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Nzoner's Game Room>***The Official MMA Thread***
KcMizzou 08:18 PM 07-08-2010
Excited about an upcoming fight? Want to make predictions, or just give people a heads-up that there are some fights on? We can do it here.

(Also a good place to complain, dicuss, and agrue about the outcomes)
[Reply]
TheGuardian 01:59 PM 02-14-2011
Originally Posted by BigCatDaddy:
He hasn't been that active, but I'm surpised Barnett isn't getting more love then he is. He has the easiest 1st round IMO.
Yes that's exactly what I was thinking.
[Reply]
raybec 4 02:34 PM 02-14-2011
Originally Posted by BigCatDaddy:
He hasn't been that active, but I'm surpised Barnett isn't getting more love then he is. He has the easiest 1st round IMO.
The last few fights I've seen Barnett in he seems to have lost a step or two. Or maybe its just me.
[Reply]
SAUTO 02:50 PM 02-14-2011
Originally Posted by raybec 4:
The last few fights I've seen Barnett in he seems to have lost a step or two. Or maybe its just me.
i have felt the same way.


plus i have always thought he was such a douchebag
[Reply]
CoMoChief 03:12 PM 02-14-2011
Originally Posted by TheGuardian:
All you resort to is hanging on Lesnar's nutsack.

Seriously. I was trying to remember if you ever actually made a post about MMA that wasn't related to a Lesnar discussion. If so, what the ratio of posts by you related to MMA that weren't LEsnar related. I bet the great majority of posts by you related to MMA are all about Lesnar.

I bet you're a bet rasslin fan aren't you........heh

****ing n00b
Wrestling sucks now.....it was good when they had the Monday Night cable ratings wars back around 2000 or so b/w WWF and Turner's WCW....that's about it though.


As far as posts about Lesnar......who fucking cares? At the time he was the current UFC HW champ. I'm not the one who acts like he's the information minister of MMA like you do.
[Reply]
TheGuardian 04:55 PM 02-14-2011
Originally Posted by CoMoChief:
As far as posts about Lesnar......who ****ing cares? At the time he was the current UFC HW champ. I'm not the one who acts like he's the information minister of MMA like you do.
Because he had beat NOBODY and had huge holes in his game yet you wouldn't should the fuck up about how unstoppable he was. A 280 pound guy beating tomato cans that can't take a punch doesn't impress me. Shouldn't impress anyone.
[Reply]
ArrowheadHawk 08:15 AM 02-15-2011
Glad to see that TheGuardian still makes this thread entertaining.
[Reply]
BigCatDaddy 12:21 PM 02-16-2011
This is a new one to me.

http://www.mmafighting.com/2011/02/1...cuses-for-loss

Fedor Emelianenko lost on Saturday night, and while a doctor's stoppage is not the most conclusive way to win or lose a bout, there's no denying that Emelianenko got decisively beaten up in the second and final round. Antonio Silva took him down and smashed him up for nearly the full five minutes. Even if Fedor himself says he could have continued, fighters agree to compete under the care of the referees and doctors in regards to their long-term health and protection, and the ringside physician feared for Emelianenko's vision after seeing his right eye completely closed.

It's only a few days later, but coaches on his team have been quoted many times in the Russian sports media talking about the loss. It's their right to explain what went wrong, but what about when they start floating conspiracy theories?

The most ridiculous one floated? One by his trainer Vladimir Voronov, who claimed in an interview with Lifesports.ru that illegal methods of psychological warfare were used. His claim? Hypnosis.

According to a translation of Voronov's interview, he believes certain "technologies" were used on both fighters from a distance that negatively affected Emelianenko's performance. His reasoning for the wild theory? Fedor did exactly the opposite of what they practiced beforehand. Also, before the fight, he thinks Fedor looked "a little depressed."

Of course, Voronov has no real evidence for the claim, and his only reason for it is the fact that Fedor lost. He also doesn't address how or why the hypnotists allowed Fedor to win the first round on two of the three judges' scorecards, risking their whole insane plot.

Hypnosis as an excuse? Now I've heard everything.

Also getting in a say was Emelianenko's striking coach Alexander Michkov, who spoke to another Russian site, Championat.ru. Michkov was asked about the size differential between Emelianenko and Silva.

