Rousimar Palhares: Noted Asshole, Stripped of WSOF Welterweight Title & Suspended Indefinitely


(You think this photo is crazy? Check out Palhares’ official response.)

Rousimar Palhares turned in an equally impressive and despicable performance in submitting Jake Shields at WSOF 22 last weekend, defending his welterweight title for the second time in the process. But keeping in line with what we’ve come to expect from the Brazilian, the fight was not without its controversies — Palhares not only gouged Shields’ eyes while mounted in the second round (the damage of which you can see above), but held onto the fight-ending kimura long after referee Steve Mazzagatti had intervened.

With it being revealed earlier today that Shields has suffered significant damage to the shoulder Palhares cranked, “Toquinho” has once again found himself in the hot seat following a victory. WSOF VP Ali Abdel-Aziz threatened to strip Palhares of his title upon reviewing the fight, and on today’s The MMA Hour, WSOF President Ray Sefo followed suit, doing just that and suspending Palhares indefinitely following the NSAC’s investigation of the fight.

The post Rousimar Palhares: Noted Asshole, Stripped of WSOF Welterweight Title & Suspended Indefinitely appeared first on Cagepotato.


(You think this photo is crazy? Check out Palhares’ official response.)

Rousimar Palhares turned in an equally impressive and despicable performance in submitting Jake Shields at WSOF 22 last weekend, defending his welterweight title for the second time in the process. But keeping in line with what we’ve come to expect from the Brazilian, the fight was not without its controversies – Palhares not only gouged Shields’ eyes while mounted in the second round (the damage of which you can see above), but held onto the fight-ending kimura long after referee Steve Mazzagatti had intervened.

With it being revealed earlier today that Shields has suffered significant damage to the shoulder Palhares cranked, “Toquinho” has once again found himself in the hot seat following a victory. WSOF VP Ali Abdel-Aziz threatened to strip Palhares of his title upon reviewing the fight, and on today’s The MMA Hour, WSOF President Ray Sefo followed suit, doing just that and suspending Palhares indefinitely following the NSAC’s investigation of the fight.

In regards to the eye pokes, Sefo was equally critical of both Palhares and Mazzagatti, stating, “Not only did he did it once or twice, he did it numerous times. And he was warned by the referee on four different occasions. He should have taken a point or maybe even disqualified him after he did it four times.”

As usual, Palhares has thus far appeared oblivious to the fact that he has done wrong, the mark of a true psychopath. As he told MMA Fighting yesterday:

On the eye pokes: I just protected myself. He put his head on my nose. I just put my hand there to protect myself. I did not put my fingers in his eyes. You can see it at the time.

On the kimura: I did not hold his arm (after the tap). The [referee] said to me before the fight, ‘just go out there, if I put my hand on you, stop.’ And when he put his hand on me, I stopped. I stopped. Sometimes in the fight, it’s hard, it’s difficult to feel something. When it felt it, I [stopped].

You hear that, guys? When Treetrunk Paul Harris is going HAM, he’s going HAM so hard that he can’t even feel his opponent tapping, nor the referee repeatedly hammering on his ribs in an effort to stop him fortheloveofGod…

You’d think that a high level black belt who’s already been fired once for holding onto submissions too long would have learned when to let go by now, but perhaps this is for the best. In any case, Sefo also claimed that Palhares “may never fight for us again” and that he could be looking at a multiple year ban pending the NSAC’s investigation into his latest maiming.

I think the sad part of this is the guy is a great fighter. When Jake Shields is tapping nine times and the referee is tapping you six, seven times and literally pulling you off, that’s where people are gonna get hurt. We’re in a sport. We’re not in a war where we have to eliminate people.

To which I say, good riddance. Whether Palhares is mentally slow or simply an asshole, there’s no place in the sport for a guy who cannot seem to control whether or not he seriously injures an opponent each and every time he steps in the cage.

Related: Bonus King, master of restraint, and all-around good guy Joe Lauzon thinks Palhares is “kind of a dick” and has video evidence to support it.

The post Rousimar Palhares: Noted Asshole, Stripped of WSOF Welterweight Title & Suspended Indefinitely appeared first on Cagepotato.

Rousimar Palhares Stripped of WSOF Title After Controversial Win

Rousimar Palhares is no longer the World Series of Fighting welterweight champion. The announcement came via WSOF President Ray Sefo who appeared on Tuesday’s edition of The MMA Hour. 

In regard to the eye gouges that Palhares inflicted on Jake S…

Rousimar Palhares is no longer the World Series of Fighting welterweight champion. The announcement came via WSOF President Ray Sefo who appeared on Tuesday’s edition of The MMA Hour. 

In regard to the eye gouges that Palhares inflicted on Jake Shields, Sefo said (h/t Marc Raimondi of MMAFighting.com), “Not only did he do it once or twice, he did it numerous times. And he was warned by the referee on four different occasions.”

