Monday, 25 November 2013

'Total Divas' episode 11 recap: Bad medicine

Natalya preps Eva Marie for her announcing debut: Total Divas, Nov. 17, 2013Natalya looks forward to Survivor Series: WWE.com Exclusive, Nov. 18, 2013Natalya reflects on different topics: WWE App Exclusive, Nov, 18, 2013Natalya vs. Tamina Snuka: SmackDown, Nov. 15, 2013AJ Lee vs. Natalya – Divas Championship Match: WWE Main Event, Nov. 13, 2013Tyson Kidd vs. Fandango: Raw, Nov. 11, 2013Natalya is embarrassed during her match against Naomi: Total Divas, Nov. 10, 2013


Eva Marie gets another chance for a big break, but violates the 11th Commandment – #DontHinderJinder – when she completely forgets Jinder Mahal’s name during a guest stint as a ring announcer. Jinder is, obviously, somewhat peeved by all this, though Heath Slater is a bit more conciliatory. Despite claiming a moral victory in that she didn’t try to cheat her way out of this mess, Eva’s brain fart lands her in the doghouse (again) with WWE execs, who are rapidly running out of options as to what to do with her.


Watch the episode highlights | Choose the Sound Byte of the Week


There’s a fungus among us, and it has taken up residence in the big toe of Jimmy Uso. It’s actually pretty gnarly – the poor guy’s foot makes him look like Patient Zero of the zombie apocalypse – yet he only goes to a doctor after it gets bad enough to trip him up during a match. The doc cleans him up in a flash, but it turns out that Naomi (Trinity) has caught whatever creeping crud has infested Jimmy’s foot, and they end the episode with His and Hers topical ointments to clear up the gunk. Adorable.


Over in Bella-land, Daniel Bryan’s doing pretty well as WWE’s de facto “top guy” in John Cena’s absence, but the increased demand on his time is starting to put a wee bit of pressure on his relationship with Brie Bella. Meanwhile,Nikki is attempting to nurse the ailing Cena back to health after his surgery – complete with nurse’s outfit – while also undergoing the process of moving her stuff into his place.


Photos: What went down on the latest “Total Divas”?


Proving that timing is everything, Cena picks this exact moment to spring a “cohabitation agreement” on Nikki that basically gives him the legal right to evict her from the premises if the relationship goes belly-up. It’s a necessary evil, one he fully realizes he may not have handled all that well. Worse, his “just in case” protestations are lost on Nikki, who’s somewhat upset by this turn of events – and by “somewhat” we mean she storms out of The Champ’s abode, absconds with a Maserati and hits the road like Stallone in “Rocky IV” to work through her emotions. Sometimes there really is no easy way out.

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'Total Divas' episode 11 recap: Bad medicine

UFC Champ Talks Club Incident With Nick Diaz, Jon Jones Return Update, Pettis Needs Surgery

- This weekend rumors spread through social media that UFC welterweight Nick Diaz and UFC lightweight champ Anthony Pettis had gotten into an altercation in a nightclub. According to Pettis, who spoke recently to gathered media (video above, courtesy MMA Fight Corner), the incident was overblown.


“I think Twitter made it bigger than what it really was,” Pettis said. “One of Nick Diaz’s friends — I was taking pictures with a fan — had something to say. My family don’t play, their family don’t play, drinks got thrown, security came. Me and Nick Diaz never had a confrontation together. I think Twitter blew it up a little more than it was. That’s normal for me in Milwaukee — it’s nothing big.”


Since taking the title, Pettis has been the target of every lightweight in the promotion. That extends to Nate Diaz, who’s had no problem calling out the champ so far. Pettis said that he’s comfortable with a target on his back though, and has no intention on giving ground.


- UFC president Dana White revealed earlier this month that light heavyweight champ Jon Jones had determined that the leftover injuries from his brawl with Alexander Gustafsson were going to prevent a planned February return against Glover Teixeira. Citing a persistent foot injury, Jones felt that he wouldn’t be able to prepare adequately enough to show up at his best for the briefly scheduled UFC 171 bout with Teixeira.


Fortunately, the injuries aren’t bad enough to keep him out of the cage much longer than that, as a report given by Ariel Helwani for UFC Tonight has the champ eyeing a March or April return to action.