Guess what? He pretty much accused Silva of juicing.

"Think about it, how can the normal human being gain 10 kilograms in 24 hours?" he said. "There is something fishy here. The fact is, all our fighters, I am talking about Russian fighters, that are fighting under the banner of M-1, train on their natural abilities. Of course, they take vitamins, but that's it. Meanwhile, all the foreign fighters, I think about 99 percent of them are taking chemicals. Obviously it was not a problem for Silva to make weight without problems. He weighed 264 pounds on the day of weigh-ins, and the next day, he was already over 280. He gained 10 kilograms. It's very hard to fight with a fighter like this."

Michkov's statement isn't so factually true. First off, not all of his M-1 fighters train on their natural abilities. Kirill Sidelnikov was busted for steroids in 2009 and served a one-year suspension.

Of course, Silva infamously tested positive for the steroid boldenone after a fight in July 2008, so the accusation is an easy one to make against him, but the size thing, well that's just puzzling.

Silva has always cut weight to make the 265-pound limit, and fought well over that on fight night.

Here are his weigh-in results of his last five fights before he fought Fedor: 263, 265.5, 263, 267, 261. Silva has always flirted with the very top of the heavyweight scale, and he's put on more size in the last year or so. Silva said after the event that he weighed 285 on fight night.

That should have come as no surprise to Emelianenko's team. Even if he had only gained five pounds, to 270, he still would have had a 40-pound weight advantage. Would that have made a difference in either fighter's performance? If this was going to be an excuse after the fight, it should have been a complaint before it.

Re-hydrating 20 pounds is not uncommon in MMA, and Emelianenko has certainly faced others who've done the same thing in his recent past, including Brett Rogers and Tim Sylvia. Are they really that flummoxed by something as simple as weight-cutting?

Michkov went on to talk about steroids testing in the tournament, charging Alistair Overeem with using steroids and saying that Strikeforce declined Olympic style testing "because everyone will get busted but Fedor."

Emelianenko's team had a right to demand an even playing field, and given the lengthy period during his re-negotiations process, they certainly had every chance to get it. Now, with Emelianenko essentially eliminated from the field -- barring an advancing fighter's injury withdrawal and reconsideration from the tournament committee -- all of this sounds like a lot of bluster and misdirection.

Emelianenko himself handled the loss with dignity. He congratulated Silva and walked out of the arena shaking the hands of fans on his way to the locker room. His camp hasn't handled it quite as well. Losing is never easy, and it's probably even more difficult when you're so used to winning, but accusing everyone else of cheating is hardly behavior worthy of the team of one of the greatest champions this sport has ever known. It would be more helpful if they took a page from their fighter and simply moved on.
[Reply]
raybec 4 12:48 PM 02-16-2011
Originally Posted by BigCatDaddy:
This is a new one to me.

http://www.mmafighting.com/2011/02/1...cuses-for-loss

Fedor Emelianenko lost on Saturday night, and while a doctor's stoppage is not the most conclusive way to win or lose a bout, there's no denying that Emelianenko got decisively beaten up in the second and final round. Antonio Silva took him down and smashed him up for nearly the full five minutes. Even if Fedor himself says he could have continued, fighters agree to compete under the care of the referees and doctors in regards to their long-term health and protection, and the ringside physician feared for Emelianenko's vision after seeing his right eye completely closed.

It's only a few days later, but coaches on his team have been quoted many times in the Russian sports media talking about the loss. It's their right to explain what went wrong, but what about when they start floating conspiracy theories?

The most ridiculous one floated? One by his trainer Vladimir Voronov, who claimed in an interview with Lifesports.ru that illegal methods of psychological warfare were used. His claim? Hypnosis.

According to a translation of Voronov's interview, he believes certain "technologies" were used on both fighters from a distance that negatively affected Emelianenko's performance. His reasoning for the wild theory? Fedor did exactly the opposite of what they practiced beforehand. Also, before the fight, he thinks Fedor looked "a little depressed."

Of course, Voronov has no real evidence for the claim, and his only reason for it is the fact that Fedor lost. He also doesn't address how or why the hypnotists allowed Fedor to win the first round on two of the three judges' scorecards, risking their whole insane plot.

