UFC Vet Mike Swick Seeks To Motivate By Opening Up On Battle With Cancer

One of the members of the original cast of The Ultimate Fighter, Mike Swick is using his situation to motivate others. After winning his fight at The Ultimate Fighter 1 Finale in 2005, Mike “Quick” Swick went on to have a fairly successful …

One of the members of the original cast of The Ultimate Fighter, Mike Swick is using his situation to motivate others. After winning his fight at The Ultimate Fighter 1 Finale in 2005, Mike “Quick” Swick went on to have a fairly successful career, winning 7 of his next 8 fights in the UFC. Ultimately,…

Continue Reading UFC Vet Mike Swick Seeks To Motivate By Opening Up On Battle With Cancer at MMA News.

Breaking – UFC alum, TUF 1 finalist Stephan Bonnar passes away aged 45

Stephan BonnarNews has broken this Christmas Eve concerning UFC middleweight division veteran and The Ultimate Fighter 1 season finalist, Stephan Bonnar, who sadly passed away this earlier this week at the age of 45.  Bonnar, a native of Hammond, Indiana, competed on the inaugural season of The Ultimate Fighter back in 2005, reaching that season’s finale […]

Stephan Bonnar

News has broken this Christmas Eve concerning UFC middleweight division veteran and The Ultimate Fighter 1 season finalist, Stephan Bonnar, who sadly passed away this earlier this week at the age of 45. 

Bonnar, a native of Hammond, Indiana, competed on the inaugural season of The Ultimate Fighter back in 2005, reaching that season’s finale against fellow finalist, former undisputed light heavyweight champion, Forrest Griffin. 

The UFC confirmed the passing of Stephan Bonnar in a statement tonight

Inducted into the Fight Wing of the UFC Hall of Fame back in 2013 along with finalist, Griffin, the promotion confirmed this Saturday night that Bonnar had passed away at the age of 45.

“The UFC family is saddened by the passing of UFC Hall of Famer Stephan Bonnar,” UFC tweeted this Saturday night. “We send our sincerest condolences to his family and friends.” 

Boasting a 15-9 professional record, Bonnar most recently competed at Bellator 131 in September 2014, dropping a split decision loss to former UFC light heavyweight champion, Tito Ortiz. 

Competing 15 times separately under the banner of the Dana White-led UFC, Bonnar managed to amass an 8-7 promotional record from 2005 to 2012. 

In eight of those promotional victories, Bonnar managed to defeat Sam Hoger, James Irvine, Keith Jardine, Mike Nickels Eric Schafer, Krzysztof Soszynski, Igor Pokrajac, and Kyle Kingsburg. 

A nine-year veteran of the UFC, during his tenure with the organization, Bonnar suffered defeats against former or future promotional champions, Jon Jones, Mark Coleman, Anderson Silva, and Rashad Evans.

Breaking – UFC alum, TUF 1 finalist Stephan Bonnar passes away aged 45

Stephan BonnarNews has broken this Christmas Eve concerning UFC middleweight division veteran and The Ultimate Fighter 1 season finalist, Stephan Bonnar, who sadly passed away this earlier this week at the age of 45.  Bonnar, a native of Hammond, Indiana, competed on the inaugural season of The Ultimate Fighter back in 2005, reaching that season’s finale […]

Stephan Bonnar

News has broken this Christmas Eve concerning UFC middleweight division veteran and The Ultimate Fighter 1 season finalist, Stephan Bonnar, who sadly passed away this earlier this week at the age of 45. 

Bonnar, a native of Hammond, Indiana, competed on the inaugural season of The Ultimate Fighter back in 2005, reaching that season’s finale against fellow finalist, former undisputed light heavyweight champion, Forrest Griffin. 

The UFC confirmed the passing of Stephan Bonnar in a statement tonight

Inducted into the Fight Wing of the UFC Hall of Fame back in 2013 along with finalist, Griffin, the promotion confirmed this Saturday night that Bonnar had passed away at the age of 45.

“The UFC family is saddened by the passing of UFC Hall of Famer Stephan Bonnar,” UFC tweeted this Saturday night. “We send our sincerest condolences to his family and friends.” 

Boasting a 15-9 professional record, Bonnar most recently competed at Bellator 131 in September 2014, dropping a split decision loss to former UFC light heavyweight champion, Tito Ortiz. 

Competing 15 times separately under the banner of the Dana White-led UFC, Bonnar managed to amass an 8-7 promotional record from 2005 to 2012. 

In eight of those promotional victories, Bonnar managed to defeat Sam Hoger, James Irvine, Keith Jardine, Mike Nickels Eric Schafer, Krzysztof Soszynski, Igor Pokrajac, and Kyle Kingsburg. 

A nine-year veteran of the UFC, during his tenure with the organization, Bonnar suffered defeats against former or future promotional champions, Jon Jones, Mark Coleman, Anderson Silva, and Rashad Evans.

