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The all new season of The Ultimate Fighter premieres on FX on Friday, September 14th at 9pm featuring opposing heavyweight coaches Shane Carwin and Roy ‘Big Country’ Nelson.
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The all new season of The Ultimate Fighter premieres on FX on Friday, September 14th at 9pm featuring opposing heavyweight coaches Shane Carwin and Roy ‘Big Country’ Nelson.
Click here to view the embedded video.
The all new season of The Ultimate Fighter premieres on FX on Friday, September 14th at 9pm featuring opposing heavyweight coaches Shane Carwin and Roy ‘Big Country’ Nelson.
A couple of former “The Ultimate Fighter” participants will square off this December as TUF 13 finalist Ramsey Nijem (6-2) and TUF 15 competitor Joe Proctor (8-1) have agreed to meet at UFC on FOX 5. Promotion officials announced the matchup earlier today on Twitter (@UFC). – On for @UFConFOX Dec 8! RT @InsideTUF #TUFLive’s […]
A couple of former “The Ultimate Fighter” participants will square off this December as TUF 13 finalist Ramsey Nijem (6-2) and TUF 15 competitor Joe Proctor (8-1) have agreed to meet at UFC on FOX 5.
Promotion officials announced the matchup earlier today on Twitter (@UFC).
– On for @UFConFOX Dec 8! RT @InsideTUF #TUFLive’s @JoeProctor has agreed to fight #TUF13′s @RamseyNijem #HereWeGo
UFC on Fox: Henderson vs. Diaz is expected to occur at the KeyArena on December 8, 2012 in Seattle, Washington. The event is headlined by a lightweight title bout between champ Benson Henderson and No. 1 contender Nate Diaz.
After losing the TUF 13 Finale as a welterweight, Nijem returned to the lightweight division to win two straight inside the Octagon. Nijem fought this past June, stopping C.J. Keith by first round TKO at UFC on FX 4, while winning a unanimous decision against Danny Downes at UFC 137.
Proctor was eliminated in the quarter-finals of the TUF 15 series and then went on to debut with the UFC at the shows finale. Proctor would finish fellow cast member Jeremy Larsen at the TUF 15 Finale by first round TKO, extending his win streak to four bouts.
Every avid mma or UFC fan looks forward to the decorated reality show we have all come to know and love. It is of course none other than The Ultimate Fighter. This combines the qualities.
Every avid mma or UFC fan looks forward to the decorated reality show we have all come to know and love. It is of course none other than The Ultimate Fighter. This combines the qualities of fighting and mma, with the reality style drama many Americans crave in media. The premise of the show is multiple fights between fighters in a tournament like style. The ultimate goal is to win the tournament, receive the honor of “The Ultimate Fighter”, and consequently receive a six figure sum contract from Dana White to fight in the top promotional company of mma. The goal is to have a single fighter come out of the tournament as the victor; a single ultimate winner.
However, I find it interesting that the longer the seasons progress, the more fighters from the show are given the opportunity to also fight in the UFC. Clearly every fighter that is in the UFC has not come from the reality show. The fighters in the UFC were up and coming mma fighters signed by Dana White and the presidents of the promotion. So technically any of the fighters from the show that didn’t win are simply just up and coming mma competitors that could potentially be signed by the UFC like any other fighter in the promotion. However, the premise of the reality show is for one man to stand out and to be the fighter signed by the UFC.
As I stated earlier, the more seasons that are being filmed of TUF, the majority of the fighters that just make it onto the show are being signed as well by the UFC. UFC 150, which will be airing August 12, 2012, features the very promising fighter Justin Lawrence as his debut in the Featherweight division. He was an excellent contender on TUF 15, and was the first overall pick. I, personally, was rooting for him to win. Unfortunately, not everyone can win a competition, and it wasn’t his moment to shine. Regardless of the fact, he was signed to the UFC. Cristiano Marcello will be appearing at UFC 153, as well as cast member Sam Sicilia. Andy Ogle is scheduled to fight at UFC on Fuel TV 5, and Daron Cruickshank is slated to fight at UFC 151, just to name a few fighters from the show.
