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View Full Version : UFC on FUEL TV 8: Silva vs. Stann | Results **Spoiler**



Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:09
Main card:
Wanderlei Silva def. Brian Stann via second-round TKO
Mark Hunt def. Stefan Struve via third-round KO
Diego Sanchez def. Takanori Gomi via split decision
Yushin Okami def. Hector Lombard via split decision
Rani Yahya def. Mizuto Hirota via unanimous decision
Dong Hyun Kim def. Siyar Bahadurzada via unanimous decision

Undercard:
Brad Tavares def. Riki Fukuda via unanimous decision
Takeya Mizugaki def. Bryan Caraway via split decision
Kazuki Tokudome def. Cristiano Marcello via unanimous decision
Alex Caceres def. Kyung Ho Kang via split decision
Hyun Gyu Lim def. Marcelo Guimaraes via second-round KO

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:11
Hyun Gyu Lim levels Marcelo Guimaraes with knee for KO

It took Hyun Gyu Lim a little while to get truly started, but when he finally did things were over in a hurry.

A bloodied-up Lim, a 3-to-1 favorite with a noticeable size advantage, knocked out Marcelo Guimaraes with a jumping knee deep into the second round to pick up a win in his UFC debut.

The welterweight bout opened up the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It streamed on Facebook ahead of a main card on FUEL TV.

Guimaraes quickly shot for a takedown, but it wasn't there. Another one was off the mark moments later. Guimaraes tried to establish some kicks, but it was Lim using his long reach advantage early to pepper in jabs. When a pair of Guimaraes takedown attempts missed, Lim just missed with a dangerous right hand.

But Guimaraes wasn't afraid to stand in tight with the Korean and cracked him with a right hand of his own. After another missed takedown, Guimaraes again popped off a right hand. With 20 seconds left, Guimaraes finally got the fight to the canvas by taking advantage of a Lim flying knee. But he wasn't able to do anything with it before the horn.

Guimaraes got off a good body kick early in the second and appeared to have some confidence. Lim swung wildly, and Guimaraes wasn't afraid to answer back. He still was far off on clean takedowns, which opened him up for trouble from Lim on the feet. But midway through the round, with Lim's nose bloodied up, Guimaraes landed his first truly clean takedown of the fight and went to work out of Lim's guard.

Lim worked back to his feet for the last 100 seconds of the round, and he would wind up being glad he did. As Lim moved in, Guimaraes ducked his head and wound up leaning right into a big Lim left knee. Guimaraes dropped to the canvas, and one big right hand fro Lim was inconsequential as referee Thomas Fan moved in to stop it.

"I don't really know what to say. I'm so happy right now," Lim said through his interpreter. "From the beginning of the second round, he kept jabbing and moving to the right side, so I watched that and timed it right."

Lim (11-3-1 MMA, 1-0 UFC) won for the sixth straight time and gets a win in his UFC debut. After a split-decision win over Daniel Stittgen in his UFC debut this past July, Guimaraes (8-1-1 MMA, 1-1 UFC) now falls to 1-1 in the promotion and suffers the first loss of his career.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:11
Alex Caceres edges Kyung Ho Kang, wins third straight

Alex Caceres overcame an early deficit and finished strong as he continued his bantamweight success with a split-decision victory over promotional newcomer Kyung Ho Kang.

The bout was part of the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It streamed on Facebook ahead of a main card on FUEL TV.

While Caceres struggled with takedowns early in the fight, he soon found a way to combat the Korean fighter's many trips to the canvas.

Kang took the first round with a series of takedowns set up from a variety of openings. Scrambles after the clinch, missed punches and trip takedowns all allowed Kang to take dominant ground positions, though Caceres was never in any real trouble. Caceres had some success standing, including a nice counter right as time wound down, but Kang dictated the pace and positioning of the round.

Caceres' escapes continued in the following rounds as Kang nabbed additional takedowns. He even delivered some decent ground and pound in the second round, and he threatened with a guillotine and triangle chokes in the third.

Caceres dominated the action late, which included punches from the mount position and shaking off Kang's big upkick. The late rally in the final frame ultimately won him fight, and he overcame the early deficit to take the split-decision victory.

The judges scored it 28-29, 29-28 and 29-28 in his favor.

"If you want to be a hero, you need to have your own dream," Caceres said. "I will be a hero."

