget it.

Coach Tate regains fight selection rights because of the win and selects Josh Hill (former male model) vs. Michael Wooten (current British guy). Thanks for joining us, ‘Taters. See ya next week!

Team Rousey Women
Shayna Baszler (eliminated by Julianna Pena in the quarterfinals, episode 2)
Jessamyn Duke (eliminated by Raquel Pennington in the quarterfinals, episode 6)
Peggy Morgan
Jessica Rakoczy

Team Rousey Men
Chris Beal (eliminated by Chris Holdsworth in the quarterfinals, episode 3)
Davey Grant
Anthony Gutierrez
Michael Wootten

Team Tate Women
Julianna Pena
Sarah Moras
Raquel Pennington
Roxanne Modafferi (eliminated by Jessica Rakoczy in the quarterfinals, episode 4)

Team Tate Men
Cody Bollinger
Chris Holdsworth
Josh Hill
Louis Fisette (eliminated by Davey Grant in the quarterfinals, episode 5)

TUF 18: Jessamyn Duke Fighter Blog, Episode 6

Note: All quotes and material were obtained firsthand by Bleacher Report through one-on-one between Jessamyn Duke and Bleacher Report’s Riley Kontek.
It was finally here. The moment I’d been waiting for since I won my fight to get into the TUF hou…

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

It was finally here. The moment I’d been waiting for since I won my fight to get into the TUF house.

Our team had control of the fight picks and Ronda picked me to fight Raquel Pennington. I’d been ready to fight since I’d arrived on the show and had been keeping my weight low in preparation. 

My cut to 135 is not really an easy one. To be able to make weight on 24 to 48 hours’ notice at anytime, I have to walk around at a much lower training weight than I’m used to, so I was quite relieved when I found out that it was going to be my turn soon. 

I’ve known of Raquel for almost a year before the show. Not only have we fought on the same cards before (with Invicta), we had potentially been opponents for each other at one point. It was for my professional debut, and despite the fact that I wanted the fight, my coach wouldn’t let me accept it because he felt she had too much experience for me to take on as a debut fighter, so it never happened.

He promised me that I could ask for her next, and true to my word, I asked to fight her every time after that but it could never be arranged. Either we weren’t fighting on the same card, or she already had an opponent arranged. So, I wasn’t kidding when I said that this was a fight I’ve been looking forward to for a long time. 

I viewed Raquel as the toughest opponent left in the house. Her ground game is very good, she’s known as a heavy-handed striker, and I’d only ever heard people talk about how strong she was. But I thought, “Hey, if I’m gonna fight the toughest chick here, I’d rather do it when I’m fresh, uninjured and not coming directly off another fight.”

I felt like everything was lining up perfectly. My strategy was to be a better fighter. Period.

I felt that my biggest advantage would most likely be on the feet, so I wanted to keep it in there. I didn’t want to force the fight to the ground, but I was more than prepared to fight here if that’s where it had ended up.

Even though I believed I was the better fighter on the ground, I knew how strong she supposedly was and that she has a good sprawl and a heavy top game so I didn’t want to risk getting controlled in that range. I knew that no matter what, it was going to be a good fight. That’s why even in my pre-fight interview, when asked to send a message to her, I said, “Let’s go hard and put on fight of the season.” 

The Green Valley Ranch pool party was the day after our fight announcement. But more importantly it was the day before our weigh-ins. Originally, I had planned on going, but that was before I had started the really miserable part of the weight cut that involved being heavily dehydrated, no food and sitting in a sauna for around four hours.

Ronda was my weight-cut buddy. She kept me company in the sauna and helped me pass the time and really made sure my mind was in the right place for the fight. Anybody who cuts weight hard knows how valuable and appreciated the weight-cutting buddy is. So after going through all of that I decided that sitting outside in the hot sun, around people having a ridiculous amount of fun and stuffing their faces with delicious food sounded about like the worst possible thing I could think of to do the night before my weigh-ins, so I stayed home.

It was definitely the right decision. The quiet time was just what I needed. Anytime I fight, I always keep to myself for a little bit. It helps me get in the right place mentally. It’s war. It’s battle. And even if it ends up not being the case, you have to prepare for it regardless. It was a nice change of pace to have the house to myself and for it to be so quiet!