- Unfortunately for Anthony Pettis, his knee injury will require a much longer hiatus. Pettis, who pulled out of a scheduled bout with Jose Aldo this summer with a knee injury, tore his left post cruciate ligament in his title-winning fight with Benson Henderson. Ariel Helwani reported for UFC Tonight that Pettis will require surgery to mend the injury, and that the procedure could keep him out for six to nine months.


Pettis is confident he’ll be able to return to action by next summer and is scheduled to undergo surgery in early December. He was slated to face Josh Thomson in his first title defense around the same time.


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UFC Champ Talks Club Incident With Nick Diaz, Jon Jones Return Update, Pettis Needs Surgery

UFC 20: Forrest

“I lose myself in the details of those 15 minutes and you don’t worry about what people think of you.” – Forrest Griffin UFC Hall of Famer Forrest GriffinIn 2005, shortly after winning season one of The Ultimate Fighter, the idea of stardom hadn’t set in for Forrest Griffin.


Forget that he almost single-handedly put mixed martial arts on the mainstream map with his stirring three round victory over Stephan Bonnar on April 16, 2005 and captivated a nation with his self-effacing humor and ability to smile through a mask of blood. He was just another guy taking out his stitches with the aid of an Xacto knife nine days after the biggest fight of his life.


“I still do it,” he deadpanned three years later. “It’s convenient.”


He’s still pretty much the same guy – celebrity sits unsteady on his head, he’d rather have a good book – particularly one of the two New York Times bestsellers that he’s written – in his hands than doing the rounds of the hottest clubs, and life is fairly simple – train, eat, train, sleep, train, fight. Throw in the usual media obligations and you’ve got the picture.


But as the years went by, the Georgia product was no longer seen as an unknown brawler looking to make a name for himself while trying to earn a spot in the UFC. Instead, he became a world champion, a Hall of Famer, and one of the seminal figures in the rise of the sport.


Yet by staying humble and grounded, he was able to keep myself on an even keel because in this game, more than in any other, there are no guarantees, and Griffin’s career is a case study.


On top of the world after beating Bonnar in April of 2005, Griffin would win his next two bouts over Bill Mahood and Elvis Sinosic before a high-profile clash with former UFC light heavyweight boss Tito Ortiz in April of 2006. On a UFC 59 card aptly titled ‘Reality Check’, Griffin survived a frightful first round beating to come back and arguably win the next two rounds. He would lose a close decision toForrest front kicks Tito Ortiz Ortiz, but his stock may have risen even higher in defeat.


That wasn’t the case two fights later, when Keith Jardine halted him in the first round in December of 2006. Unable to accept simply getting caught and stopped, Griffin questioned himself incessantly after the bout’s conclusion, wondering if he could compete with the best in the division.


In his return against Hector Ramirez at UFC 72, Griffin showed a different side of his fight game as he picked his foe apart methodically and with a discipline he sorely needed. No longer was it ‘hit Forrest and watch him put his head down and swing away.’ He looked like a contender.


And on September 22, 2007, most questions about Forrest Griffin disappeared in 14 minutes and 45 seconds, the time it took him to dominate and then submit Mauricio ‘Shogun’ Rua, the PRIDE star with the reputation as one of the top 205-pounders in the world. Griffin made him look like he shouldn’t even have showed up for the fight, and when it was over, the idea of Griffin as light heavyweight champion wasn’t so far-fetched anymore.


But it was on July 5, 2008 that he fulfilled all his promise with a fight for the ages against Quinton “Rampage” Jackson. For five rounds, the two battled tooth and nail in search of victory, and it was Griffin who got it with a unanimous decision.


He would lose his crown five months later to Rashad Evans, and at UFC 101 in August of 2009 he got knocked out by Anderson Silva, but after dealing with a myriad of injuries, Griffin has won three of his last four bouts over Ortiz (twice) and Rich Franklin, ending his career on a high note that culminated Forrest battles Jardinewith his induction into the UFC Hall of Fame in July of 2013.


“It’s one of those things where when you’re training and fighting, you can’t worry about your bills, your mortgage, did you get your girlfriend pregnant, your pet’s cancer, or anything,” he said of fighting. “Nothing else matters but that dude trying to kick you in the face or throw you on your head or trying to rip your arm out of the socket. It becomes a singularity of purpose, which an ADD kid like me rarely gets. I like that moment of clarity in fights, and I truly have that. I lose myself in the details of those 15 minutes and you don’t worry about what people think of you.”


