Lightweights Gleison Tibau, Jamie Varner Slated for UFC 164 Clash in Milwaukee

A lightweight showdown between Jamie Varner and Gleison Tibau is on tap for the UFC’s return to Milwaukee.
UFC officials announced the booking Wednesday, revealing that the 155-pound pairing has joined UFC 164. The Aug. 31 event takes place at BMO Harris Bradley Center and is topped by a lightweight title collision between Benson Henderson and T.J. Grant. The evening’s pay-per-view broadcast will also see Josh Barnett make his return to the Octagon, as “The Warmaster” takes on fellow former UFC heavyweight champion Frank Mir.
Varner, 28, has won four of his last five fights. The former World Extreme Cagefighting titlist made waves in his UFC return last year, when he knocked out heavy favorite Edson Barboza at UFC 146. Though a hard-fought submission defeat to Joe Lauzon would follow for “C-4,” Varner closed out 2012 with another win, taking a split decision from Melvin Guillard this past December at UFC 155.
One year older than his foe, Tibau has alternated wins and losses in his last four fights after winning three straight bouts in 2011. The lightweight staple has gone 1-1 so far this year, dropping a split decision to game southpaw Evan Dunham this past February before submitting Renzo Gracie pupil John Cholish with a second-round guillotine choke one month ago at UFC on FX 8. (Source)


Ricardo Lamas depending on family strength to get over disappointing pursuit of UFC belt

This was no new territory for Ricardo Lamas. Over the last nine months, he’s believed several times that he would be fighting for the UFC’s featherweight title, only to have the opportunity taken away.
Once, he actually was offered a bout in Brazil against champion Jose Aldo on a month’s notice. He quickly accepted despite the short notice and, for a few minutes or a few hours, depending upon whom you talk to, Lamas was going to fight for the title.
And then came the call that, no, the UFC was going in a different direction, and that it would be former lightweight champion Frankie Edgar, and not Lamas, who would challenge Aldo.
But it was the most recent near-miss that stung Lamas the most.
On Friday, after completing a vigorous workout to prepare for a July 6 fight against Chan Sung Jung, aka The Korean Zombie, at UFC 162, Lamas decided to check his Twitter feed on his phone before heading home.
To his horror, he learned that The Korean Zombie would replace the injured Anthony Pettis in an Aug. 3 title fight against Aldo in Brazil.
The Lamas-Jung winner would have been the division’s No. 1 contender. And while Lamas recognized Jung’s accomplishments, he also pointed out that he was active and beating top opponents while Jung was off for more than a year rehabilitating an injury.
But UFC president Dana White felt Jung was the better choice to replace Pettis, and Lamas was left on the outside looking in once again.
“That just really bothered me, that I didn’t find out from the UFC, but I found out from somebody else who saw one of Dana’s tweets,” Lamas said. “The guy tweeted something like, ‘Oh man, Ricardo Lamas, that sucks. What are you going to do now?’ My first thought was, ‘Oh great, the Korean Zombie is injured.’ “
But he would soon find out that the injury wasn’t the Zombie’s. Rather, it was to Pettis and the Zombie was filling his spot.
“I jumped on Twitter and found out what had really happened, and at that point, I had no words,” Lamas said. “Then, my phone started blowing up with reporters texting me, looking for interviews. I didn’t know what to think, but as the days passed and it settled in more and more, I was pissed and depressed. I’d gone through almost a whole camp and now what? Nothing. Typical.”