As soon as I was ready to lay down and get some sleep, everyone got home from the party and it didn’t take long for the peace and quiet to end. To be fair, Anthony was really the only person who was guilty, but he was enough. The episode didn’t show just how LONG his antics went on for!

The night before weigh-ins is always the worst night to try and sleep. You’re hungry, dehydrated, you can’t get comfortable on your bed because everything hurts from your muscles being so drained. I was extremely frustrated that Anthony felt it was necessary to try and do everything in his power to be as disruptive as possible. Not only that, he was annoying my opponent too, which is just not OK.

So, as I’m laying in my bed, grumbling about this to my roommates, Peggy finally climbs down from her aerial perch and goes full-on psycho mom mode and marches upstairs and tells Anthony—and let me make sure I get this right—”Hey! Anthony! Shut up! Just shut up, just shut the f*ck up Anthony!” and thankfully…he did. That night I was super thankful for Peggy. Because once Anthony knocked it off, I got to sleep at a decent hour. 

Fight day had arrived. I woke up early, enjoyed my coffee, and Davey made me a delicious “proper gorgeous” banana omelet. I know that you probably don’t know what that is, but trust me…they are delicious. I felt like the day was mine.

One thing I really liked about the TUF experience was how everything revolved around fighting. No distractions, no social media and nothing to take your focus off the task at hand. The fight. And on fight day, all the attention is on you and that day felt great to me. After breakfast, I kept to myself and wrote in my journal one last time before the van ride to the gym. The last thing I wrote to myself was, “Something wonderful is about to happen.”

I was right. From the very first exchange, I knew I was in for a good fight.

One of the very first punches she landed busted my nose pretty good and from the beginning of the first round on, I had a hard time breathing. There wasn’t much of a feeling-out process. We both were attacking with bad intentions and you could feel the intensity between us. All those shots were being thrown hard. It instantly pushed the fight to a pace where we were trying to break each other. 

After the first round was over, I went back to my corner and felt like I had won the round, but I knew it was close. Coach Edmond told me I was doing the best with my clinch and my knees, and that I needed to attack with them more. I thought to myself, “If I can push hard and fight like this is the last round, I can finish her or win the decision.”

However, she came out in the second round with the same attitude. She pushed forward and landed some big shots that started to really add up and do damage. At one point she had me against the cage and was teeing off on my head trying to finish me off.

I remember feeling like the lights were dimming and thinking to myself, “You gotta get outta here, you gotta move. You aren’t going down like this!” and I went for that clinch and snapped a couple knees up to her face and she backed off.

I was trying desperately to shake off the cobwebs to recover. I knew at that moment I was behind in that round and I wasn’t gonna let this fight slip away from me. So I did the only thing I knew to do and that was to just keep pushing forward and keep throwing bombs. The round ended with several more exchanges from us both. I walked back to my corner in that round and I wasn’t sure what was coming next. 

I remember Edmond telling me to wake up. I think he knew how bad I had been hurt in that round and he really helped bring my focus back. I heard the referee say we were going to a third, and I instantly had another adrenaline dump. This was it.

I was in the fight of my life and I was down to the last five minutes. Every. Single. Second.

That’s what I came up off the stool telling myself to fight. I couldn’t breath out of my nose at all at this point and I remember spitting a massive blood/snot ball onto the canvas at my feet before the round started. 

Both of us were tired and we knew it. We were both trying to push that extra little bit to try and finish the other, but we just couldn’t quite do it. I felt like the round was super close. Even in the moment, I felt like it was super close. But then something happened.

I threw a combo that ended with a knee and I saw her circle her head out and when she raised up, half her face was covered in blood. I had opened up a cut. I totally went for it. I just started throwing everything I had at her. I thought to myself, “This is it, this is the moment. You take it, you have to go now!” and I went. Then I heard the horn. The fight was over.

I thought I had stolen the round. I turned around to walk to my corner and “Stitch” Duran met me with a towel in my face and I heard him say, “I think you just took that round, girl!” I couldn’t believe what I had just gone through.