This updated profile was excerpted from the UFC Encyclopedia, which can still be purchased in the UFC Store or at bookstores and retailers around the globe.


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UFC 20: Forrest

Davis Meets Gordon At Havoc FC 4

Havoc Logo


Canada’s Flyweight division will start to fall in place in 2014 as Mike Davis will meet Malcom Gordon at Havoc Fc 4. Davis himself confirmed the bout on his Facebook page.


“All my friends who can never travel to my fights here is the chance ! I am fighting Malcom Gordon at Havok FC right here in Red Deer January.31st…”


Davis, a member of Arashi-Do Martial Arts, is currently riding a 8 fight win streak which includes victories over Michael Banin, Corey Lautischer and Eric Wilson. Currently considered by many to be Canada’s Flyweight king, Davis will look to mix up his training as he will spend time in Winnipeg to train with WAMMA in preparation for this bout.


Gordon, who trains out of Adrenaline Training Centre, may only have 3 professional bouts under his belt but has proved to be a vicious finisher ending all 3 of his outings before the 8 minute mark. This will be quite the test for the London, Ontario native as not only will Davis be his stiffest test to date but it will also be the first time Gordon has competed in MMA outside his home province.


Havoc FC 4 goes down January 31st from the Sheraton Hotel in Red Deer, Alberta.


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Davis Meets Gordon At Havoc FC 4

Froch: I won't lose focus

Carl Froch says he’s feeling confident ahead of his fight with George Groves.

$(document).ready(function() { getBC({‘con’:'#video’,'ob’:'#video-id’,'id’:’2860756633001′}); }); Carl Froch says George Groves’ “horrible” behaviour will not affect his concentration come fight time tonight on Sky Sports Box Office.

The champion, whose IBF and WBA super-middleweight belts are on the line in Manchester, admits he has become irritated by a perceived lack of respect from Groves in the weeks leading up to their huge world title fight.


Froch did not exude his usual detached calm at Friday’s weigh-in, whispering in his younger challenger’s ear as the pair went head-to-head for the benefit of a jam-packed press room.


But after a sound night’s sleep on the eve of the fight the 36-year-old, heading into his 11th straight world title contest, gave Sky Sports News a clear-headed assessment of the task at hand.


The Ringside pundits are joined by a number of guests from the world of boxing to preview Saturday’s big fight. $(document).ready(function() { getBC({‘con’:'#video3′,’ob’:'#video-id3′,’id’:’2860091686001′}); });

He said: “I’ve had a fantastic sleep – eight-and-a-half hours, which I don’t normally have. There was a riot going off in the next room, and my cornerman Mark was up patrolling the corridors like Charles Bronson at about 3.30, but I slept right through it. Happy days.


“I feel very confident. I’m apprehensive, a little bit nervous – it’s a big, big fight and I’ve got to take this kid seriously – as seriously as I can because he’s been quite petulant in the build-up.


“He’s been a horrible little child, so that’s obviously in my head. It’s a little bit irritating, but I’m taking this fight very, very seriously.


“As far as I’m concerned I’m in a top, top level world title fight and I’ll be taking it as such because if I take my foot off the gas or lose focus I’m not the dangerous fighting machine I need to be.


“As long as I’m switched on mentally I’ll do what I need to do, and I’m trying to hold focus and keep reminding myself this is a double world title fight against an unbeaten hungry kid.


“He’ll have a go at times, he’s going to punch back, and this is his big chance. Anyone in his position – with one chance – what are you going to do?


“But you’ve got to put it in context: he’s in against me, I’m firing on all cylinders and proven at world level. The right thing usually happens and should happen.


“On paper there’s only one winner, but I’m not taking that for granted – I’m turning up ready and George Groves is in serious trouble. He’s going to have to fight one hell of a fight just to stay with me, let alone win.


“Everyone should enjoy it – it’s going to be a cracker, a barnstormer, a humdinger as they say.”


Groves – a 10/3 outsider with Sky Bet – awoke on Saturday as confident as ever about his own chances of pulling off a shock victory.


He told Sky Sports News: “I’ve waited a long time for the chance to fight for a world title, and I’m not going to let this slip.


“I’m more than ready and capable of winning this fight, so there’ll be no excuses from me. I’m here to do a job and I can’t wait to get out there and do it.”


Watch Carl Froch v George Groves live on Sky Sports Box Office, November 23. Go to www.skysports.com/frochgroves for full details.


