SENGOKU 9 has happened, and POOR Akihiro Gono. That is all.

Moderator: Edi
Yeah I saw that. I was sad that the UFC cut Gono. He went 0-2 against Hardy and Fitch, but still looked pretty good I thought. But, he didn't do so well against Hornbuckle.Edward Yee wrote:SENGOKU 9 has happened, and POOR Akihiro Gono. That is all.
I'm picking Cyborg, Babalu, Diaz, Ishida, and Werdum. I think Cyborg is going to be too strong for Gina. I also think Babalu is going to ruin Mousasi's 205 debut, but I'm kind of hopeful that Mousasi does well. I just wish he'd stayed at 185.SancheztheWhaler wrote:Any predictions for Strikeforce next weekend?
So... Lyoto Machida vs. Anderson Silva? Yes? No? Should it headline or curtain jerk?aerius wrote:Now that's the Anderson Silva I like to see. Not only did he knock Forrest senseless, he made it look so damned easy. He had his hands down and Forrest couldn't even touch him, then boom, straight punch right on the chin that snapped Forrest's head around and dropped him for good. It was ridiculous.
Even if Silva isn't at Maia's level on the ground, all he has to do is not go to the ground. What this DID expose... is that god tier BJJ does not help when you cannot throw a kick without:aerius wrote:That was a quick end to the Demian Maia hypetrain, I haven't seen a guy get flattened like that since Arlovski tried his flying knee on Fedor. Nate timed him with a perfect punch and literally knocked him right off his feet and laid him out flat out in midair. Maia falls face first on the canvas and that was the end of that. And there's a bunch of people saying how Maia's going to be the guy who gives Anderson Silva problems, yeah, sure, if Nate could floor him like that I'd hate to see what Silva could do.
Why do people yell at him when he loses anyway? Well, at least he doesn't have to go home to just his wife anymore.Jardine needs to stop fighting guys named Silva, it just doesn't end well for him. Thiago took a minute longer than Wandy, but he floored Jardine with a good punch and pounded him out cold when he went down.
Then you have not seen Jon Madsen (Team Rashad) vs. Abe Wagner (Team Rampage), UNHOLY SHIT. I have no idea why Abe was allowed to continue past round 1, but the scores for the two rounds were 20-17, 20-17, and 20-16, it was that bad.weemadando wrote:Having finally finished watching UFC102, can I just say that Gonzaga v Tuscherer is the most painful fight I've ever seen.
Ehhhhhh... I just hope that Leben taking shots doesn't become the new "Sokonojudogate" (thanks to a Bloody Elbow commenter for the "Sokonojudo" joke name).Also - I will NEVER get sick of watching Chris Leben lose brain cells.
Actually, (perhaps) amazingly, CB Dollaway took it by decision! Kudos on Guillard tapping though.And now to watch (hopefully) CB Dollaway and Melvin Guillard get tapped. Again.
Did you see the after-fight footage where the medic was examining his scalp? It was split to the skull along a good 3 inches I'd say. The amount of blood was ridiculous, it was just pouring off of him.Edward Yee wrote:Then you have not seen Jon Madsen (Team Rashad) vs. Abe Wagner (Team Rampage), UNHOLY SHIT. I have no idea why Abe was allowed to continue past round 1, but the scores for the two rounds were 20-17, 20-17, and 20-16, it was that bad.weemadando wrote:Having finally finished watching UFC102, can I just say that Gonzaga v Tuscherer is the most painful fight I've ever seen.
Yeah but the cut opened right back up almost as soon as the round began because he got taken down and pounded on right away. True it wasn't going into his eyes and I don't think they should have stopped the fight at that point, but it was still the bloodiest fight I've ever seen.weemadando wrote:The cut was bad, but Stitch was able to stop the bleeding between rounds and the blood wasn't going into the eyes.
The same thing occurred to me; he is after all big for their publicity. I also wonder if it's also because the talent is "thinner" in that weight division. Guys that size I typically see in WWE for instance. And roided out of their skulls I might add. To be fair, I haven't been watching UFC or the Ultimate fighter that long so there might be (is) some selection bias in that observation.That said - given the performance from those two I'm concerned that the UFC might have tried to bring in some cans in the hope that they can get Kimbo past the first round of the show.
BJ Penn v Joe Stevenson was pretty bloody - and created one of the greatest quotes in sports history: "That cut was the size of a goat's vagina."The Spartan wrote:Yeah but the cut opened right back up almost as soon as the round began because he got taken down and pounded on right away. True it wasn't going into his eyes and I don't think they should have stopped the fight at that point, but it was still the bloodiest fight I've ever seen.weemadando wrote:The cut was bad, but Stitch was able to stop the bleeding between rounds and the blood wasn't going into the eyes.
There is a decent level of talent at heavyweight, but many of the top tier athletes at that weight end up playing Football or Basketball rather than being channelled into MMA like in many lighter divisions. The talent in this season just seems wildly varying, on the one hand you have Roy Nelson, who despite being a hambeast has made a living out of pummelling serious professional fighters. On the other you have guys who are clearly in "gym" shape or in some other "shape" that certainly isn't ring ready and have spotty (at best) records. And then you have Kimbo. The less said about him the better.The same thing occurred to me; he is after all big for their publicity. I also wonder if it's also because the talent is "thinner" in that weight division. Guys that size I typically see in WWE for instance. And roided out of their skulls I might add. To be fair, I haven't been watching UFC or the Ultimate fighter that long so there might be (is) some selection bias in that observation.That said - given the performance from those two I'm concerned that the UFC might have tried to bring in some cans in the hope that they can get Kimbo past the first round of the show.
Ah, then it's my relative inexperience with UFC then, having not seen that fight.weemadando wrote:*snip* bloody fight pics
Yeah, that's kind of what I'm getting at. The truly big guys are generally in another sport and tend to not be athletic enough to be a "true" UFC fighter (think linemen here). The ones that are athletic enough, again get funneled into other sports, like you say, and generally thrive if they don't get badly hurt, or end up in WWE. I'm speaking very, very generally here, of course.There is a decent level of talent at heavyweight, but many of the top tier athletes at that weight end up playing Football or Basketball rather than being channelled into MMA like in many lighter divisions. The talent in this season just seems wildly varying, on the one hand you have Roy Nelson, who despite being a hambeast has made a living out of pummelling serious professional fighters. On the other you have guys who are clearly in "gym" shape or in some other "shape" that certainly isn't ring ready and have spotty (at best) records. And then you have Kimbo. The less said about him the better.
The last fight Kimbo had was against a guy who failed to make it through the first season of TUF, had one UFC fight and lost, then was fighting at Light Heavyweight and stepped up to fight Kimbo on hours notice.The Spartan wrote:Honestly, I'd love to see Kimbo get put up against one of the top tier UFC heavyweights right now instead of going through the Ultimate Fighter, just to see him get owned by a real MMA fighter. I mean I get that he's got "street cred" and a lot of buzz around him because of the internet and what not, but enough's enough.