Sefo went on to tell The MMA Hour host Ariel Helwani that their organization will wait on a possible suspension from the Nevada Athletic Commission before deciding how long their stripped champ will be kept out.

This comes as little surprise. Immediately after the event, WSOF matchmaker Ali Abdelaziz was visibly downtrodden while explaining that the Nevada State Athletic Commission was withholding Palhares’ win bonus, a sign of what is likely an impending punishment. This was followed by an ominous tweet on Monday, hinting at the announcement to come.

Palhares scored a controversial submission win over MMA veteran Shields on Saturday. Shields dominated the first two rounds using his strong grappling, with Palhares’ only defense coming in the form of alleged scratching at Shields’ eyes. When the bell sounded for the third, however, Shields was visibly tired. Repeated takedown attempts eventually led to a beautiful sweep into a kimura from Palhares.

Shields would quickly tap, but Palhares would continue torquing his arm as referee Steve Mazzagatti attempted to end the fight. 

It’s familiar territory for Palhares. Toquinho was cut from the UFC following multiple instances of holding onto submissions too long. Even before joining the UFC, however, he had already built up a reputation as a dirty fighter (Warning: NSFW Language) in both MMA and Brazilian jiu-jitsu competitions.

Where Palhares goes from here will likely be contingent on whatever punishment is handed down to him. If he is banned from the sport for any prolonged period of time and released from WSOF, he will likely be forced into international promotions. Keep an eye out for more developments over the next week..

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

The Trouble with Rousimar Palhares

Who can say what goes through Rousimar Palhares’ mind?
In moments such as the one Saturday night, when Palhares again held a submission too long, who can say what the man is thinking? Who can say if he is thinking anything at all?
I have long since giv…

Who can say what goes through Rousimar Palhares’ mind?

In moments such as the one Saturday night, when Palhares again held a submission too long, who can say what the man is thinking? Who can say if he is thinking anything at all?

I have long since given up trying to figure out what makes Palhares tick. It is devastatingly clear that if not for his recurring place in the center of controversy, Palhares would be one of the more incredible stories in mixed martial arts: A man who does one thing and does it well, even when facing men with similar skill sets and aptitudes.

Even accomplished opponents such as Jake Shields know exactly what Palhares will attempt once the cage door closes. And still, he does it. On Saturday, Shields—one of the very best and heaviest grapplers in mixed martial arts—fought a nearly perfect fight, and yet he found himself tapping out to the hulking Brazilian submission artist.

But it was this moment, as it has so many other times, that doomed Palhares. It was this moment that made us overlook how he got there, and it instead forced us to once again focus on what he did once he arrived.

It was here that Palhares lived up to his reputation as the single dirtiest fighter in mixed martial arts.

That’s how it usually goes, anyway. Palhares secures a submission, his opponent taps and Palhares continues to crank away. This time it wasn’t his dreaded kneebar; it was a kimura. Even when referee Steve Mazagatti grabbed Palhares to signal the end of the fight, Palhares continued cranking away, as though trying to rip Shields’ arm from its socket.

The total time between Mazagatti touching Palhares and the Brazilian releasing the hold was just under two seconds. But when Palhares is involved, those two seconds feel like an eternity.

And I’m sure they felt like an eternity to Shields, who began his frantic tapping long before Mazagatti—a space cadet of a referee confined to working lower-tier mixed martial arts events only because he is far and away the worst referee in a sport filled to overflowing with them—finally decided that Shields’ tapping was an indication that he should maybe stop the fight.

We can talk about Palhares holding submissions too long because, put simply, that’s what he does. He was suspended for doing it one time and then fired from his UFC deal when he did it again. We’ve heard him speak of contrition. Those around him have pushed the idea that he sought counseling to help figure out why he acts the way he does. And yet here we are, in 2015, and Palhares is still being the same terrifying and yet despicable fighter he has been for the past few years.

But the submission wasn’t the worst part of Saturday night in Vegas. No, that came earlier, when Palhares clearly and repeatedly attempted to gouge Shields’ in the eyes using his thumbs. There have been many rule changes over the years in mixed martial arts, but eye gouging? That has never once been a part of the sport.

And in employing such a tactic, Palhares showed that he’s beyond sadistic. He is beyond reprehensible. It is clear that he isn’t going to change his ways even with suspensions, fines and a possible firing hanging over his head.

Maybe he can’t change his ways. Perhaps it isn’t a conscious decision at all, but rather it’s a part of his core that can’t be mended, stripped away or fixed. Maybe this is who Palhares is. Maybe it’s who he’ll always be, no matter how many jobs he loses or how many dollars he’s forced to pay to athletic commissions.

At this point, however, it shouldn’t be up to him. Regardless of what you think of the submission being held too long—and compared to his previous controversies, perhaps this one wasn’t so bad—his repeated attempts to gouge Shields’ eyes is something that needs to be dealt with.

