Signing Akiyama; UFC’s “War” on Japan
Posted by Dave Walsh on 26th February 2009
The big news this week has revolved around the signing of Yoshihiro Akiyama, the Japanese-born Korean Judoka-turned-fighter by the UFC. The Japanese national Judo hero who is best known by fans across the world as the “slippery” fighter who fought Kazushi Sakuraba while oiled up in December 2007 in K-1. This news is seen as a large coup to many fans, especially with the UFC planning to enter into the asian market at some point, namely Japan.Posted in Dave Walsh, Japan, UFC | 3 Comments »
Josh Koscheck: Quo Vadimus
Posted by Dave Walsh on 22nd February 2009
There are a lot of questions buzzing around the bleached blond locks on top of Josh Koscheck’s head after the stunning loss to Paulo Thiago last night at UFC 95 in London. The biggest question is, where does Koscheck go from here, and what does UFC do with him now that he lost a fight that he should have easily won? I pose the question;
Posted in Dave Walsh, UFC | 3 Comments »
UFC 95: London Calling!
Posted by Tommy Hackett on 21st February 2009

After receiving a raucous reception in Dublin last month, the UFC will continue to develop its international flavor in 2009 — with what may be a sleeper of a show tonight in London. Diego Sanchez attempts to fight at 155 lb for the first time, against a fellow TUF winner in Joe Stevenson. Photography from the weigh ins reveal “The Nightmare” looking like a new man. Visit Tracy Lee’s CombatLifestyle.com for great coverage of that, and read on for my predictions.
I’m up for this one for a couple of reasons. Visitors to the Total-MMA Forums may recall that I skipped last month’s PPV broadcast of UFC 94, ZUFFA’s first show in the Republic of Ireland. Sure, I knew some good fights would be missed, and the Irish crowd would be a sight to behold (and by all accounts, they didn’t disappoint… even singing “Fields of Athenry” to salute the Irish-American Marcus Davis.)
But the fact is that I just couldn’t justify dropping PPV money on a tape-delayed show with, let’s face it, little relevance to the top of the MMA world. Fortunately there will be no such problem tonight, as ZUFFA elected to broadcast tonight’s show in England free of charge on US TV. ZUFFA is expected to announce dates in Japan and the Philippines in the coming months, and let’s hope they stay generous with these smaller offerings.
So… pour yourself a bottle of Bass, put a shepherd’s pie in the stove, and read on for my predictions on the night’s biggest highlights: Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Tommy Hackett, UFC | 1 Comment »
Back in Time: Superbrawl 4 (4/9/1997)
Posted by Alan Conceicao on 19th February 2009

For the 7 or 8 people reading, you’re probably already aware that I have a blog I don’t really publicize or anything called B-Show Assault. Its a pretty meaningless site I don’t even pretend to cycle traffic to because I honestly do it more for myself than anyone just to have records of crappy fights in z-grade organizations that I’ve watched and otherwise would have forgotten. Don’t lie. You may have watched Ring of Combat events in the past, but you don’t remember anything about them either.
For this occasion, I’ve decided to go port something over for fun from there, albiet slightly edited. The year was 1997, and I was a teenager still under the delusion that Tank Abbott was the baddest thing alive. Out in Hawaii, T. Jay Thompson (w/pony tail) was running one of the biggest promotions in the world at that time out of Blaisdell Arena. The company would eventually split and birth ICON Sport and Rumble On The Rock, and helped to produce loads of elite level talent. This show, as it turned out, had none of that. What it did have was Jay R. Palmer, a tae kwon do specialist with some wrestling in his background and a propensity to stomp men’s faces into puddles of gore. Jay R. Palmer, and I say this with all due respect to Jens Pulver, was truly the first lightweight star of North American MMA. Jens may have been the Don Frye, but Palmer was more or less a John Lober. And like Lober, he was severely deficient in some aspects of his game, deficiencies that were exploited by well known muay thai kickboxer Danny Bennett in their first fight at Superbrawl III. That was a back and forth war that ended with Jay R. Palmer being unconscious for 4 minutes on the back end of perhaps the most spectacular high kick finish in the history of MMA. It led to the rematch, the first ever arena MMA show in this country that was headlined by lightweights.
Posted in History | 4 Comments »
The Lost Art of Mystique
Posted by Fraser on 18th February 2009
At UFC 93, just before the epically bizarre Shogun Rua/Mark Coleman fight, Joe Rogan made an interesting comment about Rua, pointing out how he and his Chute Boxe teammates had lost the mystique which helped guide them to success in Pride. He’s right of course as many of the Pride names (with Shogun and Wanderlei Silva leading the list) are now missing that elusive element. But what is perhaps most interesting is that this is not limited to just a few fighters or camps - MMA fighters across the board have lost that sense of mystique.
This idea of an intangible mystique has always been a prevalent part of MMA – this is after all a sport that was founded in part to see if a Bruce Lee disciple could defeat the dreaded powers of Kenpo Karate. In the past, many of the sports biggest stars trafficked heavily in mystique with names like Gracie and Ruas imbued with some sort of intangible power. So great was the power of this mystique that completely subpar fighters could ride it to a long career. As a prime example, look no further than Kimo, a fighter whose greatest claim to fame was putting in a decent showing against Royce Gracie, yet who used a combination of Royce’s “unbeatable” mystique and his own tattooed, cross bearing look to cement his name as a MMA pioneer.
Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
2009 In Boxing: An Auspicious First Act
Posted by Alan Conceicao on 15th February 2009
Entering the new calendar year, there were numerous fears about the future of the sport being generated by online sources. ESPN had dropped half its boxing programming and Telefutura all of it. HBO and Showtime were purported by Kevin Iole to be cutting their budgets off at the legs. Then a funny thing happened on the way to the scrap heap: suddenly, a lot of money fights appeared, and HBO was televising many of them. ESPN and Showtime have already booked some of the high quality Quebec cards to take the place of what would otherwise probably be club shows with unknown prospects. The Connecticut based sports station even went further and booked Vitali Klitschko’s title defense against Juan Carlos Gomez for free TV. Even the loss of Telefutura was made up for with the entrance of Azteca America into the canon of fight producing networks.
The fights scheduled not only looked to be able to draw a crowd, but were on paper exciting: Margarito/Mosley, Funeka/Campbell, Arce/Darchinyan, Ngoudjo/Urango, and so on. However, in spite of what seemed like the best efforts of the promoters, not everything has gone to plan. Controversy after the fact has made more headlines than the fights themselves often did, and when absent, the lack of entertaining content seems just as valid.
Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
K-1 MAX 2009: More of the same?
Posted by Fraser on 10th February 2009

