UFC 139: Teenage Mauricio "Shogun" Rua Knocked out in Living Room

Everyone has long heard the stories of the famed Chute Boxe academy and their less than orthodox approach to fighting.From Wanderlei Silva taking on a fellow teammate in order to lay claim as the rightful owner of a dog, or the everyday brutal sparring…

Everyone has long heard the stories of the famed Chute Boxe academy and their less than orthodox approach to fighting.

From Wanderlei Silva taking on a fellow teammate in order to lay claim as the rightful owner of a dog, or the everyday brutal sparring sessions that have occurred in the academy, Chute Boxe has a long lineage of violence that has only been thought to be “legend”. 

Now, a slew of videos have recently been released which support that legend. One video, though, stands out above the rest.

Future PRIDE and UFC champion Mauricio “Shogun” Rua took part in an unorthodox kickboxing match with a fellow teammate in a makeshift arena set inside of somebody’s living room.

Though the Brazilian would go on to build an incredible career, which includes impressive performances against Chuck Liddell, Lyoto Machida and most recently Forrest Griffin—whom have all succumbed to first-round strikes from Rua—this video details a much less “crafted” Shogun.

Circa 1998, Rua, just 17-years-old at the time, was knocked out with a headkick against his unidentified opponent, with the likes of PRIDE veterans Jose “Pele” Landi-Jons and brother Murilo “Ninja” Rua both in attendance. 

According to Marcelo Alonso of Sherdog.com, these same “super classes” were a regular occurrence and often regarded as a right of passage for most of the younger students. Fighters such as the esteemed “Axe Murderer” and Anderson Silva—both deriving from the Chute Boxe academy—have partook in such festivities as well. 

Imagine if a discouraged Shogun never decided to lace up the gloves again after such a public and embarrassing performance? The world may never know. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 139: Teenage Mauricio "Shogun" Rua Knocked out in Living Room

Everyone has long heard the stories of the famed Chute Boxe academy and their less than orthodox approach to fighting.From Wanderlei Silva taking on a fellow teammate in order to lay claim as the rightful owner of a dog, or the everyday brutal sparring…

Everyone has long heard the stories of the famed Chute Boxe academy and their less than orthodox approach to fighting.

From Wanderlei Silva taking on a fellow teammate in order to lay claim as the rightful owner of a dog, or the everyday brutal sparring sessions that have occurred in the academy, Chute Boxe has a long lineage of violence that has only been thought to be “legend”. 

Now, a slew of videos have recently been released which support that legend. One video, though, stands out above the rest.

Future PRIDE and UFC champion Mauricio “Shogun” Rua took part in an unorthodox kickboxing match with a fellow teammate in a makeshift arena set inside of somebody’s living room.

Though the Brazilian would go on to build an incredible career, which includes impressive performances against Chuck Liddell, Lyoto Machida and most recently Forrest Griffin—whom have all succumbed to first-round strikes from Rua—this video details a much less “crafted” Shogun.

Circa 1998, Rua, just 17-years-old at the time, was knocked out with a headkick against his unidentified opponent, with the likes of PRIDE veterans Jose “Pele” Landi-Jons and brother Murilo “Ninja” Rua both in attendance. 

According to Marcelo Alonso of Sherdog.com, these same “super classes” were a regular occurrence and often regarded as a right of passage for most of the younger students. Fighters such as the esteemed “Axe Murderer” and Anderson Silva—both deriving from the Chute Boxe academy—have partook in such festivities as well. 

Imagine if a discouraged Shogun never decided to lace up the gloves again after such a public and embarrassing performance? The world may never know. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

UFC 136: Jose Aldo Ready To Defend His Gold Against Veteran Florian

When he left World Extreme Cagefighting as its final featherweight champion, many expected Jose Aldo (19-1) to be the first man not named Urijah Faber to come from the promotion and gain mainstream success in the UFC.His dynamic striking, engaging pers…

When he left World Extreme Cagefighting as its final featherweight champion, many expected Jose Aldo (19-1) to be the first man not named Urijah Faber to come from the promotion and gain mainstream success in the UFC.

His dynamic striking, engaging personality and seeming invincibility in the 145lbs. realm provided the fuel, all he had to do was put it together.

Booked to fight on New Year’s Day 2011, Aldo had to pull out of his first defense of the newly-created UFC featherweight title due to injury. He was re-booked to defend against Mark Hominick at UFC 129 in Toronto, where the biggest crowd in North American MMA history saw what he was all about.

A five round war against the home favourite Hominick ensued, a memorable scrap that had Rogers Centre bouncing and made both combatants $129,000 richer as a result of matching ‘Fight of the Night’ bonuses.

“It couldn’t have been a much better night. Fighting in the UFC for the first time and defending my title for the first time was great.”

Now, in his second defense—another that was rescheduled due to injury—Aldo will see veteran contender Kenny Florian across the cage. Florian, a longtime staple of the UFC, dropped to featherweight after two failed attempts to win gold at lightweight.

Aldo has great respect for the challenger, and doesn’t take offense to a notion many have that Florian is moving down solely to take his title away.

