Bum Rush Rant: Cole Miller Lashes Out at Fighters Who Do Just Enough to Get By, Calls Cecil Peoples the ‘Antichrist of Judging’
(“Wrestling should be a means to an end…You should be taking guys down so you can ground-and-pound the…
(“Wrestling should be a means to an end…You should be taking guys down so you can ground-and-pound the…
With seven straight victories (two in the UFC), Rogério “Minotouro” Nogueira will have a tough challenge against a…
LowKick.com can exclusively confirm that the former UFC Heavyweight title challenger Jeff “The Snowman” Monson will square off against the Russian Heavyweight Sergei Shemetov, at the ambitious International Fighting Championship event in Tel Aviv, Israel on November 9th. “The Snowman” is currently on a three fight winning streak, holding an impressive MMA record of 37 (23 Submissions, 12 Decisions and 2 Knockouts) victories and 11 losses. In his last three fights, Monson fought in AustraliaThirty-nine year
Thanks to Nick Thomas on Bloody Elbow for quotes.
The rubber match UFC fans have been waiting for since UFC 63 may happen on November 20th at UFC 123. The other day Former Welterweight champion Matt Hughes posted a new blog which included the following quote
“Finally, Dana called me yesterday and we had an interesting conversation about the November 20th UFC in Detroit. More news about that down the road.
Without a doubt, our beloved MMA was a far cry from anything resembling sport in its infancy. In the beginning we had two men enter a cage, and swing their fists and feet wildly at one another, while Jiu-Jitsu was still some mystical enigma that was both confusing and frightening. Clearly this was not a spectacle that the general public could truly embrace. However time went on and MMA continued its long and tiresome trek towards legitimacy. New tactics and weight classes were introduced, and training and
Ever since UFC 12 February 1997 Weight Divisions where apply to Mix Martial Arts. With the emerge of this weight class divisions competition started getting more fair to MMA fighters.
No longer bigger fighters would used their advantages on their opponents (even if Royce Gracie didn’t need it to win the first 3 UFC events) the creation of this, made the sport look more legit and human reasonable.
Years past and fighters start to rise in each division, Champions emerge and contenders line up on the
Daniel Fletcher takes a walk down memory lane, for the man with the deepest resume in the ENTIRE sport since 2006; Shinya “The Tobikan Judan” Aoki.
Criminally underrated, Fletch examines his record in that time frame, and seeks to put an end to the American propagated propaganda that leads even hardcore fans to discriminating against Japanese fighters, and overlooking even the man with the sports finest recent resume.
But hey, I could be wrong.
A breakdown of six UFC fighters on the verge of superstardom