On This Day in MMA History…June 28


(Rich Franklin looks at this poster to cure his hiccups)

Anderson Silva puts the UFC’s middleweight class on notice 5 years ago at UFN 5

(Video courtesy of Thisis50/TonyScorpio)

Why it matters:
For those who didn’t know who Anderson Silva was prior to his UFC debut against Chris Leben at Ultimate Fight Night 5 back on June 28, 2006, they knew who he was after the fight. Silva was the slight favorite to win the bout (at – 170 to Leben’s +200), but if oddsmakers knew then what we know now, they would be kicking themselves for giving Leben a shot in hell at beating “The Spider.” It took Silva just 49 seconds to dismantle the previously thought un-KO’able TUF 1 veteran whose head was (and is) often described in the same vein as a fire hydrant. Those in the know from witnessing Silva leave a pile of PRIDE and Cage Rage opponents in his wake were not surprised that he beat “The Crippler,” but rather how quickly he did it and the devastating fashion he did it in.

Leben still wakes some nights in a cold sweat, screaming, from the recurring nightmare of Silva turning him into a human bobble-head with his pinpoint jabs.


(Rich Franklin looks at this poster to cure his hiccups)

Anderson Silva puts the UFC’s middleweight class on notice 5 years ago at UFN 5

(Video courtesy of Thisis50/TonyScorpio)

Why it matters:
For those who didn’t know who Anderson Silva was prior to his UFC debut against Chris Leben at Ultimate Fight Night 5 back on June 28, 2006, they knew who he was after the fight. Silva was the slight favorite to win the bout (at – 170 to Leben’s +200), but if oddsmakers knew then what we know now, they would be kicking themselves for giving Leben a shot in hell at beating “The Spider.” It took Silva just 49 seconds to dismantle the previously thought un-KO’able TUF 1 veteran whose head was (and is) often described in the same vein as a fire hydrant. Those in the know from witnessing Silva leave a pile of PRIDE and Cage Rage opponents in his wake were not surprised that he beat “The Crippler,” but rather how quickly he did it and the devastating fashion he did it in.

Leben still wakes some nights in a cold sweat, screaming, from the recurring nightmare of Silva turning him into a human bobble-head with his pinpoint jabs.

One fight later Silva would win the UFC middleweight title by decimating Rich Franklin in under three minutes and finished each of his next five opponents inside the first two rounds. When Patrick Cote made it into the third with the dominant champ, it was seen as a major accomplishment but when a pair of Silva’s title bouts (against Thales Leites and Demian Maia) went the distance, UFC president Dana White was quick to blast the Brazilian for not fighting like Anderson Silva. To put into perspective how good Silva has been in The Octagon, in 13 UFC fights, he has spent an average of 7.83 minutes fighting and has finished all of his opponents but Maia and Leites for an 85% finishing rate.

SPIKE TV announced it would begin production of  ’The Ultimate Fighter‘ 7 years ago


Why it matters:
Most analysts believe that the mainstream push TUF provided is what brought the UFC back from the brink of bankruptcy and made fighters like Chris Leben, Josh Koscheck, Kenny Florian, Diego Sanchez, Stephan Bonnar and Forrest Griffin household names across the world. The series, which began filming the following January would become the most popular shows on the fledgling men’s specialty channel. The “what-ifs” that we could ask ourselves about the mutually beneficial symbiotic relationship that was forged between SPIKE and the UFC, thanks to the hugely successful show, had it never materialized could be similar to those we now ask about fringe fads like Crystal Pepsi, laser disc players and hypercolor shirts. Without TUF, the UFC could be just a footnote in combat sport history like X-Arm, Yamma Pit Fighting or San-Do.

Fayetteville, North Carolina fighter Michael Kirkham died from accumulative injuries sustained in his pro MMA debut 1 year ago


(Video courtesy of YouTube/Rob1GZ)

Why it matters:
Kirkham lost that amateur fight in Columbia, South Carolina on April 24 via TKO in spite of his opponent landing a glut of his ground and pound shots to the back of his head. He was given an automatic 30-day medical suspension for the TKO loss, but didn’t follow up with a physician because of the cost of medical care. Two days after the suspension was lifted the 30-year-old, 6′ 9″, 155-pound fighter suffered a brain hemorrhage in his pro debut at the University of South Carolina Aiken Convocation Center and died two days later as a result of his accumulative injuries.