I’ve never fought like that ever. That was definitely the best I’ve ever performed in a cage. I don’t think its the best I’m capable of, but I believe that it was the best I could have done at that point in time.

I remember feeling an extreme amount of pride in myself for fighting through some extremely tough moments during the fight. I poured my entire heart and soul into that fight. I gave all that I had to give. I was happy. You can see it on my face as soon as the fight is over. Raquel and I meet each other in the center of the cage and hug each other and we both have this ridiculous smile on our faces. I’m sure she was thinking the same thing I was. It was that close. I told her, “Was it worth the wait?” and she grinned back and said, “Yes.”

Decision time. Suddenly the reality hit me when the referee grabbed our wrists and positioned me in the cage. I haven’t won yet, and I knew just how close that fight was. I started to have doubts.

When I heard Dana call out Raquel as the winner, my heart sank instantly. Never leave it in the hands of the judges. That’s what it says on the walls of the UFC training center above the locker rooms. You can never complain about a decision if you let it get to that point.

I didn’t win the fight because I didn’t finish the fight. I let it slip away. I gave everything I had to the fight, but it just wasn’t enough that day.

It was extremely hard to take. No one believed as strongly as I did that I was going to win that whole show. I believed it as strongly as I’ve ever believed anything in my life. I was absolutely heartbroken that I had failed. I felt like I had disappointed all of the people in my life that have supported me, invested in my career or believed in me. I wanted to win it for myself, but I also wanted to win it for them too. 

Not only did Ronda say exactly what I needed to hear after the fight, she brought me back to the locker room, where my entire team surrounded me and gave me a giant group hug. It was the beginning of the healing process and I was so glad I had such amazing people there to help me through it.

That’s why those people are like family to me now. There is so much more going on behind the scenes of that show than people realize. We bonded in ways that a lot of people won’t ever understand. When you share life-changing moments like that with people, and they experience the highs and the lows with you, it brings you together.

My greatest hope was that the fight was entertaining, appreciated and that I did enough to still impress the UFC and Dana White with my performance.

The moment was swiftly brought to an end by Dana White letting us know that it was time for the next fight selection. Team Tate had control now and they selected Michael Wooten to fight Josh Hill.

I was so excited to see this fight. Michael had become one of my favorite male fighters in the house because I was a fan of his style. He’s got a great dynamic striking style that was very exciting and a really solid ground game. I loved training with him every day and couldn’t wait to see him fight Josh. We knew Josh was a strong wrestler and we were sure we knew what his game plan was going to be. He was going to try and outwrestle Wooten. Wooten’s challenge was going to be not allowing that to happen, and I believed in him 100 percent.

 

**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 Josh Hill and Michael Wootten, as well as the next female fight pick.

**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.

It was finally here. The moment I’d been waiting for since I won my fight to get into the TUF house. Our team had control of the fight picks and Ronda picked me to fight Raquel Pennington. I’d been ready to fight since I’d arrived on the show and had been keeping my weight low in preparation. My cut to 135 is not really an easy one. To be able to make weight on 24-48hrs notice at anytime I have to walk around at a much lower training weight than I’m used to… so I was quite relieved when I found out that it was going to be my turn soon. 

 

I’ve known of Raquel for almost a year before the show. Not only have we fought on the same cards before (with Invicta), we had potentially been opponents for each other at one point. It was for my professional debut, and despite the fact that I wanted the fight my coach wouldn’t let me accept it because he felt she had too much experience for me to take on as a debut fighter, so it never happened. He promised me that I could ask for her next and true to my word, I asked to fight her every time after that but it could never be arranged. Either we weren’t fighting on the same card, or she already had an opponent arranged. So, I wasn’t kidding when I said that this was a fight I’ve been looking forward to for a long time. 