Caceres (9-5 MMA, 4-3 UFC), perhaps best known a stint on "The Ultimate Fighter 12," is 4-1 (with a split-decision loss) since his move from featherweight to bantamweight. Kang (11-7 MMA, 0-1 UFC), meanwhile, snaps a three-fight win streak.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:12
Kazuki Tokudome stifles Cristiano Marcello

Kazuki Tokudome showed no fear of going to the ground with fourth-degree Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt Cristiano Marcello, and it paid off for him.

Tokudome survived Marcello's biggest strikes on the feet, and when he was on top on the ground, he worked a smothering bit of ground-and-pound to score points on his way to a unanimous decision sweep of the scorecards in his UFC debut in front of his home country fans.

The lightweight bout was part of the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It streamed on Facebook ahead of a main card on FUEL TV.

Marcello, a veteran of "The Ultimate Fighter Live," landed a good knee early, and Tokudome landed some shots of his own when he clinched things up in defense. But it was Marcello bringing big right hands into the center of the octagon – though Tokudome was able to withstand the initial flurry and then subsequent right hands. Marcello slipped on a high kick, and Tokudome moved in to try to take advantage – though he was moving into the black belt's world on the ground.

Tokudome tried to land ground-and-pound, but Marcello played good defense off his back – though he did eat a handful of punches. Marcello worked on a leg lock, but Tokudome recovered and finished the round on top.

Marcello fired off a big flurry that backed Tokudome early in the second, but it was Tokudome who drilled a takedown. Tokudome continued to score from on top in Marcello's guard, landing good left hands. But at the 1:45 mark, referee Thomas Fan stood the two up despite Tokudome doing work on the top. Back on the feet, Marcello again came forward with a fast flurry, then landed a takedown of his own. But he couldn't do anything with it before Tokudome was back to his feet. The two slugged wildly to close out the second before slapping high five on the way back to their corners.

A big right hand from Tokudome dropped Marcello in the third, and he moved in to land big ground-and-pound. Marcello survived, but he was back where he had struggled the first two rounds – on his back unable to get out from under Tokudome. Marcello got back to his feet with three minutes left and tried to find a home for his right hand. When it landed, though, Tokudome seemed to bounce right back from it. With a minute left, Tokudome again landed a good takedown to put an exclamation point on a strong performance in his debut.

Tokudome (12-3 MMA, 1-0 UFC) picked up his third straight win and has won seven of his past eight. Marcello (13-5 MMA, 1-2 UFC) heads back to the loss column after a split-decision victory over Reza Madadi this past October.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:13
Takeya Mizugaki edges Bryan Caraway in emotional win

Bryan Caraway survived a late rally and thought he had one of his biggest wins yet.

But fellow bantamweight Takeya Mizugaki ultimately took a surprise split decision, one that left the Japanese fighter in tears after an entertaining three rounds.

The bout was part of the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It streamed on Facebook ahead of a main card on FUEL TV.

After a close opening round, Caraway nearly finished the fight in the second round and then narrowly survived Mizugaki's third-round assault. While he seemingly won the first two rounds – and even got advice from cornerwoman/girlfriend Miesha Tate to "coast" in the final frame – the judges favored his opponent.

Caraway scored takedowns early in the fight, and in the second round, they set up deep guillotine and rear-naked-choke attempts. Mizugaki, though, survived (in one instance by illegally grabbing the fence to get out of a troublesome position). Between rounds, Caraway asked whether he should keep the bout on his feet as he was told he was up two rounds to none and could coast.

But the advice was poor on two fronts. First, it allowed Mizugaki to land some heavy blows, including a big left hook that rocked Caraway and forced him to stumble to the mat early in the third round. And secondly, it turned out not to be the case, as two of three judges had Mizugaki up on the scorecards. So despite a late slugfest and a solid uppercut from Caraway, Mizugaki ultimately earned the judges' nod.

The 29-28, 28-29 and 29-28 scores left a teary Mizugaki in a bit of shock, and he fought back the emotions as he addressed the crowd.

"It's overwhelming," he said. "It's my first win here (for the UFC) … in Japan. I'm so emotional."

Mizugaki (17-7-2 MMA, 4-2 UFC) has now won two straight and three of his past four as he looks to get back in the title picture. Caraway (17-6 MMA, 2-1 UFC), meanwhile, snaps a three-fight win streak.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:13
Brad Tavares outworks Riki Fukuda for decision win

Speculation was that Riki Fukuda may have injured his dominant left hand, but Brad Tavares seldom let him truly get started, anyway.