White eventually phoned Lamas directly – the first time the two had spoken – and apologized for what had happened.
Lamas will be paid his show money to at least compensate him for the time he spent preparing for a bout that won’t happen.
His father, Jose Lamas Sr., a refugee from Cuba who was fighting against the pro-Castro forces and was once sentenced to death at age 22 in 1963, was more outraged than Ricardo was and kept angrily shouting that White’s decision made little sense.
Lamas Sr. left Cuba and emigrated to the U.S. with little more than the clothes on his back. But he is a rare man, one who didn’t take no easily and was a quick study.
He soon became a powerful voice in the Spanish-speaking community in Chicago, and eventually ran Channel 44, the first full-time Spanish-language television station in Chicago.
Lamas Sr. and his family have spent much time over the years promoting mixed martial arts to the Hispanic community in Chicago. Ricardo, whose mother is of Mexican descent, became the face of the sport to Chicago-area Hispanics due to the efforts of his father and his brother.
MMA, said Frank Lamas, Ricardo’s brother and manager, is big in Chicago because the family spent years educating the city’s Spanish speakers about the sport.
The UFC recently landed a lucrative television deal in Mexico and is desperate to tap into the fight-loving Hispanic culture. Because of the work of the Lamas family, the door was opened in Chicago for the UFC.
“They haven’t connected with the Hispanic market yet, not nearly as well as they can,” Frank Lamas said of the UFC. “Ricardo is a perfect vehicle for them in helping with that effort. Here in Chicago, the Spanish media knows Ricardo and what is going on with him very well. That’s a potentially huge market for the UFC and they have to hit it harder.”
Having a Hispanic champion would make that much easier, though it’s far from a given that Ricardo Lamas would be able to defeat Aldo and win the belt.
But he’s reeled off four wins in a row in the UFC and has won seven of his last eight bouts overall. He defeated Hatsu Hioki and Erik Koch in his last two bouts and, though he was disappointed he was bypassed by Pettis for the title shot with Aldo, viewed the bout at UFC 162 with the Korean Zombie as an opportunity to force the UFC to recognize him.
“If you keep beating the guys they want to give the title shots to, sooner or later, they have to come to you,” Ricardo Lamas said.
But now, he’ll sit and wait and see what happens in the Aldo-Jung fight Aug. 3. Frank Lamas said he’s not going to take any bouts until he sees how things play out.
His brother, he said, will be fine. Ricardo, Frank said, shares the passion and fiery spirit of his father.
“My whole bloodline is full of revolutionaries,” Frank Lamas said. “That fire is in our blood, to fight for what is right. First it was [former Cuban president Fulgencio] Batista, who was a tyrant, and my family was among those fighting against that. He was replaced by [Fidel Castro] who was even worse, and my father became a revolutionary to fight for the freedom and the rights of the Cuban people.
“That’s in our blood. My father went through an incredible struggle as a very young man in Cuba to fight for freedom, which is why I say he’s the greatest man I know. What he went through is almost indescribable. … But he passed that passion to do what is right down to us, and we’re fighters, too. And though this isn’t a revolution, it’s a fairness issue and we’re going to fight hard for what we believe.” (Source)