 

I viewed Raquel as the toughest opponent left in the house. Her ground game is very good, she’s known as a heavy handed striker, and I’d only ever heard people talk about how strong she was. But I thought “Hey, if I’m gonna fight the toughest chick here, I’d rather do it when I’m fresh, uninjured and not coming directly off another fight.” I felt like everything was lining up perfectly. My strategy was to be a better fighter. Period. I felt that my biggest advantage would most likely be on the feet, so I wanted to keep it in there. I didn’t want to force the fight to the ground, but I was more than prepared to fight here if that’s where it had ended up. Even though I believed I was the better fighter on the ground, I knew how strong she supposedly was and that she has a good sprawl and a heavy top game so I didn’t want to risk getting controlled in that range. I knew that no matter what, it was going to be a good fight. That’s why even in my pre-fight interview, when asked to send a message to her, I said, “Let’s go hard and put on fight of the season.” 

 

The Green Valley Ranch pool party was the day after our fight announcement. But more importantly it was the day before our weigh-ins. Originally, I had planned on going, but that was before I had started the really miserable part of the weight cut that involved being heavily dehydrated, no food, and sitting in a sauna for around four hours. Ronda was my weight cut buddy. She kept me company in the sauna and helped me pass the time and really made sure my mind was in the right place for the fight. Anybody who cuts weight hard knows how valuable and appreciated the weight-cutting buddy is. So after going through all of that I decided that sitting outside in the hot sun, around people having a ridiculous amount of fun and stuffing their faces with delicious food sounded about like the worst possible thing I could think of to do the night before my weigh-ins… so I stayed home. It was definitely the right decision. The quiet time was just what I needed. Anytime I fight, I always keep to myself the last little bit. It helps me get in the right place mentally. It’s war. It’s battle. And even if it ends up not being the case, you have to prepare for it regardless. It was a nice change of pace to have the house to myself and for it to be so quiet!

 

As soon as I was ready to lay down and get some sleep, everyone got home from the party and it didn’t take long for the peace and quiet to end. To be fair, Anthony was really the only person who was guilty… but he was enough. The episode didn’t show just how LONG his antics went on for! The night before weigh-ins is always the worst night to try and sleep. You’re hungry, dehydrated, you can’t get comfortable on your bed because everything hurts from your muscles being so drained. I was EXTREMELY frustrated that Anthony felt it was necessary to try and do everything in his power to be as disruptive as possible. Not only that, he was annoying my opponent too, which is just not okay.

 

So, as I’m laying in my bed, grumbling about this to my roommates, Peggy finally climbs down from her arial perch and goes full-on psycho mom mode and marches upstairs and tells Anthony, and let me make sure I get this right, “Hey! Anthony! Shut up! Just shut up, just shut the f*ck up Anthony!” and thankfully… he did. That night I was super thankful for Peggy. Because once Anthony knocked it off, I got to sleep at a decent hour. 

 

Fight day had arrived. I woke up early, enjoyed my coffee, and Davey made me a delicious “proper gorgeous” banana omelet. I know that you probably don’t know what that is, but just trust me… they are delicious. I felt like the day was mine. One thing I really liked about the TUF experience was how everything revolved around fighting. No distractions, no social media, and nothing to take your focus off the task at hand. The fight. And on fight day, all the attention is on you and that day felt great to me. After breakfast, I kept to myself and wrote in my journal one last time before the van ride to the gym. The last thing I wrote to myself was, “Something wonderful is about to happen.”

 

I was right. From the very first exchange, I knew I was in for a good fight. One of the very first punches she landed busted my nose pretty good and from the beginning of the first round on, I had a hard time breathing. There wasn’t much of a feeling out process. We both were attacking with bad intentions and you could feel the intensity between us. All those shots were being thrown hard. It instantly pushed the fight to a pace where we were trying to break each other. 

 

After the first round was over, I went back to my corner and felt like I had won the round, but I knew it was close. Edmond, the striking coach told me I was doing the best with my clinch and my knees and that I needed to attack with them more. I thought to myself if I can push hard and fight like this is the last round I can finish her or win the decision. However, she came out in the second round with the same attitude. She pushed forward and landed some big shots that started to really add up and do damage. At one point she had me   against the cage and was TEEING off on my head trying to finish me off. I remember feeling like the lights were dimming and thinking to myself, “You gotta get outta here, you gotta move. You aren’t going down like this!!” and I went for that clinch and snapped a couple knees up to her face and she backed off… and I was trying desperately to shake off the cobwebs to recover. I knew at that moment I was behind in that round and I wasn’t gonna let this fight slip away from me. So I did the only thing I knew to do and that was to just keep pushing forward and keep throwing bombs. The round ended with several more exchanges from us both. I walked back to my corner in that round and I wasn’t sure what was coming next. 