The vaunted Nevada State Athletic Commission is quickly morphing itself into an agency that comes down hard on cheaters. Soon, drug failures will be hit with suspensions ranging from two years to a lifetime banishment from the sport. Rightly so. PEDs have long given cheaters a potentially harmful advantage over their opponents, and it is long past time they were dealt with appropriately.

But if PED users are harshly punished for attempting to cheat their way to wins, then what of a man who willfully pushes his thumbs into his opponent’s eyes? Shields went to the hospital with blurry vision last night. One look at his face this morning tells the story. Palhares’ revolting act did the damage he intended it to cause.

In late 2014, my colleague, Jonathan Snowden, took a look at Palhares’ history of holding submissions too long after the Brazilian once again found himself at the center of controversy after submitting Jon Fitch:

But it didn’t quite cross over into straight-up assault. It was gray—a color that has come to define the Brazilian’s career.

It was a win that served two purposes. It established Palhares, arguably, as a legitimate contender for the title of “best welterweight in the world.” But it also likely reaffirmed the UFC’s decision to leave him on the outside looking in. Some fighters, even in a sport like MMA, are just too dangerous for something that’s ultimately just a game.

It is difficult to say someone should be forever banished from making a living wage. And if we were looking at a first-time offense here, I believe Palhares might deserve a little bit of leniency. But this is not a first offense. It is not even a second offense. Palhares shows a repeated pattern of going above and beyond in his attempts to hurt people, even far beyond what is acceptable in such a brutal sport.

And then you throw in the fact that he’s adding new wrinkles to his game with eye gouges? He is not getting better. He is getting worse. The time to make excuses for Palhares is over.

It is time to put him on the sidelines, permanently.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

WSOF 22: Rousimar Palhares Scores Controversial Submission Win over Jake Shields

Another World Series of Fighting event, another controversial win for their welterweight champion, Rousimar Palhares. Toquinho added yet another gorgeous submission to his highlight reel but further armed his naysayers (and the Nevada State Athlet…

Another World Series of Fighting event, another controversial win for their welterweight champion, Rousimar PalharesToquinho added yet another gorgeous submission to his highlight reel but further armed his naysayers (and the Nevada State Athletic Commission) with another extracurricular twist on a joint lock.

The early goings of the fight were not at all favorable for the Brazilian. The first frame was all Shields, who took Palhares down early and often, comfortably staying in the Brazilian’s guard and never flashing an ankle that could risk one of those signature leg locks. Palhares wouldn’t put forward much resistance and quite frankly seemed to quit during the fight.

The second round was the same story but with a single suspenseful moment where Palhares got hold of Shields’ legs on the ground. Shields managed to spin out and once again control the fight in Palhares‘ guard, but Palhares debuted a new technique: a Gerard Gordeau-style eye gouge from the bottom.

Referee Steve Mazzagatti repeatedly warned Palhares but did not deduct a point and allowed him to continue scratching his fingers across Shields’ face.

The fight turned on its head in the third, however. Shields hopped off his stool, visibly tired, and desperately shot for takedowns. Palhares sprawled each attempt and eventually got hold of Shields’ right arm and nailed a gorgeous sweep.

From there, he locked up a brutal Kimura that immediately scored the tap. In vintage Palhares fashion, however, he refused to relinquish the hold and gave it a clear extra tug for good measure.

It’s standard operating procedure for Palhares, who has earned a well-deserved reputation as a dirty fighter, based on his habit of refusing to let go of submission holds. He was famously booted from the UFC in 2013, following his similarly controversial win over Mike Pierce, where he continued torquing a leglock long after Pierce tapped.

Shields would take a swing off his back after the referee finally broke off the fight, which prompted the corners to try to storm the cage (they can be spotted on the right in the tweet). When interviewed after the fight, he was largely unrepentant, ripping Palhares over the submission and criticizing the ref for his inaction over the eye gouging. 

In a vacuum, this would be a colossal accomplishment for Palhares. Shields is an amazing grappler and one of the most successful welterweights in MMA history. Defeating him at all, never mind with that gorgeous Kimura, would have legitimized him in a way he has never experienced.

Alas, it is not in a vacuum. Palhares‘ consistently dirty fighting has most likely landed him, and WSOF, in hot water.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

WSOF 22: Reasons to Watch Palhares vs. Shields Fight Card

If you’re looking for star power, UFC 190 is the way to go. But if you want a solid fight card, top to bottom, what you really want this Saturday is World Series of Fighting 22.
Maybe get the toggle button ready on your remote control. Sure, Ronda Rous…

If you’re looking for star power, UFC 190 is the way to go. But if you want a solid fight card, top to bottom, what you really want this Saturday is World Series of Fighting 22.