Paulie Malignaggi: The next face of boxing?

It doesn’t take that great a leap of faith to believe that in a year, maybe a year-and-a-half, Paulie Malignaggi will become the face of boxing.
The WBA welterweight champion has always been a glib, accessible, entertaining interview, as well as a skilled, if a little underpowered, boxer.
But Malignaggi is on the verge of reaching superstar status as an announcer. He’s been doing analysis for Showtime’s boxing broadcasts and he’s demonstrated the kind of ability that, combined with experience, could soon make him the best in the business.
He’s thoughtful, insightful and well-spoken, quick to notice trends and able to explain them in a manner the audience understands. Broadcasting a fight, particularly in a three-man booth, is no easy task, and Malignaggi has come off in his rookie year like a 10-year veteran.
That’s why it has been so strange these last two months to see Malignaggi come so unglued in his public appearances while he’s promoted his title defense on Saturday at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., against Adrien Broner.
Malignaggi has always talked trash before a fight, but until he signed to face Broner, it’s always been light-hearted and good-natured.
But as he’s trained for Broner, it’s almost as if he’s been overcome by some unseen force. He’s matched Broner insult for disgusting insult, demeaning women, treating them as sex objects and showing disdain for the sport that has made him rich.
He’s lost the cool that helped make him so popular in the first place.
At a kickoff news conference in Las Vegas on May 4, Broner called a woman he said was named Jessica while he was on the dais. He said she was Malignaggi’s ex-girlfriend.
On Thursday, Broner brought the woman to the Barclay’s Center for the final news conference.
When he took the dais, Malignaggi spoke directly to the woman in the audience and asked her what his mother’s name was. Stories had been published saying she’d dated Malignaggi for six or seven months.
When she didn’t know his mother’s name, Malignaggi used it as proof that they weren’t close and hadn’t dated.
“Let’s put this thing behind me now,” Malignaggi said. “This is somebody I slept with. Athletes sleep with a lot of women. It’s 2013. It’s what we do. All right?”
His response came off crass, crude and far too Broner-like. It probably didn’t win him many new fans and might have cost him some of his existing ones.
Malignaggi and Broner both came off disgusting, and the stench of it rubbed off on Golden Boy, Showtime and the Barclays Center.
At least Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer pleaded before the news conference for the fighters to act civilly and to keep their comments about boxing, though he didn’t act to stop it when it quickly got raunchy. It was a two-bit soap opera, not a professional sports media event, yet Showtime Sports’ social media account gleefully tweeted a video link to the news conference, calling it “a fun one.”
Yeah, it was a hoot all right.
Boxing not only should be better than this, it has to be better. This horrible two-month act just played on all the negative stereotypes that exist about fighters.
From a boxing standpoint, the question is whether all of Broner’s talk has caused Malignaggi to come unhinged and lose concentration on what he needs to do.
Malignaggi, who is 32-4 with seven knockouts and has won world titles at super lightweight and welterweight, needs to worry about outboxing Broner and neutralizing his power, and not about one-upping him with one-liners at a news conference.
His four losses came to Miguel Cotto in 2006; Ricky Hatton in 2008; Juan Diaz in 2009 in a fight that Malignaggi appeared to win going away; and Amir Khan in 2010.
Particularly in the Cotto, Hatton and Khan fights, he was beaten by men who were considerably larger and who were able to impose their size and strength on him.
They could hurt him but he didn’t have the kind of power to do the same.
Broner is tremendously skilled, but the hype train that is pushing him is far greater than his accomplishments in the ring. It’s why it wouldn’t be a shock if Malignaggi were to score the upset.
The combination of an underrated fighter along with one who might be looking past a guy he clearly doesn’t respect might make Broner vulnerable to the upset.
“He has good speed and good timing, but his power is overrated,” Malignaggi said. “A lot of what he does is overrated.”
Golden Boy is clearly grooming Broner to be its next superstar, though Schaefer has plenty of respect for Malignaggi.
He found the wide odds favoring Broner preposterous and, win or lose, expects Malignaggi to come up with an elite performance.
“Throughout his career, Paulie has been one of those guys who’s been able to rise to the occasion,” Schaefer said. “The bigger the challenge, the better the performance he puts in.”
The Broner fight could be Malignaggi’s last big chance. If he loses, he’s not going to be a popular opponent because he’s a slick boxer with the ability to make guys look bad. That’s not the kind of guy managers want to put their rising stars in against.
So Malignaggi has much at stake in the ring on Saturday.
Win or lose, though, he still has the talent – in front of the microphone – to become the face of boxing.
Hopefully, his antics in the, ahem, promotion of the Broner fight won’t ruin an otherwise promising career. (Source)

Former boxing world champion, a Pittsburg native, indicted on bank robbery charges

A former professional boxing world champion from Pittsburg was indicted by a federal grand jury Thursday on charges of robbing six East Bay banks, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
James Page, 42, who won the World Boxing Association’s welterweight title in 1998, faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for each count of bank robbery.
Authorities say Page stole $17,796 from banks in Walnut Creek, Pleasanton, Oakley, Emeryville, Antioch and Lafayette between March 6 and June 8. Initially, authorities said he robbed eight banks.
A break in the robbery investigation came on May 29 after Oakley officers responded to a domestic dispute between Page and another person, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Oakley police recognized Page’s truck as matching the description of a vehicle involved in a bank robbery earlier that day in Oakley.
In that incident, the robber handed a teller a note demanding money, police said. No gun was seen.
Authorities found that Page had served 11 years in federal prison for a bank robbery in Atlanta in 2001, leading them to arrest him on June 10 in Oakland. He later admitted to robbing the Oakley bank, authorities said.
A call to Page’s attorney was not immediately returned.
Page, a native of Pittsburg, began his boxing career locally but quickly climbed the ladder of fame, attracting the attention of boxing promoter Don King and knocking out Russian Andrei Pestriaev in two rounds in Paris to win the World Boxing Association title in 1998.
Trouble soon found him, however. He was stripped of his title for failing to show up to a mandatory fight in 2000 and was arrested for a bank robbery a short time after his final professional fight to win back the title.
In a jailhouse interview with this newspaper earlier this month, Page said, “It’s something I got to fight. I’ll have my day in court.”
Page, who remains in federal custody, is scheduled to appear for arraignment June 27 in federal court in Oakland. (Source)


