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View Full Version : UFC on FOX 6: Johnson vs. Dodson | Results **Spoiler**



Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:27
Main Card (FOX at 8 p.m. ET)
Demetrious Johnson def. John Dodson via unanimous decision
Glover Teixeira def. Rampage Jackson via unanimous decision
Anthony Pettis def. Donald Cerrone via first-round TKO
Ricardo Lamas def. Erik Koch via second-round TKO

Undercard
T.J. Grant def. Matt Wiman via first-round TKO
Clay Guida def. Hatsu Hioki via split decision
Pascal Krauss def. Mike Stumpf via unanimous decision
Ryan Bader def. V. Matyushenko via submission (guillotine)
Shawn Jordan def. Mike Russow via second-round TKO
Rafael Natal def. Sean Spencer via submission (arm-triangle choke)
David Mitchell def. Simon Thoresen via unanimous decision

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:31
David Mitchell tops Simeon Thoresen via decision

David Mitchell finally has his first UFC win.

The Nor-Cal Fighting Alliance fighter outworked Simeon Thoresen to earn a shutout decision victory on the judges' scorecards.

The bout opened the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FOX 6 event, which took place at Chicago's United Center. It streamed on Facebook prior to additional prelims on FX and the FOX-televised main card.

Jiu-jitsu specialist Mitchell signaled his intention to make the fight a standup affair as he worked a jab early against Thoresen. Neither man landed much of note, though a left hook landed clean for Mitchell on several occasions. Midway through the frame, Mitchell walked straight into a counter punch and was forced on the defensive. The action intensified as the round drew to a close, with both men battering each other with big shots. Mitchell, however, remained the more active fighter.

Advised by his corner to tighten up his striking, Mitchell pursued and then rocked Thoresen with a flurry early in the following round. Crumpling to the mat, the two worked for position as Thoresen battled to recover his wits. Mitchell wound up on top and worked ground and pound before attempting a heel hook. Unsuccessful, he gave up position, but he came very close to securing a rarely seen gogoplata. Thoresen escaped, only to struggle with follow-up sub attempts from Mitchell.

With just seconds before the start of the third round, a cageside doctor spotted a cut to the eyelid of Thoresen, and a stoppage appeared imminent. Advised that further damage would end the fight, referee Herb Dean started the final frame, and a slugfest quickly broke out between the welterweights.

Mitchell again was the busier fighter, though Thoresen countered more effectively than before while landing a series of hard right hands. Exhausted, Mitchell shot for a takedown and wound up on his back with two minutes to work. He was unsuccessful, and Thoresen's attempts to capitalize on top yielded little.

Judges scored the bout 30-27 in favor of Mitchell (12-2 MMA, 1-2 UFC), who after dual setbacks and several cancellations finds victory inside the octagon.

"This is the greatest night of my life," he said. "I've been chasing this UFC win a long time. It means so much to me to win in the octagon. When Bruce Buffer said my name, all this emotion hit me. I kissed the canvas. … I don't know what that was all about. This just means so much to me."

Thoresen (17-4-1 MMA, 1-2 UFC) now has dropped back-to-back fights since a submission win over Besam Yousef in his octagon debut.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:31
Rafael Natal chokes out Sean Spencer in third

Promotional newcomer Sean Spencer proved a game opponent for the better part of three rounds but was ultimately no match for a more experienced and larger Rafael Natal.

Spencer, who replaced an injured Magnus Cedenblad on less than two-weeks' notice, moved up from his normal welterweight division to fight at middleweight in a UFC debut.

The bout was part of the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FOX 6 event at United Center in Chicago. It aired on FX following an additional prelim on Facebook and prior to a main card on FOX.

Spencer wasted little time rushing forward at the opening bell and looked to engage on the feet. Natal landed an accidental eyepoke in the early going, forcing a quick stoppage, but Spencer quickly returned to action and looked to utilize his apparent speed advantage.

Natal kept his distance on the outside as he switched stances frequently and looked for angles, but Spencer landed the first significant blow with a crisp left. Natal finally seized control of the action in the last minute of the round with a takedown and some late damage from mount in what could have been a round-stealing effort.

