Roger Gracie vs. Hidehiko Yoshida “nearly 100% certain”
Posted by Kendall Shields on 24th January 2008
Posted in Hidehiko Yoshida, Japan, Kendall Shields, Roger Gracie, jiu-jitsu, judo | Comments Off
Posted by Kendall Shields on 24th January 2008
Posted in Hidehiko Yoshida, Japan, Kendall Shields, Roger Gracie, jiu-jitsu, judo | Comments Off
Posted by Marc Staehling on 15th January 2008
DISCUSS THIS STORY IN THE TOTAL-MMA FORUMSÂ
It’s safe to say that the deepest, and most consistently entertaining division in mixed martial arts is the lightweight division. Just a glance at fight of the year candidates over the last several years and you’ll see a slough of classic lightweight bouts. Uno/Sato 5/99, Penn/Pulver 1/02, Sato/Nakayama 11/02, Uno/Hansen 3/05, Hansen/Azeredo 4/06, Gomi/Diaz 2/07, Griffin/Edgar 2/07 and Huerta/Guida 12/07 are just a sampling of the fantastic lightweight fights that have taken place over the last several years.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Cage Force, Japan, K-1, Marc Staehling, Pride FC, Rankings, Shooto | No Comments »
Posted by Jonathan Snowden on 12th January 2008
A fight between the biggest stars in the history of Japanese MMA. It’s UWFi versus PWF-Gumi. It’s Pride versus Pancrase. And no one seems to have noticed.
Masakatsu Funaki did more than anyone to build the sport of MMA in Japan. Pancrase was running shows before the UFC even existed and Funaki was the star. Originally groomed to be the protege of New Japan Wrestling star Antonio Inoki, Funaki was handsome, charismatic, and most importantly, he was good. Really good. He beat many of the sports biggest names in the early to mid-1990s including Bas Rutten, Ken Shamrock, Guy Mezger, and Frank Shamrock. When he did lose, like to his successor as Pancrase’s top star Yuki Kondo, it was always slightly shady. Funaki was so good, so far above the other guys in the business, that he needed to give them an leg up when he fought. So he’d challenge himself: ‘I’ll let the other guy get two rope escapes on me to get the crowd fired up and then beat him.’
Sometimes it backfired, like when journeyman Jason DeLucia tapped him out when he misread how far away the ropes were and couldn’t escape a kneebar. “From what I understand, he was supposed to carry me to three rope escapes into the match and miscalculated his distance upon the first rope escape — it happens. The promoters were very unhappy, needless to say,” DeLucia said. But usually it made for the most exciting and technically sound fights on the scene. When the UFC was still using “talent” like John Hess and Moti Horenstein, Funaki and Pancrase were putting the best fighters in the ring together in grappling classics.
“Pancrase, it was the stuff back in the day. It was the height of pro wrestling then, and we were pro wrestlers that did it for real. We were the shoot wrestlers in a sport everyone knew wasn’t real and we really captured the imagination of the Japanese audience,” former Lion’s Den fighter and King of Pancrase Guy Mezger said. “It was a lot of fun back in those days and there was a lot of notoriety to be had then. In the 17 years I was a professional fighter, that five year period was probably the most fun I had.”
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Japan, Jonathan Snowden, Kazushi Sakuraba, Masakatsu Funaki | No Comments »