The show has slowly been turning from the tournament style fighting we have all grown to love, into literally an almost everyone gets to win show. There is less zest from the show because more than likely you know as a viewer that half of the fighters are going to be signed with the UFC regardless of whether they are the victor or not. I feel like the show will eventually lose a majority of viewers, because it is not a competition anymore and more of a group of soon to be UFC fighters living in a house together, while America gets the privilege to watch their lives over the segmented time frame.
Written By: Elise Kapala
Upcoming season sixteen “The Ultimate Fighter” coach, UFC heavyweight Roy ‘Big Country’ Nelson revealed his assistant coaching list on Facebook on Saturday. Nelson, a former “TUF” winner himself from season ten, announced a list of “non-UFC allowed” coaches as well as a list of “UFC allowed” coaches for the reality series. Here are my Assistant/Guest […]
Upcoming season sixteen “The Ultimate Fighter” coach, UFC heavyweight Roy ‘Big Country’ Nelson revealed his assistant coaching list on Facebook on Saturday.
Nelson, a former “TUF” winner himself from season ten, announced a list of “non-UFC allowed” coaches as well as a list of “UFC allowed” coaches for the reality series.
Here are my Assistant/Guest Coaches the non-ufc coaches will be helping but not on the set because they are black, criminals, white, Olympian, Great TV … (disclaimer I have know idea, just opinion) NON-UFC ALLOWED Muhammed Lawal Kurt Angle Victor Conte
UFC ALLOWED Royce Gracie James Johnson Jeff Mayweather George St. Pierre Nick Diaz Nate Diaz Rashad Evans Forrest Griffin Chael Sonnen Jake Shields Gilbert Melendez Martin Kampmann Amir Sadollah Mike Pyle Gray Maynard Ron Frazier Anthony Brown, I am a student first, teacher second. Let give theses kids an opportunity of a life time. A UFC SUPER CAMP
With both ‘King Mo’ and Angle appearing on TNA (Spike TV), it’s certain that these two will be edited out for the most part and fans may catch glimpses of the two. Lawal will be playing a bigger role within Nelson’s camp, so it’s likely that he may be hanging around more in the background but I don’t expect him to have a microphone or for us to see him training any of the “TUF” competitors.
The new season of “TUF” begins filming this September under the new format of live fights every Friday night, so Nelson has a month to organize his coaches before the series hits the air.
A couple “The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil” castmates will reportedly meet when the Ultimate Fighting Championship returns to the South American country this October. After competing as middleweights on the reality series, Sergio ‘Serginho’ Maraes (6-2) of Team Vitor, and Renee Forte (7-1) of Team Wanderlei, will reportedly meet at UFC 153 according to Tatame.com. TUF […]
A couple “The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil” castmates will reportedly meet when the Ultimate Fighting Championship returns to the South American country this October.
After competing as middleweights on the reality series, Sergio ‘Serginho’ Maraes (6-2) of Team Vitor, and Renee Forte (7-1) of Team Wanderlei, will reportedly meet at UFC 153 according to Tatame.com.
TUF Brazil finalist Sergio Moraes will return to the UFC octagon as a welterweight, as he meets fellow TUF alum Renee Forte at UFC 153, event scheduled to October 13th in Rio de Janeiro. Sources close to the situation confirmed the bout to TATAME.
Moraes and Forte competed on TUF Brazil at the middleweight division. Sergio submitted Thiago Rela and Delson Heleno in the show, while Renee defeater Fabio Bolinho by decision. Both fighters were eliminated from the competition by Daniel Sarafian.
UFC 153 is expected to occur on October 13, 2012 at the HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Moraes debuted in the Octagon last month at UFC 147 in the middleweight final versus Cezar Ferreira. After three rounds of standup action, Moraes would come out on the losing end suffering a unanimous decision loss to Ferreira. The defeat puts Moraes record at 1-2 ovre his last three fights.
Forte moves back to welterweight for this fight and will look to string together back-to-back wins. His last match was in May of last year at an Amazon Fight 8 event in Brazil. There he won a third round TKO finish of his opponent. He currently holds two (T)KO finishes, two submissions wins, and three victories by decision.