Tavares used a steady diet of left jabs and heavy right hands to outwork Fukuda en route to a unanimous decision win. Scores were 29-28 twice and 30-27 in Tavares' favor as he continued to quietly climb up the UFC's middleweight ladder.

The middleweight bout closed out the preliminary card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It streamed on Facebook ahead of a main card on FUEL TV.

The two traded kicks in the early going before Fukuda landed a left hand to counter a high Tavares kick. The fight hit the ground, but just momentarily before Tavares was able to get back to his feet. But there, Fukuda caught another kick and pushed Tavares to the ground. Tavares briefly had a triangle, then an arm – but released to move back to his feet.

Back standing, Tavares landed a pair of good right hands as he looked to establish that as his weapon of choice in the first round. Tavares landed with a high kick and followed it up with a right hand as he continued to gain confidence.

Tavares continued to work his right hand and right foot against the left-handed Fukukda in the second, and he peppered in his left jab to help bloody up his opponent's face. It really was the jab that appeared to be keeping Fukuda at bay. Tavares even mixed in a spinning backfist to continue dominating in the standup game – though he was cut up, as well.

The two traded a little more evenly the first half of the third, with Fukuda perhaps realizing that the fight may be hanging in the balance. But Tavares still seemed to have the upper hand and still seemed to be the fresher fighter as the clock ticked down.

Tavares (10-1 MMA, 5-1 UFC) now has won for the third straight time and fifth time in the UFC. Fukuda (19-7 MMA, 2-3 UFC) saw his up-and-down UFC run continue. He heads back to the loss column after a November win over Tom DeBlass.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:14
Dong Hyun Kim dominates, shuts out Siyar Bahadurzada

Dong Hyun Kim shut down Siyar Bahadurzada's heavy hands and dominated the action on the mat for a clear-cut unanimous-decision victory.

The welterweight bout opened the main card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It aired on FUEL TV following a preliminary card on Facebook.

Kim did what Kim does best, and he scored frequent takedowns, controlled from the top, and delivered a steady stream of ground and pound during the lopsided three-rounder.

In the first round, Kim scored a takedown, moved to mount, and delivered plenty of punches and elbows (despite an odd warning from referee Herb Dean to get busy). Even when Bahadurzada got to his feet, Kim maintained a body lock and wore him like a backpack before the round ended.

The second round was much of the same. After shaking off a flush head kick, Kim scored a single-leg takedown, briefly took his opponent's back, moved to mount, and then rained down punches, elbows and double hammerfists through the remainder of the five-minute frame.

By the third round, Bahadurzada clearly was frustrated, but he still couldn't fend off the takedown. Kim took him down, moved from side mount to full mount, delivered knees to the body, and then threatened with an arm-triangle choke. Unable to cinch it, he instead worked punches to the body, returned to full mount, and delivered heavy punches from the top as Bahadurzada simply looked to survive. Kim even invited Bahadurzada to punch him before raining down another ground-and-pound barrage to put the exclamation point on a dominant victory.

The late theatrics helped spruce up a sometimes-methodical win, which came via unanimous decision with 30-27 scores across the board.

Kim (17-2-1 MMA, 8-2 UFC) moves to 3-1 in his past four fights, though he still hasn't earned a stoppage win in nearly five years. Bahadurzada (21-5-1 MMA, 1-1 UFC), meanwhile, snaps a seven-fight win streak.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:14
Rani Yahya outgrapples, upsets Mizuto Hirota

One of the world's best grapplers gave Mizuto Hirota a fairly rude welcome to the UFC, but not without a few late worrisome moments.

Rani Yahya outworked Hirota on the ground and staved off a few submission attempts from his Japanese opponent and went on to a unanimous decision victory with 29-28 scores on all three cards.

The featherweight bout was part of the main card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It aired on FUEL TV following a preliminary card on Facebook.

Yahya shot for a single-leg takedown 30 seconds in and got the fight to the floor, which would be the hallmark of the fight for him. Hirota was in trouble for a moment with Yahya latching onto an arm, but he squirmed out of the grappling ace's grip and tried to go to work from half-guard on top. He wanted to bail out, but Yahya grabbed a leg, swept him back to the canvas and regrouped to go to work on top.

After referee Marc Goddard called for work, Hirota again scrambled out, but it was Yahya who quickly brought things right back into his world on the ground. Yahya eventually passed to side control and went after an arm, then took his back and worked for a choke – but Hirota survived the round.