Maybe get the toggle button ready on your remote control. Sure, Ronda Rousey and her submission game might be must-see TV but so too is that of Rousimar Palhares. You remember Paul Harris, the guy who launched a thousand memes, the guy who was released and banned from the UFC for holding submissions too long and continues to hold them too long in the WSOF? Not the sharpest knife in the ol‘ drawer there.

Is Palhares the kind of guy you look up to as a role model? Yeah, probably not. Is his behavior over the years ridiculous and out of bounds? I think so. Am I going to tune in and see whether he does it again or whether fellow grappling wizard Jake Shields can intelligently defend his way to a W and Palhares‘ welterweight strap? Yes.

I don’t blame if you don’t want to tune in. But I would blame you if you didn’t want to watch some of the other action on the card, which includes bantamweight champion Marlon Moraes, who might be the best bantamweight today outside of the UFC. 

Either way, here are four reasons to tune in to the NBC Sports Network Saturday night.

 

 

Begin Slideshow

The Beaten Path: Abubakar Nurmagomedov Follows Brother Khabib into Big-Time MMA

OK, so they’re not technically brothers, but who’s really counting, right? Plus, “cousins who have lived in the same house since they were young boys” doesn’t have quite the same ring to it. 
Label it how you wish, but Abubakar and Khabib Nurmagom…

OK, so they’re not technically brothers, but who’s really counting, right? Plus, “cousins who have lived in the same house since they were young boys” doesn’t have quite the same ring to it. 

Label it how you wish, but Abubakar and Khabib Nurmagomedov—who are really cousins—think of themselves as siblings. You can hear it as Khabib helps translate questions for Abubakar during a recent interview, and you can sense it as Khabib talks proudly, if a bit nervously, about Abubakar‘s American MMA debut, happening this Saturday against Jorge Moreno at World Series of Fighting 22.

“We’ve lived together all our lives,” said Khabib Nurmagomedov in an exclusive interview with Bleacher Report. “I was seven years old when he came. Now, he’s 25, and I’m 26. We do everything together. We push each other, push ourselves. We help each other. He’s a very important guy in my life.”

They might be similar in many of the same ways, growing up together in the Dagestan republic of Russia’s North Caucasus region, the MMA hotbed that has spawned Rustam Khabilov, Ruslan Magomedov, Omari Akhmedov, Mairbek Taisumov and Zubaira Tukhugov, among others, including the brothers Nurmagomedov.

To hear Abubakar tell it, though, there are fundamental differences in their fighting styles. Khabib, who is 22-0 and the No. 3 fighter in the official UFC lightweight rankings, uses a dominant grappling game, including some of the best takedowns in the sport, to rake in round after round and fight after fight. If a finish comes, so much the better, but winning the fight with minimal damage is the first priority.

That approach contrasts with that of Abubakar (9-1). Khabib has gone the distance on eight occasions. For Abubakar, the number is zero. Abubakar may also have more knockout power or at least more willingness to throw his fists; despite having 11 fewer pro fights than Khabib, Abubakar‘s seven knockout wins are only one less than his cousin.

“I’m a little different from Khabib‘s style,” Abubakar said through an interpreter. “He’s more of a thinking style. I’m more someone who likes to exchange and do brawling. Khabib takes a position and tries to advance it. I expect to finish. He gets on me sometimes because I’m not using the same safe kind of style as him.”

At the same time, each fighter’s game is based in wrestling and combat sambo, the blended self-defense technique distinct to that part of the world.

Khabib, under the guidance of his father, was the first to try freestyle wrestling, then sambo; Abubakar followed his lead. Though they will always be linked, Khabib said Abubakar is ready to start this chapter, which will be distinctly his own.

“I think he’s experienced enough,” Khabib said. “It’s hard. He can fight for the title. He is 25 years old, but he has a lot of experience in amateur. I think he’s ready for tough opponents.”

As for Moreno (4-0), an aggressive opponent in his own right, Abubakar sounds ready.

“I’ve seen his fights on YouTube. He always jumps, always looks for the finish,” Abubakar said. “I’m excited about that. I have a message for him: I’m not going to back down.”

As the two Nurmagomedovs hunkered down in Las Vegas, doing interviews together and cutting the final few pounds from Abubakar‘s frame, they prevent themselves from talking too much about topics outside the business at hand. But it’s Abubakar‘s first time in America. Brothers can dream together, too, can’t they?

“I can fight all 15 minutes, but I don’t want it to go 15 minutes,” Abubakar said. “I want to finish him in the first round, and then I want to go to McDonald’s. I’ve never been before. That’s where I want to go.”

The Beaten Path is Bleacher Report MMA’s series on top fighter prospects. For the previous interview in the series, click here. Scott Harris covers MMA prospects and more for Bleacher Report. For more, follow Scott on Twitter. All quotes obtained firsthand.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com