Diego Sanchez wants to face Takanori Gomi in Japan
Diego Sanchez could care less about walking into enemy territory. After spending much of 2012 on the sidelines with an injury, The Ultimate Fighter season…
Diego Sanchez could care less about walking into enemy territory. After spending much of 2012 on the sidelines with an injury, The Ultimate Fighter season…
What’s the best way to follow an event featuring a thrilling five round UFC Welterweight Championship fight? How about an event on free television featuring a UFC Lightweight Championship battle between reigning 155 kingpin Benson Henderson and current top contender Nate Diaz?
The Super Bowl Weekend card gets bigger as Jon Fitch will take on Demian Maia.
As long-standing Welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre prepares to return to the Octagon after almost 19 months away, it becomes important to remember what got GSP to the lofty status he sits today. There has been much talk surrounding GSP’s inability to finish opponents as of late, his tendency to fight very safe, and questions surrounding his severe knee injury. All valid questions to be sure, but the bottom line is GSP has been a dominant champion, and has finished off some of the best Welterweights
The UFC featherweight champion will face the former lightweight champion at UFC 156 in Las Vegas.
In three weeks’ time, Georges St. Pierre will return to the cage again, with sights on solidifying his spot as the greatest Welterweight in UFC history, and one of the top Pound-for-Pound fighters in the sport today. St. Pierre’s path of destruction is a long list of top UFC 170-pounders, making the French-Canadian one of the mhttp://lowkick.blitzcorner.com/create/noUrlost dominant champions in UFC history.
Welterweight is arguably one of the most stacked weight-class in the UFC. St. Pierre’s run of six
Clay Guida recently announced that he’ll drop down to the featherweight division and has his sights set on Frankie Edgar for his debut.
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
In a video interview, UFC President Dana White brings up the topic of how different putting major UFC fights on Fox is than their normal pay-per-view format. A lot of the difference has to do with the allotted time due to commercial breaks,, which are non-existent at normal UFC cards. White has come under some criticism for the first two UFC on Fox events, which featured a 60-second fight in the debut and what many deemed a “boring” card in the second. However, White discards the comments of these critics,
(I don’t always accuse Hector Lombard of using steroids, but when I do, I make this face.) Potato Nation,…