Hirota backed Yahya to the fence in the second and when he looked as if he was about to get some strikes off, Yahya dropped levels and brought the fight right back to the canvas. And from there, he passed to side control and sank in an arm triangle. He appeared to have it, but he bailed on it and went back into the guard of Hirota, who was fortunate to survive the submission attempt.

In the third round, Hirota impressively tied Yahya up in a triangle choke, then moved to an arm bar. Both appeared to have Yahya in danger, but the grappling champ remained calm, moved out and went to work trying to take Hirota's back. With 45 seconds left, though, Hirota moved out and got back to his feet. Yahya remained on the ground, visibly worn out. When he stood up, Hirota jumped in with a flying knee that Yahya barely got out of the way of. It was a strong finish for Hirota, but too little, too late.

Yahya (18-7 MMA, 3-1 UFC) now has his first win streak since 2008-2009, when he won three straight in the WEC. He has won three of his past four. Hirota (14-6-1 MMA, 0-1 UFC) drops his second straight following a loss this past July to Pat Healy in Strikeforce.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:15
Yushin Okami survives Hector Lombard's late rally

Hector Lombard started and finished strong, but he simply couldn't overcome Yuhsin Okami's mid-fight dominance.

The Japanese fighter survived the former Bellator champion's third-round assault and held on for a split-decision victory in his home country.

The middleweight bout was part of the main card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It aired on FUEL TV following a preliminary card on Facebook.

Lombard was aggressive in the first round, but once Okami caught a kick, he forced a takedown and kept most of the action on the mat during the opening frame.

The second round played out much of the same way, and Okami continually scored takedowns and dominant ground positions. But Lombard, who already appeared to be tiring, also became a target with jabs, hooks and a lunging knee up the middle once they were on their feet.

With a sense of desperation, Lombard came out firing in the final round and had his opponent in serious trouble. Okami was wobbly on his feet as Lombard, who overcame a serious reach disadvantage, continually landed with punches from all angles. But the Cuban quickly tired, and Okami answered a knee before falling to his back on a failed takedown attempt. Lombard kept top position and delivered ground and pound for the remainder of the round, but he was never close to a finish, and the fight went to the judges' scorecards.

They ultimately gave Okami the split decision via 28-29, 29-28, 29-28 scores across the board.

Okami (28-7 MMA, 12-4 UFC) has now won three straight fights since back-to-back knockout defeats to champ Anderson Silva and Tim Boetsch. Lombard (32-3-2 MMA, 1-2 UFC), meanwhile, has dropped two of three since a five-year, 25-fight unbeaten streak.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:16
Diego Sanchez takes split decision from Takanori Gomi

Diego Sanchez needed to head to the other side of the world to get his first lightweight win since 2009 – and still, it was close.

Sanchez snapped Takanori Gomi's three-fight win streak with a split-decision win, picking up a pair of 29-28 scores. It was Sanchez's return to 155 pounds after a four-fight run at welterweight, and his first fight in more than a year.

The lightweight bout was part of the main card of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It aired on FUEL TV following a preliminary card on Facebook.

Gomi got started early, landing right hands when Sanchez tried to get inside. After a Sanchez low blow got Gomi a short pause, it was Sanchez quickly taking the fight to the ground. But Gomi was back up quickly as the crowd started chanting Gomi's name. With 80 seconds left, Gomi landed a knee, but Sanchez used it for a takedown. On the ground, Sanchez went after a kneebar, but Gomi wriggled out and back to his feet, where he landed a body shot.

Gomi went after Sanchez's body early in the second. Sanchez kicked high and had it blocked, but an inside leg kick from him appeared to land just a bit too close for comfort and Sanchez was given a final warning from referee Marc Goddard. Gomi kept the pressure on throughout the round, and although Sanchez was able to land a few kicks and punches, it was Gomi who landed them more frequently.

Sanchez sprinter to the center of the cage to open the third round, but he circled to the outside as Gomi looked to keep pressure on him. The takedowns for Sanchez didn't come in the third, and that worked to Gomi's advantage on the feet. Sanchez threw a flurry at the end of the fight, but Gomi didn't go down.

The judges scored the bout 29-28 twice for Sanchez and 29-28 for Gomi. Gomi was going after his third straight win, all of which would've been on his home continent of Asia.