Both fighters looked content to trade again in the second with Spencer serving as the aggressor. Natal again used a takedown to turn the momentum, and he would enjoy top position for much of the round. Spencer tried to tie things up underneath and earn a stand-up before eventually exposing his back in an attempt to move back to the feet. Natal tried to finish the fight from the dominant position, but Spencer was saved by the bell.

In the final frame, Natal engaged much faster and earned a quick takedown, moving immediately from side control into a crucifix in the opening minute of the round. Natal blasted away with short elbows from the top before settling into a keylock that looked close to ending the fight. Spencer was gutsy underneath as he survived the hold, but Natal moved immediately into an arm-triangle choke from mount and was able to earn the tap without leaving the position.

"It was a great fight; he made me work very hard," Natal said after the win. "It’s great to win again and get back on track.

"I almost had him earlier in the fight with the choke, but I was smart. I didn’t want to exhaust my arms by trying to get a choke so close to the end of the round. If I had 10 seconds more, I would have really gone for the finish. Instead, I used it to tire him out, and in the last round I knew I would get him."

With the win, Natal (15-4-1 MMA, 3-2-1 UFC) bounces back from a knockout loss to Andrew Craig this past July and is now 3-1 in his past four fights. Spencer (9-2 MMA, 0-1 UFC) loses in his UFC debut but is expected to return to welterweight for his next appearance.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:32
Shawn Jordan scores comeback win over Mike Russow

After a widely panned performance in his previous outing, Shawn Jordan returned to the winner's column with a second-round TKO win over hometown favorite Mike Russow.

Jordan escaped early trouble from the Chicago cop to charge ahead with superior conditioning before earning the finish.

The heavyweight was part of UFC on FOX 6, which took place Saturday at Chicago's United Center. It aired on the FX-televised prelims ahead of the night's FOX-televised main card.

Jordan, who lost a snoozer decision to Cheick Kongo at UFC 149, took heavy shots from the deceptively powerful Russow at the start of the first round. Russow opened a cut under his right eye and smothered him against the cage, which harkened back to his previous misfortune.

But by late in the first round, Russow was already suffering the consequences of what appeared to be a low gas tank, and Jordan was emboldened to look for the counter.

Dodging Russow's combinations early in the second, Jordan backed his foe against the cage and unloaded punches before taking the fight to the mat. He quickly gained mount position and pounded away with punches, but a slick reversal brought a brief reprieve for Russow.

But Jordan continued with his ground assault, and after gaining mount again, forced a stoppage at the 3:48 mark of the second when Russow turned his back and took an onslaught of punches.

"How badly hurt was I in the first round? What? There was two rounds in that fight? Huh, interesting," Jordan joked. "Well, I was shook up pretty bad. That first round wasn't fun at all. He hurt me a couple of times, but I saw after each big attack his arms would go down, which made me think he was getting tired, putting too much into it early. My corner told me the same. In the second, he was still there, but I felt myself getting stronger, and I finished it. He made me work hard."

Jordan (14-4 MMA, 2-1 UFC) now boasts a 2-1 record inside the octagon while Russow (15-3 MMA, 4-2 UFC) has dropped two straight bouts following a four-fight UFC win streak.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:33
Ryan Bader taps Vladimir Matyushenko in 50 seconds

At just 2-3 in his past five fights, "The Ultimate Fighter 8" winner Ryan Bader was in desperate need of a win, which he earned in record-setting fashion.

Bader earned a 50-second tapout of longtime veteran Vladimir Matyushenko in what turned out to be the fastest submission in the history of the UFC's light heavyweight division.

As the pair looked to feel things out on the feet, Bader set the tone with a leaping left hook that sent Matyushenko crashing to the floor. Bader quickly followed to the canvas and immediately latched on to his opponent's head and arm before falling to the floor in a modified arm-in guillotine choke. Matyushenko initially resisted, but Bader adjusted his legs into half-guard to increase the torque on the hold and earn the tap.

In rebounding from a disappointing knockout loss to Lyoto Machida, Bader (15-3 MMA, 8-3 UFC) is now 3-1 in his past four fights.

"I've worked my way to being very close to getting a title shot before, then I got KO'd by Lyoto last time, but everyone gets beat in the UFC," Bader said after the win. "Not everyone bounces back. I was determined to bounce back."

For his next outing, Bader said he'd like an opportunity to face Brazilian MMA legend Mauricio "Shogun" Rua.