Video: ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ Season 1 Cast Reunion, Where Has The Time Gone

Where has the time gone? 14 years later the cast from ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ season one shares some memories.

The post Video: ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ Season 1 Cast Reunion, Where Has The Time Gone appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

Where has the time gone?

The Ultimate Fighter has been chugging along for 27 seasons now. Some have been fantastic; others were not so much. But the original cast of characters from “TUF 1” still holds a special place in MMA fans hearts.

The UFC has been working overtime as of late compiling a ton of new content in lieu of the promotions 25th Anniversary. One such program will feature a where are they now style documentary revolving around the original cast from the groundbreaking first season of TUF back in 2005.

Only Josh Koscheck, Lodune Sincaid, and Jason Thacker missed out on the “TUF 1” reunion. All of the other fighters and coaches from the inaugural season took part in the get-together.

Retired fighter and “TUF 1” cast member Mike Swick shared an interesting side by side comparison photo via social media.

“TUF 1” middleweight winner Diego Sanchez is the only fighter still competing inside the octagon 14 years later. Although, a number of other fighters and coaches from TUF 1 are still active in the sport. Namely, Chris Leben who recently came out retirement to fight Phil Baroni in a bare-knuckle boxing match later this year.

Here are some more social media posts via Instagram:

#baby

A post shared by Diego Sanchez (@diegonightmaresanchezufc) on

Mike Swick’s video post via Twitter:

The Ultimate Fighter franchise may be coming to a close, but the original cast from season one will always hold a special place in MMA fans hearts.

The post Video: ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ Season 1 Cast Reunion, Where Has The Time Gone appeared first on LowKickMMA.com.

BREAKING: Jason Thacker, Bobby Southworth to Be Inducted Into UFC Hall of Fame (Not Really) (But Maybe?)

(And just like that, a robot-voiced MMA fighter from the future star was born.)

Without coming off too anti-UFC (LOL!), I think we can all agree that the promotion’s Hall of Fame is about as meaningless as their rankings system, right? Aside from picking and choosing its inductees based around whoever Dana White isn’t fueding with at the moment, it’s page on UFC.com hasn’t been updated in years, so much so that recent additions Tito Ortiz, Stephan Bonnar, and Forrest Griffin are not even featured on it. Although to be fair, Ortiz probably never will.

Regardless, Dana White has been teasing his media cronies that the UFC Fan Expo at this year’s Fourth of July International Fight Week — you know, the one featuring musical guests Papa Roach, POD, and Lit (double LOL!) — will serve as the induction ceremony for the UFC Hall of Fame’s next member, as it has in years past. The big difference being that this year could serve as the induction for not just one man, but the entire cast of The Ultimate Fighter season 1 (via Fox Sports):

I think that’s a must. I think that entire season should be inducted. Without a doubt that group of people are all game changers. I’ve thought about the whole cast should be (in the hall of fame). Even the Canadian Jason Thacker — without the group of people that we had and the way the synergy worked and the way things went down, that season really launched everything.

Man, Frank Shamrock must have snapped an entire box of pencils in half when he heard this news.


(And just like that, a robot-voiced MMA fighter from the future star was born.)

Without coming off too anti-UFC (LOL!), I think we can all agree that the promotion’s Hall of Fame is about as meaningless as their rankings system, right? Aside from picking and choosing its inductees based around whoever Dana White isn’t fueding with at the moment, it’s page on UFC.com hasn’t been updated in years, so much so that recent additions Tito Ortiz, Stephan Bonnar, and Forrest Griffin are not even featured on it. Although to be fair, Ortiz probably never will.

Regardless, Dana White has been teasing his media cronies that the UFC Fan Expo at this year’s Fourth of July International Fight Week — you know, the one featuring musical guests Papa Roach, POD, and Lit (double LOL!) — will serve as the induction ceremony for the UFC Hall of Fame’s next member, as it has in years past. The big difference being that this year could serve as the induction for not just one man, but the entire cast of The Ultimate Fighter season 1 (via Fox Sports):

I think that’s a must. I think that entire season should be inducted. Without a doubt that group of people are all game changers. I’ve thought about the whole cast should be (in the hall of fame). Even the Canadian Jason Thacker — without the group of people that we had and the way the synergy worked and the way things went down, that season really launched everything.

Man, Frank Shamrock must have snapped an entire box of pencils in half when he heard this news.

Honestly, it’s hard to form much of an opinion either way on this statement given the aforementioned lack of legitimacy the UFC Hall of Fame has in the broad scope of things. Do I think that the likes of Lodune Sincaid, Josh Rafferty, and Sam Hoger deserve a spot in the Hall of Fame over the likes of Shamrock or Bas Rutten? Helllllllll no. But am I going to get up in arms over a sports entertainment company excluding some perhaps more deserved fighters from its make believe awards ceremony? Please, I’ve got Fight Pass cards to shit on.

But there you have it: It’s 2014, Kimbo Slice and Gina Carano are still making headlines, and Jason Thacker is about to be inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame. Holy shit.

J. Jones

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.