Sanchez (24-5 MMA, 13-5 UFC) had a successful return to the lightweight division – save for missing weight and forfeiting 20 percent of his purse to Gomi. He won at 155 pounds for the first time in nearly four years. He now has won three of his past four. Gomi (34-9 MMA, 3-4 UFC) had a two-fight win streak snapped with the loss.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:16
Mark Hunt floors Stefan Struve with third-round combo

On a card full of decisions, Mark Hunt waited until the third round before he finally earned a long-awaited stoppage win.

But the wait was clearly worth it.

The heavyweight bout co-headlined Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It aired on FUEL TV following a preliminary card on Facebook.

After nine consecutive decisions in previous bouts, Struve vs. Hunt initially appeared it'd follow the pattern. But in the final frame, Hunt, a Kiwi kickboxer with legendary power, let his hands fly and connected on his towering 7-foot-tall opponent.

The fighters split the first two rounds. Struve pulled guard early in the first round, moved to mount, and delivered heavy punches while mixing in an armbar attempt. Then in the second, with Struve doing little but standing and watching his opponent, Hunt scored with lunging punches, secured a nice foot sweep, and then escaped a leg lock and armbar attempt.

The third round, though, is when things quickly shifted into Hunt's direction. He opened with lunging punches, and with Struve slow to react, they began to land flush. With the Dutchman an easy target, Hunt landed a huge right-left combo that instantly put Struve down for good.

Hunt actually walked away from the vicious knockout, though the fight wasn't stopped. But with Struve clearly in a daze, referee Herb Dean ultimately waved it off before another blow landed.

The stoppage came at the 1:44 mark of the round.

Hunt (9-7 MMA, 4-1 UFC), who extended his losing streak to six fights with a UFC-debut defeat in 2010, has since won four consecutive UFC fights to get into the title picture. Struve (25-6 MMA, 9-4 UFC), meanwhile, snaps a four-fight win streak that had him knocking on the door of a title shot.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:18
Wanderlei Silva KOs Brian Stann in homecoming fight

As far as storybook endings go, it's going to be pretty hard to top this one.

After a torrid pace in the first round with both Wanderlei Silva and Brian Stann getting multiple knockdowns, Silva knocked Stann out in the second in his return to Japan – where he became an MMA legend while in PRIDE.

And if there was any question of Silva calling it quits as he approaches 50 career fights, he may have answered them.

The light heavyweight bout was the main event of Saturday's UFC on FUEL TV 8 event at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. It aired on FUEL TV following a preliminary card on Facebook.

Stann took the middle and kept Silva's back to the fence. But when he moved inside, he slipped during a flurry and Silva took advantage. He cut Stann above his nose, then looked to land a knee. But Stann answered back with another flurry before moving back to the center. And Silva motioned for him to slug it out. Stann did just that, and dropped Silva with a right hand as he came forward. But Silva recovered and the two went back to the the middle.

Halfway through the round, the action finally slowed – but only because a Stann knee attempt had his foot land too low. Silva got time to recover, and after 30 seconds the action continued. When Stann landed an outside leg kick, Silva countered perfectly with a right hand. At the one minute mark, Stann moved in and dropped Silva for a third time. Silva quickly returned to his feet, and Silva then drilled him and put him on the ground – and when Stann recovered to take the fight to the ground, Silva was covered in blood from a cut opened up above Stann's nose.

The pace slowed in the second, not surprisingly after a torrid first. But a Stann kick landed too low – or too high, actually – and he was given a warning. On the restart, Silva landed a good head kick. But as things got going again, Silva landed a huge right with a left hand right behind it. Stann covered up on the ground, but Silva landed four big shots on the ground to get the massive knockout.

"I'm so proud, and thanks to Dana White and the UFC for giving me this opportunity to fight here for my brothers," Silva said. "My corner told me what I needed to do, and I'm glad I got to win back here."

An emotional Stann, who was born in Japan, said it hurt to lose the fight to one of his heroes, but he was glad he took the bout.

"I knew what I had at risk when I signed on the dotted line next to that man fighting here in Japan," Stann said. "Wanderlei's always been one of my favorite fighters ever. He's one of the fighters who inspired me to start this sport. And I'm very proud to have been a part of his career – as much as this hurts right now. My heart's broken, but I'm still proud that I put my name on the line and I fought him."

