Top 10 Pound for Pound MMA Fighters in the World 7/14 Posted by Drew Ellis (07/14/2009 @ 1:19 pm) 
At one point following UFC 100 this past weekend, I felt like there are a lot of new questions about who the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world is. Georges St. Pierre certainly raised his stock with a definitive win over Thiago Alves, who was considered to be GSP’s toughest fight to date prior to UFC 100. Brock Lesnar also deserves some consideration for his dominant performance over Frank Mir, which left many wondering who can beat him. Here is my personalized top 10 ranking of who I feel are the top 10 overall fighters in the world. In making this list, I consider win-loss record, how convincingly the fighters have won their most recent fights, and their appeal to other fans. Well, here we go: 1. Fedor Emelianeko (30-1-1) – Heavyweight – Affliction About a year ago, I was one of those people that claimed that Fedor was overrated and didn’t fight the best. Well, after two quick KO’s of Tim Sylvia and Andrei Arlovski, you can’t argue that Fedor is not the best. The guy has virtually never lost, with his lone loss coming on a cut. The guy never changes his expression and never makes a mistake in his fights. Until someone beats him cleanly, Fedor will be at the top of my list. Read the rest of this entry » Posted in: Mixed Martial Arts Tags: Anderson Silva, B.J. Penn, Best MMA fighters, Brock Lesnar, Dan Henderson, Fedor Elemianenko, Georges St. Pierre, Jake Shields, Lyoto Machida, Miguel Torres, Mike Thomas Brown, MMA Top 10 lists, Quinton Jackson, Rampage Jackson, Rashad Evans, Thiago Alves, Top 10 MMA Fighters, Top 10 MMA fighters regardless of weight class, Urijah Faber
Saturday MMA Review: 7/11 Posted by Anthony Stalter (07/11/2009 @ 2:00 pm) 
Here’s a weekly rundown of MMA content from Ben Goldstein of CagePotato.com: – Quinton “Rampage” Jackson’s dry-humping of a female reporter became the year’s most uncomfortable MMA viral video. – Saturday’s monumental UFC 100 show will feature “Girl Next Door” Holly Madison as a celebrity Octagon Girl, and two very worthy additions to the UFC Hall of Fame. – With the bookings of Alistair Overeem vs. Fabricio Werdum and Nick Diaz vs. Joe Riggs, Strikeforce’s “Carano vs. Cyborg” mega-card will now feature four title fights. – In other Diaz Brother news, Nate Diaz is headlining the next UFC Fight Night event, despite having lost his last two matches, and plans on getting knocked dead this time. – The UFC’s new stance on sponsorships is taking money out of the pockets of their fighters. – After screwing the UFC by defecting to DREAM, MMA legend Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic has decided to screw DREAM and return to the UFC. – The full cast of “The Ultimate Fighter: Heavyweights” was revealed. Does Kimbo Slice have a chance? – Swing by CagePotato tonight (Saturday) beginning at 7 p.m. PT/10 p.m. ET for our liveblog of UFC 100, in which Brock Lesnar clashes with Frank Mir for the second time, Georges St. Pierre defends his belt against Thiago Alves, and Michael Bisping and Dan Henderson battle for a middleweight title shot. Get hyped for the historic event by watching this unofficial tribute, and this official one. Posted in: Mixed Martial Arts Tags: Alistair Ovreem vs. Fabricio Werdum, Brock Lesnar, Carano vs. Cyborg, Dan Henderson, Frank Mir, Georges St. Pierre, Holly Madison, Kimbo Slice, Michael Bisping, Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic, MMA Octago Girls, Nate Diaz, Quinton "Rampage" Jackson, Ramage Jackson dry-humping video, Strikeforce, Thiago Alves
UFC 100 Preview & Predictions Posted by Administrator (07/11/2009 @ 11:15 am) 
The Ultimate Fighting Championship celebrates a monumental landmark tonight with UFC 100. To celebrate the 100th Pay Per View show for the Mixed-Martial Arts company, the UFC has put together a stacked feature card headlined by three main-event caliber fights. Overall the main card has five fights, including two championship bouts. The show takes places from the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas at 10 p.m. ET. Here are my predictions for the main card bouts. Heavyweight Championship (265 pounds): Champion Brock Lesnar (3-1) vs. Frank Mir (12-3) – This fight is tough to call. Mir one the previous meeting at UFC 81 in February of 2008, but since, both fighters have vastly improved. Lesnar has been over-powering and shown solid boxing in his wins over Heath Herring and Randy Couture. Mir has been on a tear in his last three fights, picking up quick wins over Antoni Hardonk, Lesnar, and Minotaro Nogueira. Mir