“It’s a natural transition for Kenny, a lot of guys move up and down in weight. I’m focused on my training, I respect Kenny, I don’t take it personally.”

For Florian, the fight is a chance at cementing his legacy as a champion, instead of the best bridesmaid the UFC has ever seen. Aldo has a legacy of his own to protect, seen by many as a top pound-for-pounder and a man who could reign atop the division for as long as he sees fit.

However, after a video of Aldo’s battle with cutting weight for the Hominick fight recently surfaced online,  the possibility that he may elect to compete at a higher weight class seems to be growing more realistic.

“Since I started training martial arts, going back to my jiu-jitsu days, I’ve always been cutting a lot of weight. I’m comfortable now at 25 years old cutting that weight, but there may come a time when I’m older that I have to look at going to lightweight. Right now though, I’m okay cutting the weight. Before [UFC 129] we were working on putting on muscle mass, that might have been why that weight cut was a little bit more.”

Regardless of where his future lies and what his plans are, the violent Brazilian has one task at hand at the moment, that of a very crafty, very talented veteran on October 8. Kenny Florian is no joke for anyone, and Aldo knows what he’s up against.

“I’ve fought taller guys, guys with longer reach. All I can do is expect to impose my gameplan and win the fight.”

The talking is done. All that’s left is to lock the cage door and see which man is better. The champion believes it’s him, and he’ll look to prove it at UFC 136.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

MMA: White Jumps the Gun, GSP Training, Cyborg Returns & the Week’s Biggest News

After a blockbuster week that saw UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones successfully defend his belt at UFC 135 against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, there were plenty of other news items that took center stage.UFC President Dana White briefly announce…

After a blockbuster week that saw UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones successfully defend his belt at UFC 135 against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, there were plenty of other news items that took center stage.

UFC President Dana White briefly announced a highly-anticipated showdown between light heavyweights Phil Davis and Lyoto Machida, only to pull back the news almost immediately.

Consensus No. 1-ranked female fighter Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos will return to Strikeforce to defend her 145-pound title on Dec. 17.

UFC welterweight kingpin Georges St-Pierre announced that he will be training with former challenger Dan Hardy in preparation for his UFC 137 title defense against Carlos Condit.

 

Rob Tatum is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report MMA. You can also find Rob’s work at TheMMACorner.com.  For anything related to MMA, you can follow Rob on Twitter @RobTatumMMA.

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UFC 139: Cung Le Calls out "Keyboard Warriors"

Cung Le makes his debut in the UFC against Wanderlei Silva at UFC 139 on Nov. 19 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, California, and he is not going to take this fight lightly.The former Strikeforce middleweight champion told MMAWeekly.com that he expects …

Cung Le makes his debut in the UFC against Wanderlei Silva at UFC 139 on Nov. 19 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, California, and he is not going to take this fight lightly.

The former Strikeforce middleweight champion told MMAWeekly.com that he expects Wanderlei to be a dangerous opponent, despite his recent decline in performance:

He’s kind of like a warrior that has his back against the wall. A lot of times that’s more dangerous … Wanderlei is not ready to retire. He’s gonna be more dangerous, he’s gonna come and fight a lot harder. He chooses to step in the cage and so do I. It doesn’t make me feel good about myself to think I might be the one to retire him, or that he might get hurt.

Since Wanderlei lost to Chris Leben at UFC 132, many have called for Wanderlei to retire from MMA, with the common criticism being that Wanderlei is past his prime and is more prone to injury at his age.

However, Le squashed these criticisms and made his opinion on the matter clear:

It takes a lot to be a fighter, it takes a lot to step inside the cage and for people to say certain things that they don’t know about, it’s kind of disrespectful. There’s plenty of keyboard warriors out there that think they know it all and they never respect a minute doing what we do.

This marks Le’s first fight in over a year; he, has been inactive since June 2010, following a spectacular TKO win over Scott Smith at Strikeforce: Fedor vs. Werdum. 

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Hump Day Headlines with Stephanie Ann Cook

Tim Sylvia is fighting Andrei Arlovski under the Pro Elite banner this November 5th. Dave Herman vs. Mike Russow scrapped from UFC 136 card due to an injury for Herman. Leonard Garcia vs. Nam Phan.

Tim Sylvia is fighting Andrei Arlovski under the Pro Elite banner this November 5th.

Dave Herman vs. Mike Russow scrapped from UFC 136 card due to an injury for Herman. Leonard Garcia vs. Nam Phan II now promoted to main card.

UFC 140‘s planned match of Lyoto Machida vs. Phil Davis is definitely a no-go. Davis didn’t even know it was a prospect.

Georges St. Pierre training with Dan Hardy for his upcoming UFC 137 main event with Carlos Condit.

UFC 139 headlined by Mauricio “Shogun” Rua vs. Dan Henderson with co-maint event, Wanderlei Silva vs. Cung Le. But you won’t find San Jose residents, Jon Fitch or Josh Koscheck on the card unless there is a “vs.” sign between their two names, according to Dana White.

In case you missed it, here is that picture of Michael Jackson after he passed away that was submitted in court yesterday in the case of his doctor Conrad Murray‘s wrongful death trial.