Silva (35-12-1 MMA, 5-7 UFC) now has alternated wins and losses for five fights. He's back in the win column after a loss to Rich Franklin this past June. Stann (12-6 MMA, 6-5 UFC) now has lost two straight and three of his past four.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:18
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=vaGXPLqfDIg

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:38
UFC on FUEL TV 8 bonuses: Wanderlei Silva, Brian Stann, Mark Hunt win $50K

Wanderlei Silva, Brian Stann and Mark Hunt each earned bonuses for their performances at Saturday's "UFC on FUEL TV: Silva vs. Stann" event, with Stann and Hunt picking up $50,000 each and Silva doubling up with $100,000.

Hunt and Silva shared the "Knockout of the Night" award, and Silva and Stann were given the "Fight of the Night" bonus. With no submission, two KO bonuses were given with the lack of a "Submission of the Night."

UFC President Dana White announced the winners at the conclusion of the card.

UFC on FUEL TV 8 took place at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. The main card aired on FUEL TV following prelims on Facebook.

Silva (35-12-1 MMA, 5-7 UFC) and Stann (12-6 MMA, 6-6 UFC) traded in the first round as if it was a one-round fight, not a five-round fight. Each knocked the other down multiple times, and multiple times it appeared as if the fight was seconds away from ending. Silva cut Stann open, and as the round came to a close, Stann was bleeding onto Silva's chest. Things slowed down in the second, but then Silva caught Stann with a right, then a left, and on the ground four more big shots put Stann out cold.

The back-and-forth first round and relentless pace the two men set put them over the top for "Fight of the Night" over what likely was competition from Diego Sanchez's split decision win over Takanori Comi and Takeya Mizugaki's split-decision win over Bryan Caraway.

In the co-main event, Hunt (9-7 MMA, 4-1 UFC) got into a slugfest with Stefan Struve (25-6 MMA, 9-4 UFC). And in the third round, the 5-foot-10 heavyweight started teeing off on the 7-footer. With one giant left hand, he felled the big man – and then just walked away, even though Herb Dean hadn't waved the fight off yet.

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:42
UFC on FUEL TV 8: Silva vs. Stann | VIDEOS (http://www.mixfight.nl/forum/showthread.php?127400-UFC-on-FUEL-TV-8-Silva-vs-Stann-VIDEOS)

Kemal
03-03-2013, 08:44
Twitter:

Stefan Struve✔@StefanStruve
Thanks for the support everybody, I wanted Herb to take the tooth out of my cheek and continue but then it turned out my jaw was broken..

Harrie Nak
03-03-2013, 09:51
Tja, eigen schuld, moet ie maar normaal vechten. Continue weer die handen laag, niet gebruik maken van zijn lengte, nog minder conditie dan die dikke Hunt... dan krijg je dat. We kunnen wel blijven roepen dat hij nog jong is, maar er lijkt weinig verbetering in te zitten.

123trisweat
03-03-2013, 10:30
Tja, eigen schuld, moet ie maar normaal vechten. Continue weer die handen laag, niet gebruik maken van zijn lengte, nog minder conditie dan die dikke Hunt... dan krijg je dat. We kunnen wel blijven roepen dat hij nog jong is, maar er lijkt weinig verbetering in te zitten.

zie mijn andere reply ik heb dezelfde gedachte, Struve moet staand echt een enorme progressie maken wilt ie top 5 worden

btw: Struve sterkte met je kaak

basblue
03-03-2013, 10:31
Nou ja, ik ben natuurlijk ook teleurgesteld omdat hij heeft verloren van Hunt. Dit was het moment geweest om door te dringen tot de groep vechters die in aanmerking komt voor een titleshot. Ik vind dat Stefan een fantastisch gevecht heeft neer gezet. De eerste ronde bewoog hij goed weg van Hunt en op de grond was hij heer een meester. Echt van topniveau!

Ik denk dat hij in de eerste twee rondes te veel heeft gegeven en daarom zo moe oogde. Die Hunt is natuurlijk een blok beton. En hij slaat de lucht ook uit je longen. Die stoten op het lichaam waren niet misselijk. Misschien dat daarom de handjes om laag gingen?

Ik geloof dat Struve nog prima kan leren. Het wordt wel tijd om extra te investeren in het boksen. Hij heeft prima begeleiding van Schreiber en Pardoel. Misschien Regelmatig naar Mike Passenier? Wie weet werkt "een nieuwe prikkel".

123trisweat
03-03-2013, 10:37
Nou ja, ik ben natuurlijk ook teleurgesteld omdat hij heeft verloren van Hunt. Dit was het moment geweest om door te dringen tot de groep vechters die in aanmerking komt voor een titleshot. Ik vind dat Stefan een fantastisch gevecht heeft neer gezet. De eerste ronde bewoog hij goed weg van Hunt en op de grond was hij heer een meester. Echt van topniveau!