"I'd like to fight someone ahead of me in the rankings," Bader said. "I was honored to fight Tito Ortiz and 'Rampage' Jackson, guys I idolized coming up before I was in the UFC. I'd love to fight another legend in 'Shogun' Rua. I think we'd have a great fight and to share the octagon with him would be an honor."

Meanwhile, Matyushenko (26-7 MMA, 7-5 UFC) has now been finished in the opening round of his past two appearances.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:33
Pascal Krauss shuts out Mike Stumpf

Pascal Krauss is back in the winner's circle.

The 25-year-old German put on a striking clinic against Illinois native Mike Stumpf en route to a unanimous decision.

The welterweight bout was part of the FX-televised prelims in advance of Saturday's UFC on FOX 6's main card. The event took place at Chicago's United Center.

Stumpf attacked the inside of Krauss' legs early on as the German looked to counter. Stumpf used a leg kick to earn a takedown early, but he did little with the position. Krauss soon found his feet and clinched to land knees, but Stumpf escaped, and the two traded more heavy leg attacks. Krauss, though, landed the most significant strikes of the round with a front kick to the face and stiff right uppercut that forced Stumpf to look for a takedown.

Krauss began to find his range early in the second. The German unloaded several combinations that snapped back the Illinois native's head and tagged his legs. Stumpf appeared to have little answer for the attacks, but he took advantage of a tactical error from Krauss, who curiously broke his rhythm to take the fight to the mat. Reversing position, Stumpf held an advantageous position and managed to score points. But Krauss eventually reversed and again took control to close out the second frame.

Krauss again went to work with effective combinations in the third. A leaping superman uppercut highlighted what was ultimately a kickboxing showcase at Stumpf's expense. While tough enough to take punishment, Stumpf's counters met diminishing returns. Midway through the frame, his face was a swollen, red mess. A pair of takedown attempts was blocked, and Krauss closed out a dominant performance with ground and pound from top position.

Judges unanimously scored the bout 30-27 in favor of Krauss (11-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC), whom John Hathaway outpointed in a previous bout that came after a year-plus layoff.

Stump (11-3 MMA, 0-2 UFC) now has dropped back-to-back fights inside the octagon and could very well be sent back to the regional circuit.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:34
Clay Guida outwrestles Hatsu Hioki, claims split

Clay Guida is now 1-0 at featherweight, but his victory over Hatsu Hioki didn't exactly come in convincing fashion.

In his first fight at 145 pounds, Guida's movement on the feet was as frantic as ever, but Hioki used his reach advantage and pinpoint accuracy to deliver stiff counter strikes at every opportunity. "The Carpenter" was busy throughout the opening round, and the crowd chanted his name, but Hioki seemed to be the more effective striker.

In the second, Guida landed a crisp leg kick and immediately scooped up Hioki and slammed him to the floor. Unfazed, Hioki sat up underneath and briefly threatened with a kimura. Guida defended well and remained safe as the flexible Hioki twisted and turned underneath him while seeking out potential submission attempts. Guida found it impossible to move past Hioki's guard, but he did enjoy top position for most of the round and was able to land an occasional blow from the top.

The pair was reset on the feet with 40 second left, and Hioki scored with a slick kick to the head, but the fighters moved on to the final frame.

Hioki stalked on the feet to open the third, but it was Guida again who drove in for a takedown one minute in. Hioki immediately set up a few triangle choke opportunities from his back, but Guida was able to pull free each time and maintain top position. Hioki eventually scooted to the fence and worked to a knee, but Guida remained tied to his body as the referee asked for action.

The pair was stood again in the final minute, and Hioki looked to capitalize with another high kick and a few straight punches. At the bell, Guida took a few victory laps, and it turned out that two of the three judges valued his takedowns and top control and awarded him a split-decision result.

"He was like a rubber band; he was so hard to keep in one space so I could get anything going," Guida said after the win. "I saw a lot of tape on him and he usually tires in the second and third round, and that's why I went gang-busters in the first to tire him. But he was ready, man. He was still strong in the last minute of the fight.

He got me with some nice body shots; for a tall guy he hit me pretty good to the ribs in just the right spot a couple of times. But I think the takedowns won it for me."

After back-to-back losses at 155 pounds, Guida (30-13 MMA, 10-7 UFC) is victorious in his first fight at 145 pounds. Hioki (26-6-2 MMA, 2-2 UFC) suffers consecutive losses for just the second time in his career.