Post-mortem findings showed that the hemorrhage could have been avoided by an MRI scan, which would have detected the pre-existing condition he likely sustained from his last bout. The scan, which would have cost approximately $1000 is a mandatory requirement of most athletic commissions, like the Ontario Athletic Commission, who caught a similar issue in Brian Foster’s pre-UFC 129 test that prevented the UFC welterweight from competing on the card. The same test also revealed a brain abnormality in Thiago Alves prior to his UFC 11 bout. In both cases, the implications of not finding the issue could have been fatal as it was with Kirkham.

The incident prompted several commissions to increase the stringency of their medical testing requirements of both professional and amateur fighters, thus making the sport safer in their jurisdictions, which is good for everyone.

TUF 13 Champ Tony Ferguson Back to Lightweight, Fights Aaron Riley at UFC 135 in Denver

Filed under: UFCTony Ferguson, who won Season 13 of “The Ultimate Fighter” earlier this month, already has his next fight.

Ferguson, who beat Ramsey Nijem at the TUF 13 Finale in Las Vegas on June 4 with a first-round knockout, will face Aaron Riley …

Filed under:

Tony Ferguson, who won Season 13 of “The Ultimate Fighter” earlier this month, already has his next fight.

Ferguson, who beat Ramsey Nijem at the TUF 13 Finale in Las Vegas on June 4 with a first-round knockout, will face Aaron Riley in a lightweight bout at UFC 135 on Sept. 24 in Denver. The UFC announced the fight booking on Twitter on Monday night.

Ferguson (11-2, 1-0 UFC) has won four straight fights, including his UFC debut victory over Nijem, which also netted him a $40,000 Knockout of the Night bonus to go along with his guaranteed UFC contract. That fight was at welterweight. Against Riley (30-12-1, 3-4 UFC), Ferguson will return to the lightweight division.

On Season 13 of TUF, Ferguson fought for coach Brock Lesnar’s team. The three wins Ferguson had in the TUF house to reach the live finale were all knockouts or TKOs. Those those three fights are not official, if counted he has seven straight TKO or KO victories. After taping for the season finished, Ferguson trained at Lesnar’s Death Clutch camp in Minnesota to prepare for his fight with Nijem.

Riley has been out of action for more than a year, since a unanimous decision win over Joe Brammer at UFC 114 in May 2010. Riley, an Indiana native, was expected to return at UFC 119 in Indianapolis last September, but pulled out of his fight with Pat Audinwood with an injury. When he returns in September, it will be after a 16-month layoff.

Riley, whose primary training home is with Greg Jackson’s camp in Albuquerque, N.M., is in his third stint with the UFC. He was one-and-done with losses to Robbie Lawler at UFC 37 and Spencer Fisher at Fight Night 3. Since returning at UFC 91, Riley has gone 3-2, but hasn’t put together consecutive wins. His three wins have all been by unanimous decision.

UFC 135 will take place at the Pepsi Center in Denver. It will be the promotion’s first trip to Colorado since the first UFC on Versus event in March 2010, which took place in the north Denver suburb of Broomfield. The UFC hasn’t been to Denver proper since UFC: The Ultimate Ultimate in December 1995. UFC 1 and UFC 2 also took place in Denver.

UFC 135 is expected to be headlined by a light heavyweight title fight between champion Jon Jones, making his first defense, and former champion Quinton “Rampage” Jackson. Also on the card, Hall of Famer and former welterweight champion Matt Hughes will face former lightweight title challenger Diego Sanchez.

 

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TUF 3 Winner Kendall Grove Released From UFC

Filed under: UFCThree weeks after dropping his second straight fight, Kendall Grove has been released by the UFC.

The Season 3 winner of “The Ultimate Fighter” broke the news on his Facebook page. Grove suffered a unanimous decision loss to Tim Boets…

Filed under:

Three weeks after dropping his second straight fight, Kendall Grove has been released by the UFC.