 

I remember Edmond telling me to wake up. I think he knew how bad I had been hurt in that round and he really helped bring my focus back. I heard the referee say we were going to a third and I instantly had another adrenaline dump. This was it. I was in the fight of my life and I was down to the last five minutes. Every. Single. Second. That’s what I came up off the stool telling myself to fight. I couldn’t breath out of my nose at all at this point and I remember spitting a massive blood/snot ball onto the canvas at my feet before the round started. 

 

Both of us were tired and we knew it. We were both trying to push that extra little bit to try and finish the other but we just couldn’t quite do it. I felt like the round was super close. Even in the moment, I felt like it was super close. But then… something happened. I threw a combo that ended with a knee and I saw her circle her head out and when she raised up, half her face was covered in blood. I had opened up a cut. I totally went for it. I just started throwing everything I had at her. I thought to myself, “This is it, this is the moment you take it, you have to go now!” and I went. Then I heard the horn. The fight was over. I thought I had stolen the round. I turned around to walk to my corner and Stitch met me with a towel in my face and I heard him say, “I think you just took that round, girl!”. I couldn’t believe what I had just gone through.

 

I’ve never fought like that. Ever. That was definitely the best I’ve ever performed in a cage. I don’t think its the best I’m capable of, but I believe that it was the best I could have done at that point in time. I remember feeling an extreme amount of pride in myself for fighting through some extremely tough moments during the fight. I poured my entire heart and soul into that fight. I gave all that I had to give. I was happy. You can see it on my face as soon as the fight is over. Raquel and I meet each other in the center of the cage and hug each other and we both have this ridiculous smile on our faces. I’m sure she was thinking the same thing I was. It was that close. I told her, “Was it worth the wait?” and she grinned back and said, “Yes.”

 

Decision time. Suddenly the reality hit me when the referee grabbed our wrists and positioned me in the cage. I haven’t won yet, and I knew just how close that fight was. I started to have doubts. When I heard Dana call out Raquel as the winner my heart sank instantly. Never leave it in the hands of the judges. That’s what it says on the walls of the UFC training center above the locker rooms. You can never complain about a decision if you let it get to that point. I didn’t win the fight because I didn’t finish the fight. I let it slip away. I gave everything I had to the fight but it just wasn’t enough that day. It was extremely hard to take. No one believed as strongly as I did that I was going to win that whole show. I believed it as strongly as I’ve ever believed anything in my life. I was absolutely heart broken that I had failed. I felt like I had disappointed all of the people in my life that have supported me, invested in my career, or believed in me. I wanted to win it for myself, but I also wanted to win it for them too. 

 

Not only did Ronda say exactly what I needed to hear after the fight, she brought me back to the locker room where my entire team surrounded me and gave me a giant group hug. It was the beginning of the healing process and I was so glad I had such amazing people there to help me through it. That’s why those people are like family to me now. There is so much more going on behind the scenes of that show than people realize. We bonded in ways that a lot of people won’t ever understand. When you share life changing moments like that with people, and they experience the highs and the lows with you… it brings you together. My greatest hope was that the fight was entertaining, appreciated, and that I did enough to still impress the UFC and Dana White with my performance.

 

The moment was swiftly brought to an end by Dana White letting us know that it was time for the next fight selection. Team Tate had control now and they selected Michael Wooten to fight Josh Hill. I was so excited to see this fight. Michael had become one of my favorite male fighters in the house because I was a fan of his style. He’s got a great dynamic striking style that was very exciting and a really solid ground game. I loved training with him every day and couldn’t wait to see him fight Josh. We knew Josh was a strong wrestler and we were sure we knew what his game plan was going to be. He was going to try and outwrestle Wooten. Wooten’s challenge was going to be not allowing that to happen, and I believed in him 100 percent.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

TUF 19: BJ Penn Comes Full Circle Against Frankie Edgar

The year is 2007.
The UFC’s lightweight division is not only not a feature attraction, it basically doesn’t exist. Sean Sherk is the champion, but he’s only held the belt for a couple of months after the title had been shelved for nearly four years.
Th…

The year is 2007.