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Froch: I won't lose focus

KSW 25 Update: Light Heavyweight Champ Jan Blachowicz Scratched Due to Injury

Jan Blachowicz is off KSW 25. | Piotr Pedziszewski/Sherdog.com

A mere five days after it was announced, the KSW 25 co-main event has been altered due to injury.


KSW light heavyweight champion Jan Blachowicz has been forced to withdraw from his upcoming title fight at the promotion’s final event of 2013, according to a press release issued Tuesday by the Polish promotion.


Blachowicz was originally slated to face former Bellator talent Virgil Zwicker, who now awaits a replacement opponent. “Rezdog” will not have to wait long, however, as KSW revealed in the announcement that Zwicker will receive a new foe sometime this week.


KSW 25 takes place Dec. 7 at Centennial Hall in Wroclaw, Poland, and is headlined by a middleweight showdown between Mamed Khalidov and Ryuta Sakurai.


Blachowicz was last seen in March, when he successfully defended his belt against former UFC talent Goran Reljic. The Pole has won five straight fights, with the sole loss in his last 15 outings coming in March of 2011, when he was unable to continue against Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou due to a badly bruised left thigh.


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KSW 25 Update: Light Heavyweight Champ Jan Blachowicz Scratched Due to Injury

Universal Soldiers

Frank Shamrock was one of the first fighters to focus on cardiovascular conditioning. | Photo: Jeff Sherwood/Sherdog.com

Those who competed in the earliest Ultimate Fighting Championship events had no idea they were launching a sport, let alone how best to train for it.


Some hit pads backstage and growled. Others wrestled like they were preparing for a meet. Before the first UFC, one fighter famously tightened the one boxing glove he wore into battle, thinking it was his ticket to a knockout. In training for his 1994 UFC debut, All-American wrestler Dan Severn simply drilled techniques that were banned on collegiate mats. Must be illegal for a reason, he figured. Then, for the most part, all of them went into the cage and did whatever the hell came to mind.


In the years since, there has been a heady stream of evolutions. Mixed martial artists, as the sport came to be known, shifted from experimentation to specialization. Camps today are every bit as scientific in their approach to competition as any other professional sport, sometimes more so. Yet the deference and philosophies of traditional martial arts remain stitched into how fighters prepare.


UFC television analyst Joe Rogan has grown fond of saying the martial arts have evolved more in the past 20 years than they did in the preceding 200, and it is hard to argue the point. It seems waves of nouveau thinking about training wash over the sport every few months, and all it takes is a few fighters finding success with a technique for it to be seen as a new way of fighting. The counters to those techniques emerge just as quickly.


At the UFC’s outset, fighters thought in a very linear way. Wrestlers like Mark Coleman and jiu-jitsu players like Royce Gracie had a singular goal: take opponents off their feet, control them on the ground and find ways to pummel their faces or catch submission holds. Strikers intent on moving forward and firing shots drilled ways to get up off the mat. The operating principle for everyone was to get the fight into their wheelhouse, where their strengths resided; and those strengths were honed well before an MMA career was a thought.


Today, mixed martial artists do not necessarily have a wheelhouse. They have things they do particularly well, but for the most part, they are not going into fights with one-track minds about where the action needs to take place for them to be successful.


“Now, it’s on a much more micro level,” said Greg Jackson, a kickboxer whose New Mexico self-defense gym, established in 1992, blossomed into one of MMA’s most successful camps. “There are little revolutions, still every bit as important, but just smaller. Instead of a wrestler trying to figure out how to take a kickboxer down to the ground, it’s the third defense they use against a single-leg [that he or she focuses on].”


To appreciate the embryonic training and preparation present in the earliest UFCs, it is important to understand how martial arts — and martial artists — were perceived in America at the time. Prior to UFC 1, the image of a martial artist involved a guy in a kimono with a black belt, which symbolized he could beat up 10 other guys at once. A value system underpinned it all: one is never to use his martial training to injure or create social unrest. While laudable, this ethic also created the opening for some martial artists to boast that their techniques were superior beyond measure, without ever having to prove it.


“Now [with] a martial artist, the mystique has been taken away,” said Stephen Quadros, a lifelong martial artist and veteran fight journalist and commentator. “Commercially, it’s bad for those that sold that mystique, but generally speaking, I think it’s better because you have more of a grounding in reality.”