The Season 3 winner of “The Ultimate Fighter” broke the news on his Facebook page. Grove suffered a unanimous decision loss to Tim Boetsch at UFC 130 last month. Before that, he dropped a decision to Demian Maia at the TUF 12 Finale in December.

He becomes the third TUF winner to be cut by the promotion. Season 8 winner Efrain Escudero and Season 4 winner Travis Lutter also were released by the organization.

Grove (12-9, 1 NC, 7-6 UFC), from Hawaii, has fallen into a rough stretch in the UFC’s middleweight division the last year, dropping three of his last four fights. His only win was a split decision over Goran Reljic at UFC 116 last July. He did, however, have a Fight of the Night performance in a loss to Mark Munoz at UFC 112.

Grove has not won consecutive fights since a split decision over the late Evan Tanner at the TUF 7 Finale in June 2008 and a TKO of Jason Day at UFC 96 in March 2009.

After winning TUF 3 with a unanimous decision victory over Ed Herman in June 2006, Grove won his next two UFC fights. But since that three-fight UFC winning streak, he has been up and down, going 4-6.

 

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TUF 12 Winner Jonathan Brookins Meets Erik Koch on UFC’s New Orleans Card

Filed under: NewsThe UFC will return to New Orleans on Sept. 17 for the first time since 2000, and Season 12 winner of “The Ultimate Fighter” Jonathan Brookins will return to the cage for the first time since winning his title.

The UFC announced Satur…

Filed under:

The UFC will return to New Orleans on Sept. 17 for the first time since 2000, and Season 12 winner of “The Ultimate Fighter” Jonathan Brookins will return to the cage for the first time since winning his title.

The UFC announced Saturday that verbal agreements are in place for TUF 12 champ Brookins, who won the show at lightweight, to drop down to featherweight to face Erik Koch at UFC Fight Night 25.

The “Battle on the Bayou” show now has three confirmed bouts with Alan Belcher vs. Jason MacDonald and Dongi Yang vs. Court McGee getting announced for the card last month.

Brookins (12-3, 1-0 UFC) has not fought since his unanimous decision victory over Michael Johnson at the TUF 12 Finale in December. The WEC and Bellator veteran was scheduled to face John Makdessi at UFC 129 in April, but had to pull out with an injury. Re-booked for the TUF 13 Finale last Saturday against Jeremy Stephens, he was again forced off the card. Brookins’ last loss came at WEC 36 in November 2008 to Jose Aldo a year before Aldo won the featherweight title.

Koch (12-1, 1-0 UFC), who went 3-1 in the WEC prior to its merger with the UFC, has won three straight by first-round stoppage – including consecutive Knockout of the Night bonuses. In March, he knocked out Raphael Assuncao in the first round at UFC 128. His only loss was a unanimous decision setback to Chad Mendes, one of the featherweight division’s top contenders for Aldo’s title, at WEC 47 in March 2010.

The main card of UFC Fight Night 25, an event heavily promoted by UFC sponsor Bud Light, airs on Spike TV. As MMAjunkie.com recently reported, the event is expected to take place at the New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.

UFC Fight Night 25 is expected to take place at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans. The main card will air on Spike TV and is the promotion’s first of a series of planned annual special events with major sponsor Bud Light.

The UFC has not hosted an event in Louisiana since UFC 37 in May 2002, which was in Bossier City, a suburb of Shreveport. The last UFC event in New Orleans was UFC 27 in September 2000, prior to the Zuffa era.