(Thanks to tufentertainment.net for the fitting logo.)
By Nathan Smith
With the recent announcement that Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin have been named as the coaches for the next installment of The Ultimate Fighter series, the MMA universe immediately launched into a full-blow orgasmic ticker-tape parade complete with tons of flying confetti and a marching band belting out death metal tunes. Once I heard the news, it was as if my life instantaneously turned into a beer commercial and the entire Potato Nation was invited. There was a rad pool-party, barbeque, a plethora of hotties, endless alcohol, and an overall quest for fun.
Well . . . . . actually, none of that happened. In fact, when word spread that Nelson and Carwin would helm the next season of TUF, it was officially filed under “WTF?” Judging from the comment section, most of the CP brethren didn’t care for the choices either. TUF is coming off a season that saw the ratings dip lower than they ever had, which could partially be blamed on the move to FX and the dreaded Friday night time slot. Regardless of the variables for the ratings drop, something drastic needs to be done, but is anybody really convinced that Carwin and Nelson are the answer to TUF’s slow and painful demise? Let’s start from the beginning and take a look back to see if this runaway train can be coaxed back onto the main rail.
The Season That Started it All
The inaugural season of TUF featured future Hall of Famers Chuck Liddell and Randy Couture as the competing coaches who would go mano y mano at the PPV after the season finale. For fans of the UFC, that was good enough for most to initially tune in for the Fertitta-funded experiment. It still remains the best crop of young talent and personalities to ever grace the show; future stars like Forrest Griffin, Stephan Bonnar, Josh Koscheck, Chris Leben, Diego Sanchez, Mike Swick, Kenny Florian, and Nate Quarry were all complete unknowns vying for stardom in a fledgling sport. You mix in the whole “fatherless bastard” angle and the show was off and running even before the awe-inspiring climax between (pre TRT) FoGrif and The American Psycho. Even before that, we were treated to the greatest speech of all time that has since been condensed into a few words. “Do you wanna be a fighter?” Though there were other memorable moments from the seasons that followed, Zuffa should have quit while they were ahead because it would never be this good again. The unrefined personification of immature talent, undeniable aspirations and gonzo-sized balls oozed from the boob tube during every episode.
(Thanks to tufentertainment.net for the fitting logo.)
By Nathan Smith
With the recent announcement that Roy Nelson and Shane Carwin have been named as the coaches for the next installment of The Ultimate Fighter series, the MMA universe immediately launched into a full-blow orgasmic ticker-tape parade complete with tons of flying confetti and a marching band belting out death metal tunes. Once I heard the news, it was as if my life instantaneously turned into a beer commercial and the entire Potato Nation was invited. There was a rad pool-party, barbeque, a plethora of hotties, endless alcohol, and an overall quest for fun.
Well . . . . . actually, none of that happened. In fact, when word spread that Nelson and Carwin would helm the next season of TUF, it was officially filed under “WTF?” Judging from the comment section, most of the CP brethren didn’t care for the choices either. TUF is coming off a season that saw the ratings dip lower than they ever had, which could partially be blamed on the move to FX and the dreaded Friday night time slot. Regardless of the variables for the ratings drop, something drastic needs to be done, but is anybody really convinced that Carwin and Nelson are the answer to TUF’s slow and painful demise? Let’s start from the beginning and take a look back to see if this runaway train can be coaxed back onto the main rail.
The Season That Started it All
The inaugural season of TUF featured future Hall of Famers Chuck Liddell and Randy Couture as the competing coaches who would go mano y mano at the PPV after the season finale. For fans of the UFC, that was good enough for most to initially tune in for the Fertitta-funded experiment. It still remains the best crop of young talent and personalities to ever grace the show; future stars like Forrest Griffin, Stephan Bonnar, Josh Koscheck, Chris Leben, Diego Sanchez, Mike Swick, Kenny Florian, and Nate Quarry were all complete unknowns vying for stardom in a fledgling sport. You mix in the whole “fatherless bastard” angle and the show was off and running even before the awe-inspiring climax between (pre TRT) FoGrif and The American Psycho. Even before that, we were treated to the greatest speech of all time that has since been condensed into a few words. “Do you wanna be a fighter?” Though there were other memorable moments from the seasons that followed, Zuffa should have quit while they were ahead because it would never be this good again. The unrefined personification of immature talent, undeniable aspirations and gonzo-sized balls oozed from the boob tube during every episode.