"I think he probably won it," Hioki admitted. "Under the rules, with takedowns being so important, he won under those terms. He won a contest, fairly, but I won a fight.

"I am not unhappy with the decision – it was split because it was so close."

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:35
T.J. Grant batters Matt Wiman in statement win

Look out lightweight division: T.J. Grant has arrived.

The 28-year-old Canadian battered Matt Wiman with a vicious striking game before earning a TKO late in the first round.

The lightweight bout served as the final FX-televised bout on the preliminary-card for UFC on FOX 6, which took place at Chicago's United Center.

Grant, who picked up his fourth consecutive win since vacating the welterweight division, dedicated the win to his pregnant girlfriend back home in Cole Harbor, Nova Scotia.

"It turned out perfectly," he said afterward. "My plan was to keep Matt on the feet and try to expose some holes. I know how tough and durable he's been, and I was glad to hurt him and put him away."

Indeed. The elbows that sent Wiman crashing to the mat also flecked the camera with blood.

Wiman was the more aggressive fighter out of the gate, winging punches and lunging with kicks. But Grant was the more accurate fighter inside, landing accurate hooks and throwing knees inside from the clinch.

Wiman took most of the strikes. But just past the midway point of the first frame, Grant's striking began to pay dividends. An elbow wobbled Wiman and sent him back to the canvas, and after landing more shots from top position, Grant again dropped his opponent to the mat. A brief flurry of punches brought an end to the fight at the 4:51 mark of the round.

"He's a really good fighter coming forward, as am I, so I felt like I had more crisp striking," Grant said. "I feel really happy."

Grant (10-5 MMA, 7-3 UFC) should graduate to a top-tier opponent following his performance, which followed a "Fight of the Night" win over Evan Dunham at UFC 152.

Wiman (15-7 MMA, 9-5 UFC) sees his momentum halted after a submission of Paul Sass and decision over Mac Danzig in his previous outings.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:35
Ricardo Lamas earns brutal finish of Erik Koch

If you didn't know the name Ricardo Lamas before Saturday night, you should now.

Lamas brutalized former top contender Erik Koch with a nasty barrage of ground-and-pound blows that earned him a second-round TKO.

The bout opened up the main card of Saturday's UFC on FOX 6 event at United Center in Chicago. It aired on FOX following prelims on FX and Facebook.

Both fighters started quickly as they looked to engage in the center. Despite several pawing jabs and a few high kicks from both fighters, nothing landed flush for either. Lamas eventually elected to look for a takedown, but Koch was up for the challenge as he defended against the fence. They broke with a little more than a minute remaining, but Lamas pushed right back into the clinch.

Koch immediately picked up his striking pace at the start of the second frame and was finding some early success before a slip eventually allowed Lamas to push in and take top position. From there, Lamas went to work with a thunderous barrage of massive elbows from the tops. Koch tried to turn and defend, but Lamas shots not only sliced open his opponent's face but left him rocked before referee "Big" John McCarthy finally stepped in to halt the vicious assault.

With the victory, Lamas (13-2 MMA, 4-0 UFC) is now 7-1 in his past eight combined fights under the UFC and WEC banner and with wins over Koch (13-2 MMA, 2-1 UFC), Hatsu Hioki and Cub Swanson could potentially be in line for a No. 1 contender's bout in his next appearance.

"I've beat Cub Swanson, I've beat Hioki, and now I've beat Koch," Lamas said after the win. "All those guys were supposed to be fighting for the title at one point. I beat them all. We're all here to be world champ and I am no different.

"I want the winner of Jose Aldo vs. Frankie Edgar next week. I don't care who wins; I want the winner. I think I've earned my shot, and I will perform like I did tonight."

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:36
Anthony Pettis stops Donald Cerrone with liver shot

Anthony Pettis vs. Donald Cerrone was not a "Fight of the Year" candidate.

But it might be a "Knockout of the Year" candidate for Pettis, who likely sealed the next shot at the lightweight belt with a first-round TKO win.

The lightweight was part of the UFC on FOX 6 main card, which took place Saturday at United Center in Chicago following prelims on FX and Facebook.

Pettis, who previously saw a title shot slip through his hands after transitioning from the now-defunct WEC to the UFC, immediately implored his bosses to give him the opportunity after his latest win.