 

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Rankings Spotlight: The Ultimate Fighter’s 10 Best Non-Finalists

Kyle Kingsbury Fabio Maldonado TUF 13 Finale
(Bader beat him. K-Sos beat him. Lawlor beat him. Now he’s one of the toughest prospects in the light-heavyweight division — proving once again that shaving your head is always a good career move. Photo props to UFC.com)

Not to pee-pee on Tony Ferguson‘s parade, but winning The Ultimate Fighter is no guarantee of success in the UFC. On the other hand, getting eliminated while in the TUF house is no guarantee of failure either. In fact, some of today’s most dangerous UFC contenders are guys who entered the promotion through the reality show, but didn’t even get to fight for the glass trophy. In the wake of Saturday’s TUF 13 Finale, here’s how I’d rank the Top 10 non-finalists from The Ultimate Fighter, based on their current standing in the promotion…

#1: Gray Maynard

On TUF: Was choked out by Nate Diaz in the semi-finals of season 5.
These days: Drew with Frankie Edgar in his first lightweight title challenge in January, but will get another crack at the belt later this year. His pair of title fights against Edgar follow an eight-fight win streak in the Octagon, which included a decision win against Diaz in a rematch last year.

#2: Josh Koscheck

On TUF: Lost a split-decision to Diego Sanchez in the semi-finals of season 1.
These days: A perennial top contender in the welterweight division, Kos will be one of the front-runners for the belt if GSP ever leaves the division; until then, he’ll just have to be content with being “right up there.”

Kyle Kingsbury Fabio Maldonado TUF 13 Finale
(Bader beat him. K-Sos beat him. Lawlor beat him. Now he’s one of the toughest prospects in the light-heavyweight division — proving once again that shaving your head is always a good career move. Photo props to UFC.com)

Not to pee-pee on Tony Ferguson‘s parade, but winning The Ultimate Fighter is no guarantee of success in the UFC. On the other hand, getting eliminated while in the TUF house is no guarantee of failure either. In fact, some of today’s most dangerous UFC contenders are guys who entered the promotion through the reality show, but didn’t even get to fight for the glass trophy. In the wake of Saturday’s TUF 13 Finale, here’s how I’d rank the Top 10 non-finalists from The Ultimate Fighter, based on their current standing in the promotion…

#1: Gray Maynard

On TUF: Was choked out by Nate Diaz in the semi-finals of season 5.
These days: Drew with Frankie Edgar in his first lightweight title challenge in January, but will get another crack at the belt later this year. His pair of title fights against Edgar follow an eight-fight win streak in the Octagon, which included a decision win against Diaz in a rematch last year.

#2: Josh Koscheck

On TUF: Lost a split-decision to Diego Sanchez in the semi-finals of season 1.
These days: A perennial top contender in the welterweight division, Kos will be one of the front-runners for the belt if GSP ever leaves the division; until then, he’ll just have to be content with being “right up there.”

#3: George Sotiropoulos

On TUF: Was K.O.’d by Tommy Speer in the semi-finals of season 6.
These days: Even though he dropped a decision to Dennis Siver in his last fight, his previous seven-fight win streak — which included high-profile wins over Joe Stevenson, Kurt Pellegrino, and Joe Lauzon — established him as a player in the lightweight division. He’ll return to action against Rafael Dos Anjos at UFC 132 next month.

#4: Melvin Guillard

On TUF: Lost a unanimous decision to Josh Burkman in the quarterfinals of season 2.
These days: Speaking of lightweight contenders, the Young Assassin has been on a tear lately. After going 3-0 in 2010, Guillard TKO’d Evan Dunham at “Fight for the Troops 2″ in January, picking up a Knockout of the Night bonus and some much-deserved respect. Next up on Melvin’s to-punch list: Shane Roller at UFC 132.

#5: Matt Mitrione

On TUF: Was submitted by James McSweeney in the quarterfinals of season 10, where he was best known as “the dude with the brain damage.”
These days: He’s done nothing but win since his time on the show, racking up a 4-0 Octagon record with victories over Big Baby, Kimbo, the Mexecutioner, and Tim Hague. Not exactly a who’s-who of heavyweight contenders, but he’s looked great so far. Mitrione’s next opponent will be Christian Morecraft at UFC on Versus 4, later this month.

#6: Matt Hamill

On TUF: Was unable to continue after his unanimous decision win over Mike Nickels in the quarterfinals of season 3.
These days: A constant presence in the light-heavyweight division, although his recent loss to Rampage Jackson doesn’t bode well for his future title prospects.