Ik denk dat hij in de eerste twee rondes te veel heeft gegeven en daarom zo moe oogde. Die Hunt is natuurlijk een blok beton. En hij slaat de lucht ook uit je longen. Die stoten op het lichaam waren niet misselijk. Misschien dat daarom de handjes om laag gingen?

Ik geloof dat Struve nog prima kan leren. Het wordt wel tijd om extra te investeren in het boksen. Hij heeft prima begeleiding van Schreiber en Pardoel. Misschien Regelmatig naar Mike Passenier? Wie weet werkt "een nieuwe prikkel".

tja, zo wil ik het ook graag zien. Een goede jab zou al een heel verschil maken (zie een gemiddelde partij van Schilt, heeft Struve daar uberhaupt contact mee?). Hij loopt echt onnodig schade op, zie zijn kaak tweet.

Ralph
03-03-2013, 16:25
Balen van Struve! Had het idee dat ie niet zo lekker in zijn vel zat... En handjes laag + kin in de lucht was weer jammer om te zien. Struve moet echt eens met Schilt of de Klitchko's gaan trainen oid en leren om zijn lengte te gebruiken. Het is natuurlijk echt klote dat je van iemand met een lengte van 1.78 m op KO verliest (al is het dan wel Hunt). Wel weer een bazenactie hoe Hunt wegloopt na die enorme linkerhoek. Trouwens ook vet dat Silva heeft gewonnen! Misschien nog een partij tegen Manhoef en dan stoppen? Ik had ook heel wat meer van Siyar verwacht. Jammer dat het even allemaal niet zo best loopt met de 'Nederlanders'.

Harrie Nak
03-03-2013, 17:28
Jammer van Siyar inderdaad. Had er na al dat gewauwel van "The Great" wel meer van verwacht.

goro
03-03-2013, 22:51
En wat denken jullie vd KO vn Wanderlei? Hell yeah!!!!

kooivechter
04-03-2013, 01:07
Wat viel Struve tegen. Zo slecht heb ik hem lang niet zien vechten. Had verwacht dat hunt een eitje zou zijn voor hem.
Erg jammer.

Turboknecht
04-03-2013, 01:23
Ik vond het maar een suf event op de laatste twee potten na. Jammer van Struve, mooi voor Hunt. Wanderlei - Stann was geweldig.

Chane
04-03-2013, 09:46
Wanderlei!!!
Wat een vette pot! Mooi dat Stann KO ging :)
Verder vond ik het hele event tegenvallen.
Struve... tja... die standup van m blijft wel erg slecht zeg. Jammer.

Harrie Nak
04-03-2013, 17:18
Jammer van Siyar inderdaad. Had er na al dat gewauwel van "The Great" wel meer van verwacht.http://www.ufc.com/news/Siyar-Bahadurzada-Fired-Up-for-Kim-and-2013


Dong Hyun Kim says he doesn't know me? How many guys put Paulo Thiago to sleep? I'm pretty sure when he analyzed his tapes he knew who I was. I think he's scared of me, and that's why he said that.

People are asking me 'hey, are you fighting 'The Korean Zombie (Chan Sung Jung)?' I'm not fighting him, I'm fighting the other boring guy. After ten fights in the UFC, there are still people who don't know who (Kim) is, and that says something about him being a high-profile UFC fighter and how terrible he is. If I fight ten UFC fights, I will leave my footprints in the history of the UFC.

The training is so good here with the Blackzilians that it didn't even cross my mind not to move here," said Bahadurzada. ...“Sometimes on the weekend I'll go with Alistair and friends to the beach or play poker at Alistair's place, but that's all I do. I'm motivated and I don't let anything distract my mind. I just have one goal in front of me.

(Kim) will not impose his will on me; that's not gonna work. I will impose my will on him and I will make him pay for making my sport ugly.

I want to fight the best wrestlers, I want to fight the best grapplers, and I want to fight the best strikers. And when I'm the champion, I want to be the kind of champion that everybody's like 'you know what, I'll just wait until this guy retires and I'll fight the other champion.' I want to be a champion that nobody dares challenge, the most vicious UFC champion that's ever been.

:fp:

dirk5
04-03-2013, 17:26
Het spijt me het te moeten zeggen maar Stefan heeft echt het vecht iq van een kleuter.