Today, there is a bright line between training for self-defense and training to win fights. Practitioners make the art, not the other way around, and disciplines once thought to be discredited are rediscovered and re-contextualized. Witness Lyoto Machida using a karate stance and punching style to great effect and Anthony Pettis leveraging the unpredictable striking angles of tae kwon do. The early wisdom was that these arts were impotent against wrestlers and ground fighters. Many doubled down in response. Strikers trained their striking that much harder, while wrestlers and jiu-jitsu players scoffed at standup training.


“[With] Martial artists, much like people involved politics, it’s very difficult for them to change their beliefs,” Quadros said. “You almost have to beat it out of them.”


Photo: Dave Mandel/Sherdog.comThe sport of mixed martial arts did that.

The UFC was originally framed as a clash of martial arts styles to determine which one was supreme. This suggested the skills competitors brought to the table were static, set in stone, and we could get an apples-to-apples comparison. Instead of which style was superior, the development of the UFC revealed other truths. A key one: even the most skilled fighter was useless once he ran out of gas.


In the UFC, longtime training partners Frank Shamrock and Maurice Smith charted a path forward to fend off exhaustion in the heat of battle. A world champion kickboxer, Smith handed then-unstoppable wrestling machine Mark Coleman his first loss at UFC 14 in 1997 by biding his time, tying up Coleman and waiting for him to tire.


Once he did, Smith ripped into Coleman with leg kicks en route to a decision nod, instantly reinvigorating the place of striking in MMA.


From Smith, Shamrock learned about the cardiovascular conditioning regimen that was routine in kickboxing camps and put it to dramatic use when he burst into fight-finishing offense deep into the fourth round of his UFC 22 title bout against a fatigued Tito Ortiz. Ortiz had pinned down Shamrock for virtually every minute up until that point, but Shamrock was conditioned enough to explode at the first opportunity. Prior to the fight, Shamrock began doing basic, short-interval sprints, about 15 to 20 seconds a piece, to simulate the intensity of a round. He had never run in his life, hated it in fact, but he could not deny what it did for his game.


“It was what I was missing; it just changed everything about what I could do,” Shamrock said. “Maurice was like, ‘Your heart’s not strong. You haven’t done the work.’ He just made it so simple.”


Until he collaborated with Smith, Shamrock said he and most other fighters were always racing against the clock, hunting for a submission or fight-finishing opportunity before hitting a wall of exhaustion and dwindled effectiveness. Frank’s initial training with adoptive brother Ken Shamrock in the famed Lion’s Den, one of the first American MMA camps, was rooted in the training philosophies of Japanese catch wrestling. It emphasized chaining together submission attempts in grappling exchanges and hundreds of squats, push-ups and leg lifts to build muscle.


Strength training for MMA fighters has evolved from curls and bench presses, more of a bodybuilder regimen, to more functional fitness training, honing the body in ways that assist in manipulating another and overcoming resistance. Veteran trainer and former UFC champion Pat Miletich sums it up as run, jump, swim and climb, or what any kid with a big backyard does.

“The bodybuilding craze, weightlifting, ruined America’s fitness, to be honest with you,” Miletich said. “It’s not aesthetics; that’s not what we’re after. We’re after the ability to grab another human so you can throw them.”


In some sense, mixed martial arts has sprouted its own hybrid of fitness training, a blend of explosive movement and cardio drills that professional athletes from several other sports have sought to give them an edge.


In 2013, the Ultimate Fighting Championship launched “UFC Fit,” an in-house exercise program that promises to unleash the training and fitness “secrets” of fighters.


Frank Shamrock, learning what he learned from Smith, spoke to the value of collaboration, which took a while to occur in MMA. Originally, fighters kept very much in their own silos, perhaps a remnant of the closed-society mentality of traditional martial arts.


“There was too much animosity or resistance from the individual groups to get in one place,” Shamrock said. “I couldn’t train with the Gracies because I was a Shamrock, but what we missed in collaboration was huge. If we would have gotten together and figured some stuff out, there was huge holes that could have been filled.”


Miletich played a key role in breaking down these walls.


Finish Reading » “Generally, it’s mixed martial artists just training in mixed martial arts, and it’s a bastardized version. When I watch a UFC, I shouldn’t see guys who suck at striking, and I see it a lot. They don’t understand the finer points.”


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Universal Soldiers