Hypnosis as an excuse? Now I've heard everything.

Also getting in a say was Emelianenko's striking coach Alexander Michkov, who spoke to another Russian site, Championat.ru. Michkov was asked about the size differential between Emelianenko and Silva.

Guess what? He pretty much accused Silva of juicing.

"Think about it, how can the normal human being gain 10 kilograms in 24 hours?" he said. "There is something fishy here. The fact is, all our fighters, I am talking about Russian fighters, that are fighting under the banner of M-1, train on their natural abilities. Of course, they take vitamins, but that's it. Meanwhile, all the foreign fighters, I think about 99 percent of them are taking chemicals. Obviously it was not a problem for Silva to make weight without problems. He weighed 264 pounds on the day of weigh-ins, and the next day, he was already over 280. He gained 10 kilograms. It's very hard to fight with a fighter like this."

Michkov's statement isn't so factually true. First off, not all of his M-1 fighters train on their natural abilities. Kirill Sidelnikov was busted for steroids in 2009 and served a one-year suspension.

Of course, Silva infamously tested positive for the steroid boldenone after a fight in July 2008, so the accusation is an easy one to make against him, but the size thing, well that's just puzzling.

Silva has always cut weight to make the 265-pound limit, and fought well over that on fight night.

Here are his weigh-in results of his last five fights before he fought Fedor: 263, 265.5, 263, 267, 261. Silva has always flirted with the very top of the heavyweight scale, and he's put on more size in the last year or so. Silva said after the event that he weighed 285 on fight night.

That should have come as no surprise to Emelianenko's team. Even if he had only gained five pounds, to 270, he still would have had a 40-pound weight advantage. Would that have made a difference in either fighter's performance? If this was going to be an excuse after the fight, it should have been a complaint before it.

Re-hydrating 20 pounds is not uncommon in MMA, and Emelianenko has certainly faced others who've done the same thing in his recent past, including Brett Rogers and Tim Sylvia. Are they really that flummoxed by something as simple as weight-cutting?

Michkov went on to talk about steroids testing in the tournament, charging Alistair Overeem with using steroids and saying that Strikeforce declined Olympic style testing "because everyone will get busted but Fedor."

Emelianenko's team had a right to demand an even playing field, and given the lengthy period during his re-negotiations process, they certainly had every chance to get it. Now, with Emelianenko essentially eliminated from the field -- barring an advancing fighter's injury withdrawal and reconsideration from the tournament committee -- all of this sounds like a lot of bluster and misdirection.

Emelianenko himself handled the loss with dignity. He congratulated Silva and walked out of the arena shaking the hands of fans on his way to the locker room. His camp hasn't handled it quite as well. Losing is never easy, and it's probably even more difficult when you're so used to winning, but accusing everyone else of cheating is hardly behavior worthy of the team of one of the greatest champions this sport has ever known. It would be more helpful if they took a page from their fighter and simply moved on.
Jumped up jesus christ on the cross.......hypnosis?really?!?
Also it's not that hard for a dude that size to shed or gain 16 lbs of water
[Reply]
Pants 12:49 PM 02-16-2011
:-)
[Reply]
BigCatDaddy 01:01 PM 02-16-2011
Yeah, training with a sain team might do him some good.
[Reply]
ArrowheadHawk 11:00 PM 02-19-2011
Tito should just fucking retire.

Tito Ortiz Out of UFC Fight Night 24
[Reply]
raybec 4 11:51 AM 02-21-2011
Originally Posted by ArrowheadHawk:
Tito should just ****ing retire.

Tito Ortiz Out of UFC Fight Night 24
he really has nothing left
[Reply]
WebGem 07:56 PM 02-23-2011
I really with Bellator would sign Gerald Harris
[Reply]
Shogun 08:00 PM 02-23-2011
^^Hes actually fighting at Tachi palace fights 9 on may 5th!
[Reply]
raybec 4 08:16 PM 02-23-2011
Originally Posted by Shogun:
^^Hes actually fighting at Tachi palace fights 9 on may 5th!
I can't understand the UFC cut process. Some guys with real potential get tossed while guys like Phil Baroni keep hanging around
[Reply]
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