Dat moment dat ie in mount zit en dat of geeft voor een armbar waar ie vervolgens de arm voor vergeet was echt gewoon komisch. Ik lag bijna te slapen op de bank maar op dat moment heb ik 3 minuten lopen schaterlachen.

Ik vind het erg, maar ik begin een beetje het idee te krijgen dat hij nooit kampioenmateriaal gaat worden.

king
04-03-2013, 18:50
Saitama Super Arena
Saitama, Japan
Attendance: 14,682
Gate: N/A

Wanderlei Silva: $300,000 ($200,000 to show, $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus, $50,000 Knockout of the Night bonus)
Hector Lombard: $300,000
Diego Sanchez: $96,000 ($60,000 to show, $60,000 to win, $24,000 fine for missing weight)
Dong Hyun Kim: $88,000 ($44,000 to show, $44,000 win bonus)
Yushin Okami: $84,000 ($42,000 to show, $42,000 win bonus)
Takanori Gomi: $74,000 ($50,000 to show, $24,000 from Sanchez for missing weight)
Brian Stann: $73,000 ($23,000 to show, $50,000 Fight of the Night bonus)
Mark Hunt: $62,000 ($50,000 Knockout of the Night bonus, $6,000 to show, $6,000 win bonus)
Stefan Struve: $29,000
Riki Fukuda: $28,000
Rani Yahya: $24,000 ($12,000 to show, $12,000 win bonus)
Takeya Mizugaki: $24,000 ($12,000 to show, $12,000 win bonus)
Brad Tavares: $20,000 ($10,000 to show, $10,000 win bonus)
Alex Caceres: $20,000 ($10,000 to show, $10,000 win bonus)
Kazuki Tokudome: $12,000 ($6,000 to show, $6,000 win bonus)
Hyun Gyu Lim: $12,000 ($6,000 to show, $6,000 win bonus)
Bryan Caraway: $8,000
Cristiano Marcello: $8,000
Mizuto Hirota: $6,000
Siyar Bahadurzada: $6,000
Kyung Ho Kang: $6,000
Marcelo Guimaraes: $6,000

king
04-03-2013, 18:51
Moet dollar zijn natuurlijk, maar dat maakt het er niet beter op...

kooivechter
04-03-2013, 19:12
Het spijt me het te moeten zeggen maar Stefan heeft echt het vecht iq van een kleuter.

Dat moment dat ie in mount zit en dat of geeft voor een armbar waar ie vervolgens de arm voor vergeet was echt gewoon komisch. Ik lag bijna te slapen op de bank maar op dat moment heb ik 3 minuten lopen schaterlachen.

Ik vind het erg, maar ik begin een beetje het idee te krijgen dat hij nooit kampioenmateriaal gaat worden.

Nee dat klopt ben echt een Struve fan, maar in de mount tot 2 keer aan toe kan hij het afmaken, en verliest op bijna
Kinderlijke manier zijn positie. Wat een verschil met zijn vorige partij, daar stond een totaal ander mens.
Nee het was niet zijn dag, maar geloof dat het er nog steeds in zit. Silv vs Stann was super. Hector Lombard viel me weer erg tegen, jammer hij maakt de hoge verwachtigingen niet waar

T15Boxing
04-03-2013, 19:33
Waarschijnlijk hoort dat nog bij zijn eerste UFC contract toen hij vers uit Dream kwam met 48 Kimura losses in the eerste ronde met nog een KO verlies tegen Manhoef.

lopez86
04-03-2013, 19:36
http://www.ufc.com/news/Siyar-Bahadurzada-Fired-Up-for-Kim-and-2013



:fp:

Pfff wat een blaaskakerij.
Hoge bomen vangen veel wind, karma is a bitch :)

Kemal
04-03-2013, 19:39
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=KdOwc5du2C0

Kemal
04-03-2013, 19:39
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iH8dMdLX73M&feature=player_detailpage

Kemal
04-03-2013, 19:41
Mark Hunt vs. Stefan Struve fight video highlights (http://msn.foxsports.com/video?videoid=c2ea86a9-707a-4779-8070-181bfdfa777b&src=v5:share:sharepermalink:&from=sharepermalink)

Harrie Nak
04-03-2013, 21:08
Moet dollar zijn natuurlijk, maar dat maakt het er niet beter op...Ik vind die 29K voor Struve ook niet zoveel, zeker niet na een stuk of 13 partijen.