The UFC’s lightweight division is not only not a feature attraction, it basically doesn’t exist. Sean Sherk is the champion, but he’s only held the belt for a couple of months after the title had been shelved for nearly four years.

The man many consider the true champion, legendary Hawaiian warrior BJ Penn has only been back in action for about a year after a UFC absence due to contract issues. He’s fought exclusively at welterweight since his comeback.

But now he’s coaching The Ultimate Fighter 5. He’ll see Jens Pulver, a longtime lightweight rival, across the cage when the season is over. All the competitors are lightweights, most of whom will become household names within a few years.

Lightweight is back.

BJ Penn is back.

He’ll go on to torch Pulver in his return to 155 pounds and reclaim the title he never lost soon after.

His place as the greatest lightweight of all time is secured with title defenses that span across two years, most of which see him looking better than he ever has.

The year is 2014.

Built on the blood, sweat, and tears of the men who have competed since 2006, the lightweight division is a feature attraction. Anthony Pettis is the champion and is still seeing his popularity grow.

He’s young, talented, and marketable, and the UFC is enjoying promoting its newest superstar.

A weight class below him, legendary Hawaiian warrior BJ Penn is reinventing himself as a featherweight. He’s working with diet guru Mike Dolce to make his first trip to 145 pounds a pleasant one.

He’s on television every week, coaching The Ultimate Fighter 19, appearing in the position for the first time since 2007. When it’s all over, he’ll see longtime rival Frankie Edgar—a man who handed him two losses and sent him packing from the division he basically createdacross the cage. No one knows what the future holds for the cast members, but some are bound to break through in the UFC.

BJ Penn is back.

He’s come full circle.

The BJ Penn you’ll see next year is not the one you saw in 2007.

That Penn left town on his own terms, hadn’t lost at 155 pounds since Pulver beat him in 2002 and was a welterweight title contender while he awaited a chance to return to his natural weight class.

This Penn is a loser of four of his past six, his only win in that time coming over the now-retired Matt Hughes. Dana White has begged him to retire, but he’s not going out unless it’s on his terms.

Again.

In a lot of ways, the Penn returning after a layoff of at least 16 months is what Pulver was in 2007a former champion who had shown some signs of fading, but who no one wanted to admit might be done.

The Penn loss was his second in a row, and he’d go on to lose six straight after a single win. Since 2007 he’s gone 6-10, and losses in more recent times have been to guys he’d have destroyed in his prime.

The other actor in this play, Edgar, is in 2014, ironically, the Penn of 2007. He’s a former champion who’s still in his prime, beloved by most for his gutsy performances, and thought by some to have never lost his title in the first place.

He’s reinvented himself in a new weight class and is looking to vanquish his greatest rival one more time on the way back to the top of the heap.

So why do the fight?

Edgar beat Penn twice in 2010, and nothing has indicated that the two have gotten closer in ability in the time since they last met.

For one, Penn wants it. Bad.

For another, Edgar never met a fight he didn’t like, so he didn’t take much convincing.

Plus, it’s happening in a new weight class where the possibilities are endless for either guy coming off a win.

But perhaps most importantly, the fight is happening because MMA is a full-circle sport. There’s a very clear trajectory in the career of a mixed martial artist.

You start off young.

You rise.

You beat veterans on the way to the top.

You maybe win a title.

You maybe lose it.

You’re a veteran on the way down.

You fall.

You’re old.

It’s a would-be circle of life, and it’s being played out right in front of our eyes with Penn’s return to TUF and, eventually, the cage.

The only thing left to see is whether or not he can alter that course, whether he can show that he’s got something left in a career that is, without question, among the most remarkable in the history of the sport. Time and evidence, however, aren’t on his side.

This spring BJ Penn comes full circle against Frankie Edgar. It’s a fight six years in the making, but we didn’t even know it until a few weeks ago.

