Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas: MMA’s Drug Problem Grows
Cast your minds back to late 2013, when a dishevelled welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre vacated his belt. He…
Cast your minds back to late 2013, when a dishevelled welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre vacated his belt. He…
Our generation was fortunate enough to witness the beginning of a new sport back in the 1990’s, as…
Not taking anything away from Assuerio, he’s a tough dude, obviously. I hit him a couple of times…
(“Accepts trilogy-completing title fight against biggest rival, points out where he will faceplant later.” Photo via Getty.) Although the…
With the recent resurgence of Pride FC veterans Wanderlei Silva and Mark Hunt, I’ve been thinking back to the hay days of the now defunct Japanese MMA…
A look at wrestling in MMA, and how the sport has evolved around it over the years, including some fighters who have had success utilizing wrestling control to dominate in the past.
Saturday’s Strikeforce event is the promotion’s first non-Challengers event of 2011. Unfortunately, it’s been toiling in the shadows…
A long term dynamic develops in every sport that sticks around for a while. A section of the fan base will inevitably compare the play of today to their heroes from yesteryear. Whether it is the baseball fan that longs for the day where they didn’t have to worry about someone using performance enhancing drugs after every home run, or the football fan that yearns for the era of hard hitting and less complaining in the NFL. One thing is a common factor; this group wishes things would go back to
As Fedor Emelianenko heads into what has been billed as his “farewell bout”, misconceptions about “The Last Emperor” continue to swirl around the internet. It is one thing for a fighter to be called “the greatest martial artist of all time” by promoters, fans and management times; it is quite another to receive such praise from a fighter’s peers. Shane Carwin, Cain Velasquez and others have gone on record saying that Emelianenko was one of the best.
Despite his record of 33 wins, 4 losses and 1 “No
When I was ten years old my uncle bought me a brand new Playstation game that has helped blossom my love and interest in combat sports. K-1 Revenge came out in 1999 and it introduced me to many kickboxing legends that I admire and still enjoy watching today. Names like Ernesto Hoost, Peter Aerts, the late Andy Hug, Mike Bernardo, and many more. One name in the game that really stood out to me at the time was Mirko Tiger. Not because of his style or the way he played, but it was his name itself that I