became the first to stop Nogueria back at UFC 92, which set up the rematch with Lesnar. In this fight, I think Mir’s improved boxing will play a big factor. In the first meeting, Lesnar landed big punches early and pounced on Mir, nearly stopping the fight before Mir pulled of a knee-bar submission. In this fight I think Mir will be able to dictate where the fight goes more than he did in the first meeting. With Mir’s composure and elite level submission ability, I see Mir surviving Lesnar’s early onslaught and then successfully pulling off a submission. I take Mir by submission in round three. Read the rest of this entry » Posted in: Mixed Martial Arts Tags: Alan Belcher, Brock Lesnar, Brock Lesnar vs. Frank Mir, Dan Henderson, Dan Henderson vs. Michael Bisping, Frank Mir, Georges St. Pierre, Georges St. Pierre vs. Thiago Alves, Jon Fitch, Jon Fitch vs. Paulo Thiago, Michael Bisping, Paulo Thiago, Thiago Alves, Yoshihiro Akiyama vs. Alan Belcher, Yoshiro Akiyama
Top 10 Significant UFC Fights Posted by Anthony Stalter (07/04/2009 @ 3:30 pm) 
With UFC 100 a week away on July 11, I decided to look back at what got the UFC to this point. Here is my take on what I believe are the 10 most significant fights in UFC history, helping the company become what it is today. 1. Stephan Bonner vs. Forrest Griffin – Ultimate Fighter Finale 1: This fight was not only the most memorable fight to watch, but may also be the fight that really pushed the UFC into the next level of mainstream popularity. Following the debut season of The Ultimate Fighter, a show which UFC President Dana White and co-owners Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta funded out of their own pocket, the finale took place live on Spike TV, which was airing live fights for the first time in the history of cable television. The UFC knew it needed something big to happen to not only keep a cable television deal, but earn future advertisers, and also prolong its reality show for future seasons. Bonner vs. Griffin delivered just that. The two fought to the very end and both were so even, it was impossible to decide a clear winner for most fans. The fight at one point drew 10 million viewers, which was just what the UFC needed. The back-and-forth, non-stopped action gave the UFC an identity to fans that had never seen it before and got the ball rolling that has allowed the UFC to snowball into what it is today. Read the rest of this entry » Posted in: Mixed Martial Arts Tags: Anderson Silva, Brock Lesnar, Chuck Liddell, Dan Henderson, Forrest Griffin, Ken Shamrock, Lyoto Machida, Matt Hughes, Quinton "Rampage" Jackson, Randy Couture, Rashad Evans, Royce Gracie, Stephan Bonner, Tito Ortiz, Top MMA Fights, Top MMA Signifcant
Saturday MMA Review: 6/20 Posted by Anthony Stalter (06/20/2009 @ 1:00 pm) 
Here’s a weekly rundown of MMA content from Ben Goldstein of CagePotato.com: – Rich Franklin edged out Wanderlei Silva and Cain Velasquez dominated Cheick Kongo at UFC 99 last Saturday. Also, Mirko Cro Cop defeated Mostapha Al Turk via illegal eye-pokes, then told the UFC to kiss his ass. – We saw some crazy knockouts this week, including Tim Sylvia getting wrecked by a 50-year old boxer, a brilliant flying knee KO at a Bellator show [http://www.cagepotato.com/knockout-day-nick-pace-wrecks-collin-tebo-bellator-xi], and a 9-second head-kick finish followed by a flying referee tackle. – Brock Lesnar is built like a black man, still not a fan of the gays. – Team U.K.’s James Wilks cruised to the welterweight finals on Wednesday’s episode of The Ultimate Fighter, ending a season that didn’t really live up to the hype. – MMA model Penny Mathis’s breasts may not be real, but they’re still fabulous. – Shaquille O’Neal is seriously considering a switch to MMA after finishing his basketball career, and wants to start off by beating up the giant Korean who smashed Jose Canseco. – When Cris Cyborg chokes out a reporter, that’s just her polite way of saying she’s finished with the interview. – Come back tonight [Saturday] at 9 p.m. ET/PT for our liveblog of the Ultimate Fighter 9 Finale show, which will feature Diego Sanchez vs. Clay Guida, Nate Diaz vs. Joe Stevenson, and the lightweight and welterweight TUF finals. And check out our exclusive interviews with Sanchez, Stevenson, and Chris Lytle. Posted in: Mixed Martial Arts Tags: Brock Lesnar, Cain Velasquez, Cheick Kongo, Clay Guida, Cris Cyborg, Diego Sanchez, James Wilks, Joe Stevenson, MMA rumors, Nate Diaz, Penny Mathis, Rich Franklin, Shaquille O'Neal MMA, Tim Sylvia, TUF 9, UFC rumors, Wanderlei Silva
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