Looking at history though, we all kind of knew this was the way it had to end.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

TUF 18 Ratings Update: A Round of Applause For Our First Group of Female Contestants


(“I’m so sorry…I’m sorry…I’m…*looks down*…hey, those really are nice shoes.” Photo via Getty.) 

If you’ve been following The Ultimate Fighter this season, chances are that, like us, you’ve been more than impressed with the quality of the fights themselves. Four great fights with four decisive (not to mention brutal) finishes have easily outshined most if not all of the petty drama that oft permeates the TUF house, a trend that has only increased since the program’s move to the FX and FOX Sports 1 networks.

Unfortunately, great fights have not necessarily equaled great ratings this season. Blame it on the new network, blame it on the time slot, but TUF 18‘s ratings have been just barely swimming above the “lowest live-viewership” record since the premiere episode. Yes, despite seeing a temporary boost with the second episode, MMAFighting’s Dave Meltzer is reporting that last week’s fight between Davey Grant and LivesWithParents pulled in just 640,000 viewers.

In fact, episode 3, featuring the fight between Chris Holdsworth and Chris Beal, similarly drew in just 639,000 viewers. Here’s the thing, episodes 2 and 4 — which featured the female fights of Baszler/Pena and Rakoczy/Modafferi — performed significantly better than those featuring their male counterparts. As Meltzer writes:

For the Ultimate Fighter, there has been an up-and-down pattern in the ratings. As in, the week of a women’s fight, the audience is up. The two women’s fights, airing on Sept. 12 and Sept. 26, did 870,000 and 778,000 viewers live. The men’s fights on Sept. 19 and Oct. 3 did 639,000 and 640,000. 


(“I’m so sorry…I’m sorry…I’m…*looks down*…hey, those really are nice shoes.” Photo via Getty.) 

If you’ve been following The Ultimate Fighter this season, chances are that, like us, you’ve been more than impressed with the quality of the fights themselves. Four great fights with four decisive (not to mention brutal) finishes have easily outshined most if not all of the petty drama that oft permeates the TUF house, a trend that has only increased since the program’s move to the FX and FOX Sports 1 networks.

Unfortunately, great fights have not necessarily equaled great ratings this season. Blame it on the new network, blame it on the time slot, but TUF 18‘s ratings have been just barely swimming above the “lowest live-viewership” record since the premiere episode. Yes, despite seeing a temporary boost with the second episode, MMAFighting’s Dave Meltzer is reporting that last week’s fight between Davey Grant and LivesWithParents pulled in just 640,000 viewers.

In fact, episode 3, featuring the fight between Chris Holdsworth and Chris Beal, similarly drew in just 639,000 viewers. Here’s the thing, episodes 2 and 4 – which featured the female fights of Baszler/Pena and Rakoczy/Modafferi — performed significantly better than those featuring their male counterparts. As Meltzer writes:

For the Ultimate Fighter, there has been an up-and-down pattern in the ratings. As in, the week of a women’s fight, the audience is up. The two women’s fights, airing on Sept. 12 and Sept. 26, did 870,000 and 778,000 viewers live. The men’s fights on Sept. 19 and Oct. 3 did 639,000 and 640,000. 

Additionally, the DVR numbers for TUF 18 have been incredibly strong:

Viewership has increased anywhere from 32 percent to 37 percent from the initial reports when you factor in people who watched the show via DVR between Thursday and Saturday. For example, the Sept. 26 show, the most recent to have DVR numbers for, did an additional 272,000 viewers of the initial airing, pushing total viewership to 1.05 million.

The Ultimate Fighter has always been a strong DVR property as compared to most sports programming, but the increases have historically only been in the 15 percent range. 

So it’s not exactly great news, but it does offer a sliver of hope for TUF‘s chances on FS1.

Personally, I’d love to help the show out by tuning in Wednesday nights. I really would. But if the UFC expects me to miss out on Always Sunny so I can listen to Momma Rousey hand down life lessons, they are sorely mistaken. Because I need characters whose problems I can identify with, and seeing an illiterate janitor, a sociopath, a tranny-lover with delusions of grandeur and a bird woman drunkenly argue about things they have no understanding of is like going to a family reunion every week for me.

J. Jones