"Dana White, what do I have to do for this title shot?" Pettis said to the UFC president in his post-bout interview.

"Showtime" found success with a counter right hand in early exchanges before planting an arm for a flashy spinning kick. The attacks gave the stiff Cerrone a measure of pause, which encouraged Pettis to go on the attack.

A pair of vicious kicks to the body got Cerrone's attention, and Pettis even modified his signature "Showtime" kick to crack "Cowboy" with a knee to the jaw.

But it was another kick to the body that proved to be too much for Cerrone, who dropped to the mat with a shin to the liver. Follow-up punches from Pettis were academic.

The official time of the stoppage was 2:35 of the first round.

Pettis (16-2 MMA, 3-1 UFC), who three years ago took the WEC lightweight belt from current UFC champ Benson Henderson, decided against waiting for a title shot when previous champ Frankie Edgar and then-contender Gray Maynard fought to a draw. He then lost a decision to Clay Guida, which derailed his title aspirations.

But Pettis has now earned three straight wins, which puts him within spitting distance of Henderson, who next meets Gilbert Melendez at UFC on FOX 7 in April.

Cerrone (19-5 MMA, 6-2 UFC), meanwhile, goes back to the drawing board after besting Melvin Guillard and Jeremy Stephens in his previous two outings.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:37
Glover Teixeira decisions fading Quinton Jackson

If Quinton "Rampage" Jackson is indeed done with the UFC, he'll leave the octagon on a sour note.

Brazilian slugger Glover Teixeira outstruck and outwrestled Jackson over the course of 15 minutes en route to claiming a clearcut unanimous-decision win in the biggest victory of his career to date.

The bout was the co-main event of Saturday's UFC on FOX 6 event at United Center in Chicago. It aired on FOX following prelims on FX and Facebook.

Jackson looked quick and lively to start the fight and showed promise of an impressive sendoff. However, one minute into the fight, Teixeira dropped for a single leg and quickly transitioned to Jackson's back. With both hooks in, Teixeira looked to be incomplete control, but Jackson patiently pulled his opponent away and returned to the feet.

Both fighters fired powerful hooks on the feet, and Jackson mixed in a few low kicks in a weapon not seeing much in recent fights. Still, as the round wore on, Jackson seemed to tire. Teixeira defended a late takedown and scored with a crisp left, and it seemed momentum was entirely in his favor.

Teixeira dropped Jackson in the final minute, but "Rampage" climbed back to his feet and fired counter shots in the pocket that helped him survive until the bell.

Teixeira opened the second with another takedown and immediately set up in half-mount. A visibly frustrated Jackson still found a way to et back to his feet, and a series of uppercuts brought the crowd to life. Still, Teixeira walked through the blows and returned fire with his own heavy leather. A tired Jackson began to retreat and look to load up on big hooks an d uppercuts, but Teixeira simply walked forward with combinations.

Jackson started taunting his opponent in the final minute, apparently inviting him to come in with careless aggression. Teixeira didn't bite, and the fight carried on to the third.

Jackson appeared energized to open the third, but Teixeira opted for a takedown one minute into the round. The crowd booed the strategy, and Teixeira eventually backed away and looked to trade again on the feet. Jackson continued to load up on his punches in the closing minutes of the fight, but Teixeira's volume striking earned him points. Jackson was visibly fatigued in the final minute, and Teixeira simply cruised to a decision win, firing off power shots without opening himself to ay dangerous counters and also scoring another takedown at the end.

Teixeira (20-2 MMA, 3-0 UFC) now boasts an 18-fight win streak and is certainly in line for a big fight. Jackson (32-11 MMA, 7-5 UFC), who had never dropped consecutive fights before his current run, is now on a three-fight losing streak.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:38
Champ Demetrious Johnson rallies by John Dodson

Demetrious Johnson proved his championship caliber in the latter rounds of his first title defense.

After struggling mightily in early rounds against challenger John Dodson, Johnson rallied to retain his flyweight title in the FOX-televised headliner of UFC on FOX 6.

The event took place Saturday at Chicago's United Center.

Two judges awarded Johnson three of five rounds, for 48-47 scores, while a third gave the fast-paced "Mighty Mouse" all but one round, 49-46.