Season 2 saw Rich Franklin coach opposite Matt Hughes, and since both men competed at different weight classes, they were obviously not going to fight at the conclusion of the season. This was a prime example of the UFC throwing shit against the wall to see if it would stick by parading two somewhat charismatic champions in front of the camera with hopes of gathering ratings/fans for the upcoming UFC 56 PPV. Although it was undoubtedly a less thrilling season than that of its predecessor, it did introduce to another future light heavyweight champion in Rashad Evans, who won the contract competing as a heavyweight, as well as such names as Joe Stevenson, Melvin Guillard, and future pound-for-pound punching bag GOAT Keith Jardine. And if not for Jardine, the worldmay have never learned that “The Dean of Mean” would make no sense if his last name was Johnson, a valuable take home indeed.
Season 3 is one of my personal favorites because of the preconceived notions about coaches: Tito Ortiz and Ken Shamrock. Tito was working the crap out of “The Huntington Beach Bad Boy” gimmick and wore the black hat pretty damn well even though he desperately wanted to be accepted by everyone. On the other hand, Shamrock was the MMA legend who competed in the very first UFC tournament and was the founder of his own training facility – The Lion’s Den. Shamrock was supposed to be the more seasoned coach, but chose to bring in weight lifting specialists and opted to rewatch videos of his UFC fights instead of training during an infamous episode, among other baffling decisions. Tito, conversely, came across as a guy that was genuinely committed to making his team better fighters through technique (believe it or not) and some crazy conditioning drills involving piggyback rides and vacant floors of Las Vegas hotels. In the end, Tito TKO’d Ken in just over a minute and Michael Bisping began his quest to piss off everybody around the world en route to winning the LHW contract.
Season 4 came upon us with the familiar sound of a giant turd smacking against a cinder block divider. Luckily for the UFC, a Ram-Manesque New Yorker with a perfectly timed overhand right came along and the dookie kind of stuck. I am not exactly sure who came up with the idea of bringing back washed up fighters mixed with a few coulda-shoulda guys coupled with a blend of has-beens and never-weres, but I am certain it must have sounded phenomenal during the pitch meeting. This was the only other season that featured an abundance of talent (albeit fleeting talent) like the first season. Shonie Carter, Patrick Côté, Matt Serra, Travis Lutter, Jorge Rivera, Pete Sell, *cough convicted rapist *cough* Jeremy Jackson, Scott Smith, Din Thomas, Mikey Burnett, and (everybody’s favorite) Chris Lytle. All of these guys were waaaaaay professional for any of the usual drama to become too much of an issue, aside from Shonie’s batshit craziness, that is. There were no head coaches but instead guest coaches, and all the fighters shared instructors Mark DellaGrotte as their striking guru and Marc Laimon as the perceived submission specialist. Season highlights include a goggled Burnett self-concussing himself while running through some sheet rock (forgetting that code requires studs every 16 inches), Serra calling Laimon a pussy for never stepping into the real world of fighting and of course . . . . . this. After the season there would be a fundamental plummet to mediocrity.
Season 5, or, the Aforementioned Plummet to Mediocrity
Season 5 was back to a basic grudge match between BJ Penn and Jens Pulver. The session would have been pretty tense if Pulver actually won his “welcome back to the UFC” fight months prior. Instead, Jens got KTFO by a wild-eyed nobody (at the time) named Joe Lauzon. How do you remedy this issue? Make Lauzon a participant during the season and have BJ make the guys raise their hands if they did NOT want to be on Pulver’s team. We were also introduced to the unrefined, yet potent, skills of Nate Diaz (along with his brotherly inspired “Fuck You” demeanor towards Karo Parisyan) and some Ping-Pong skills that would make Forrest Gump puke. So, basically the entire thing resembled a trash can fire without the Doo Wop.
On the next page: Disgusting pranks, trans-Atlantic rivalry, and a pugilist named Slice.