#7: Chris Leben

On TUF: Was outpointed by Josh Koscheck in the quarterfinals of season 1, then was brought back as an injury replacement, and lost to Kenny Florian by doctor’s stoppage TKO.
These days: Gearing up for a fight against Wanderlei Silva at UFC 132 that could re-establish him as a contender. His last fight ended in a TKO loss to Brian Stann that stopped an impressive three-fight win streak.

#8: Kyle Kingsbury

On TUF: Like Leben, his time on the show resulted in multiple losses. Kingsbury was submitted by Ryan Bader in the elimination round of season 8, brought back as an injury replacement, and then submitted again by Krzysztof Soszynski in the quarterfinals. Kingsbury was given another shot on the finale card against Tom Lawlor, and was defeated by unanimous decision.
These days: Incredibly, the UFC decided to keep Kingsbury around. It turned out to be a wise choice, as “Kingsbu” has gone 4-0 since the TUF 8 Finale, knocking off prospects like Jared Hamman, Ricardo Romero, and (last weekend) Fabio Maldonado.

#9: Matt Wiman

On TUF: Lost a decision to Manny Gamburyan in the quarterfinals of season 5.
These days: Riding a three-fight win streak, including victories over TUF 6 winner Mac Danzig and submission wizard Cole Miller, who also competed on TUF 5. His next fight will be against Dennis Siver at UFC 132. Damn, you noticing a trend here?

#10: George Roop

On TUF: Lost to Phillipe Nover by submission in the semi-finals of season 8.
These days: After dropping from lightweight to featherweight to bantamweight, then returning to featherweight, Roop is settling in at 145 with fantastic results. He’s gone 2-1-1 in his current featherweight campaign, with devastating knockout wins over Chan Sung Jung and Josh Grispi. His draw against Leonard Garcia — which should be considered a moral victory — won WEC 47′s Fight of the Night award.

Ben Goldstein

Long Way From His TUF Days, Ed Herman Glad to Be Back

LAS VEGAS – Both Ed Herman and Tim Credeur had to have had some jitters heading into their fight Saturday. With both out of action for nearly two years, some cage rust would be expected.

But if Herman had any, he shook it off quickly – and is glad he…

LAS VEGAS – Both Ed Herman and Tim Credeur had to have had some jitters heading into their fight Saturday. With both out of action for nearly two years, some cage rust would be expected.

But if Herman had any, he shook it off quickly – and is glad he did. Herman, back for the first time since August 2009, and coming off two knee surgeries, shut down Credeur with a big first-round TKO. And he’s already talking about putting himself in a position to contend in the middleweight division.

“I’m just so excited to be back and prove that I belong here still,” Herman said. “The life-changing injury – I’m just excited to be back in the middleweight division and excited to make a run.”

Herman (20-7, 5-5 UFC) has had an up-and-down UFC career following his loss in the TUF 3 title bout to Kendall Grove. But after being out of action for so long, it was his original jumping-off point – “The Ultimate Fighter” – that may have jumpstarted his career on Saturday night at the TUF 13 Finale.

“It was cool to be here on the Finale with the guys coming off Season 13 – 10 seasons after mine is kind of crazy,” Hermand said. “It meant a lot, and it gave me the opportunity to be on the main card. If it was a big pay-per-view, I may not have had that opportunity. So to get out there and let people know I’m still fighting – when you’re not on TV for a while, people kind of forget you – it was good to have that opportunity.”

Herman even said he would love to work his way toward a rematch with Grove and had mixed feelings about his TUF 3 Finale opponent’s loss to Tim Boetsch last week at UFC 130.

“I was a little bummed (that Grove lost),” Herman said. “I was hoping he could go on a run, too, so we could have a big rematch and get some hype behind it. I was bummed to see him lose, but at the same time I’ve trained with Tim, so I was glad to see him win.”

While Herman likely would have taken a win any way it would come on Saturday night, he said getting a knockout – and so quickly – makes his return extra special.

“I saw him crumble and his eyes roll in the back of his head,” Herman said. “The win is unreal – a dream come true for me. After being out two years with injury and really starting to question myself, it feels great to show the UFC I still have what it takes.”

 

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