"It was a great fight," said the 26-year-old champ, who admitted he was dazed by Dodson in the second round.

That was when Dodson, a protege of famed trainers Greg Jackson and Mike Winkeljohn, earned two knockdowns by brilliantly countering the 125-pound champ's movement. Johnson tried to chase down a reply, but he was frequently met by accurately timed punches and knees.

But the fight took a turn in the fourth round, when Johnson cornered Dodson against the cage and landed a flurry of knees that cut the challenger. One also landed illegally, which prompted a check from the cageside doctor - and notably, no point deduction - but Dodson was ruled OK to continue.

The fifth round saw Dodson hang on for dear life as Johnson peppered him with knees from the clinch. By the end of the fight, Dodson's face was swollen and bloodied.

Despite getting rocked early in the fight, Johnson bested Dodson's striking on paper. According to the UFC's official stat company, FightMetric, the champ landed 127 significant strikes to Dodson's 57 and finished five takedowns to the challenger's one.

"It was a great fight, and I'm very happy the fans liked it," Johnson said. "He hit me pretty good a couple of times. I was stunned, but I am in great shape, and my head cleared very quick. He's very tough, very strong. I hit him with a lot of knees late on, but he's very tough. That was a great fight and great first defense."

Johnson (17-2 MMA, 5-1-1 UFC), who won the belt this past September with a split call over Joseph Benavidez at UFC 152, now owns a four-fight unbeaten streak. Dodson (14-6 MMA, 3-1 UFC), who defected to flyweight after winning "The Ultimate Fighter 15" as a 135-pound bantamweight, sees a five-fight win streak snapped.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:38
UFC on FOX 6 bonuses: Johnson, Dodson, Pettis and Bader earn $50K awards

Demetrious Johnson, John Dodson, Anthony Pettis and Ryan Bader each earned $50,000 bonuses for their performances at Saturday's "UFC on FOX 6: Johnson vs. Dodson" event.

Pettis earned the "Knockout of the Night," Bader won "Submission of the Night" and Johnson and Dodson picked up "Fight of the Night" honors.

UFC officials confirmed the winners at the evening's post-event press conference, which MMAjunkie attended.

UFC on FOX 6 took place at United Center in Chicago. The main card aired on FOX following prelims on FX and Facebook.

Johnson and Dodson competed in the evening's main event with "Mighty Mouse's" flyweight title on the line. Challenger Dodson looked sharp early, but it was Johnson who battled back over the final three rounds to claim a unanimous decision win and retain his title. The fast-paced 25-minute fight was tight throughout, and both shared in the evening's "Fight of the Night" check.

Pettis earned his extra money with a scintillating first-round stoppage of Donald "Cowboy" Cerrone. While Pettis flashed a cartwheel kick and a leaping knee off the cage, it was a devastating liver kick that earned the stoppage and the "Knockout of the Night."

Meanwhile, Bader received his bonus check for a 50-second submission of 42-year-old veteran Vladimir Matyushenko. Bader rocked "The Janitor" with a leaping strike and then latched on to a modified guillotine choke to earn a tap in just 50 seconds, which turned out to be the quickest submission win in the history of the UFC's 205-pound division.

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:41
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hr4ryQE-Sos&feature=player_detailpage

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:41
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHHW961P9ys&feature=player_detailpage

Kemal
27-01-2013, 07:47
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXRngWPo7Ac&feature=player_embedded

stephan_dude
27-01-2013, 12:48
https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/317029_10151411845481276_2027100116_n.jpg

Big John met z'n kids:)

Diz
27-01-2013, 15:14
Dodson is een beetje de Churandy van de UFC... Altijd een lach op z'n bakkes...

Kemal
27-01-2013, 17:36
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjUP3CZej6o&feature=player_detailpage

Kemal
27-01-2013, 17:36
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_17DZ2wxLE&feature=player_detailpage

Kemal
27-01-2013, 17:37
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JwRgc6esVpA&feature=player_detailpage

Kemal
27-01-2013, 17:37
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MC3-HkW09k&feature=player_detailpage

Wheelie
29-01-2013, 21:54
Net pas kunnen kijken maar moest wel lachen om John McCarthy tijdens de partij Johnson vs Dodson.
Dodson kreeg een illegale knie te verwerken en John tegen Dodson: Look at me with your bad eye, Am I ugly ? ;)