As K-1 MAX Gears up to begin 2009, now is a good time to look ahead to what the year has in store for the company. Right now, K-1 MAX is in a similar problematic position to where K-1 was a year ago. That problem can best be summarized in one word.
Stagnation.
The company has fallen into something of a rut with your same basic stars at the top constantly – Souwer, Sato, Buakaw, Masato, Drago, Kraus, Kyshenko… It’s a good amount of names, but there’s a definite feeling of going around in circles with no one new able to step in and shake things up. K-1 snapped out of this rut in 2008 with Badr Hari joining the elite and names like Teixeira and Zimmerman gaining momentum, but MAX has not yet found those new names. They did have some success last year with the unexpected Japan tournament win from Yasuhiro Kido, but Kido needs wins in order to keep that popularity going (and one win over Chi Bin Lim is not enough).
Posted in K-1 | 6 Comments »
Sour Grapes, Sweet Redemption, or Something Else?
Posted by Tommy Hackett on 6th February 2009
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“A few years back Diego Sanchez had enough grease on him to lube up a semi. His corner was greasing him up so Nick (Diaz) wouldn’t submit him. At the time the commission and public wasn’t as hip as to how this could affect the outcome of the fight and they got away with it. Now these guys are acting like they didn’t know what they were doing. Glad the truth is coming to light.” –Cesar Gracie
Last weekend, as Dave reported, one of the most anticipated rematches in MMA history came to a halt as BJ Penn’s corner retired him after a brutal four round beating at the hands of Georges St. Pierre. Now (as he predicted) the aftermath, regarding video of St. Pierre’s cornermen applying Vaseline to St. Pierre’s back and shoulders, continues to grind on.
JD Penn and company made their case to the NSAC earlier this week, assuring fans that “we are not trying to make excuses, GSP was the better fighter that night… we just wish his cornerman didn’t cheat…”
Now, the MMA world, including GSP’s previous opponents, are coming out of the woodwork to offer their perspectives on “Greasegate,” and enough trash has been talked back and forth that both parties are ready to step in the cage again.
Posted in BJ Penn, Georges St. Pierre, Tommy Hackett | 3 Comments »
Strikeforce to the Big Time
Posted by Alan Conceicao on 5th February 2009

A week ago, noticable from the absence of every calendar of upcoming events was any sort of Strikeforce event. No developmental MMA/kickboxing shows, no major events, nothing for HDNet, nothing for NBC. Oddly, this raised no suspicion whatsoever from bloggers or even major writers, who were apparently convinced that nothing was happening. Imagine the surprise then when yesterday the news of an imminent EXC sale to Strikeforce hit the rumor mill. It must have, to some extent, been shocking. There’s little to be said, however, of the internet announcing that they may have been wrong. And with that, I offer the first Lesson of 2009 (TM): If something is making money hand over fist in the middle of a deep, horrible recession, there’s a good chance that what little investment capital is out there has a distinct shot of heading for it.
Strikeforce has proved quite canny when it comes to putting together cards and acquiring talent, using nonexclusive contracts to draw in bigger name fighters than many promotions can hustle together. They also are very smart about their money, often cheaping way out on undercards to reserve spending for the “main card”. The downside was a long list of sometimes unwatchable MMA shows in 2008 featuring old names (Sapp, Mo Smith, Rick Roufus), underwhelming young talent (remember Raymond Daniels?), and onesided matchmaking (Ashe Bowman/Josh Thomson?). Strikeforce should be able to keep their costs lower but it’ll be interesting to see if they can produce as interesting a product as EXC often did on their ShoXC events or even on their main Showtime and CBS cards.
Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
BJ Penn: Crossroads
Posted by Dave Walsh on 1st February 2009
Last night we saw a dominant Georges St. Pierre take on the much hyped BJ Penn in what was an unprecedented champion vs. champion bout. This was Dana White’s gift to both the company and to BJ Penn, the unstoppable Lightweight Champion who had always wanted to prove his meddle in higher weight classes. As part of BJ “playing nice” he would receive a rematch with Georges St. Pierre.
Posted in BJ Penn, Dave Walsh, Georges St. Pierre, UFC | 6 Comments »