Renda and Butler both ready for battle on Saturday

Cello Renda and Danny Butler clash for the English middleweight title in Peterborough on Saturday - and it looks a 50-50 fight.
Both turned professional in their teens and have done their fair share of fighting on the right-hand side of the bill. The pair have both reinvented themselves recently.
Renda (pictured above fighting Max Maxwell) used to put everything into every punch and would take one to land one.
BoxRec News’ Martin Supple recalls being ringside for Renda’s epic first clash with Paul Samuels in 2009:
“Renda and Butler both appeared on a cracking Hatton Promotions bill- topped by Matthew Hatton against Lovemore Ndou. Danny was outpointed over ten rounds by Darren McDermott for the English middleweight title, but it was Cello’s clash with the dangerous Paul Samuels which grabbed all the headlines and ultimately became a cult classic with boxing fans around the world.
“In-the-know punters ensured an early arrival at the Fenton Manor Leisure Centre, as with both men being powerful, vulnerable fighters, it always promised fireworks. In an extraordinary battle, Renda decked Samuels in the opening round. In round two, the two big hitters landed simultaneous left hooks on each other’s chins and with nobody present quite believing their eyes, both fighters crashed over flat on their back - a double knockdown. Renda rose on wobbly legs at four, whilst Samuels barely beat the count, getting up at nine, looking finished. But Samuels rallied and caught the tiring Renda with several unanswered shots in the third to score an unlikely stoppage.”
These days, Renda can box and bang, and puts his faith in trainer Jon Pegg:
“I’m ready for anything. We’ve got Plan A, Plan B, Plan C and Plan D if I need them. I have instructions when I box now when in the past I was just told to get my hands up, chin down and get stuck in.”
Butler says he’s benefitted from working with Andy O’Kane. He headed to O’Kane’s gym following a fourth loss in five fights at a good level, including a short-notice defeat to Darren Barker for the British and Commonwealth belts. He has gone on to hand both Frankie Borg and Tom Costello their first losses, with the 10th-round stoppage of Costello in March securing the vacant English middleweight title.
O’Kane said: “I think a lot of people wrote Danny off, but I really do genuinely believe the best is yet to come.
“The lads in the gym who had been handling him comfortably are nowhere near him now. A lot of guys who have known Danny for a long time say he is a different fighter now.”
Butler moves better, Renda boxes more and both have everything to fight for at the Peterborough Arena. Renda says this is the biggest fight of his 10-year career, while Butler is desperate to make a title defence in Bristol, then challenge for bigger honours.
Both expect a tough fight. and Renda says home advantage gives him the edge:
“In the closing rounds when you’re gasping for breath and short of energy, hearing the crowd cheering me on will lift me and push me on.” (Source)


Breaking Down the Recipe for the Ideal UFC Superstar

The world of professional athletics is often ruthless and unforgiving—any given sport is riddled with has-beens and also-rans. One poor performance in the heat of the moment can be as devastating as an embarrassing faux paus during a press conference. Star athletes are forced to walk on eggshells as they tread the fine line separating mediocrity from superstardom.

Mixed martial arts is no different.

Cage fighters must juggle sponsorships, media appearances and their own, public perceptions—all the while striving to increase the number of digits in their win column.

An elite few overcome the odds and somehow manage to secure the illustrious title of champion. Then, of course, begins the struggle to keep contenders at bay—giving birth to the expression, "It's harder to keep the belt than it is to get it in the first place."

Some UFC champions—both past and present—have managed to handle it admirably. But as I've said before, there's a clear line of demarcation separating a mere champion in a series of many from one who propels the sport of MMA to lofty new heights. We have yet to see the ideal superstar that extols the traits of a champion for the ages.

Which ingredients would we need from some of MMA's most iconic figures and, more interestingly, what if we were to throw them in a melting pot in a quest assemble the archetype of an MMA superstar?



Start with a Full Serving of Georges St. Pierre's Signature Professionalism

The French Canadian sets MMA's standard for suave and sophistication—he's practically synonymous with the suit-and-tie look. Always respectful of opponents and attentive to company needs, GSP would represent the core of our dream superstar. All the crucial traits would have to carry over: professionalism, business-oriented attitude, work ethic and even self-promotion.

The ideal MMA athlete would need the right stuff both inside and outside the cage.



Mix in a Good Batch of Sheer Athleticism Courtesy of Jon Jones

Top-tier athletes tend to look the part. This mixture would result in a physically impressive fighter a la Jon Jones. Reach and height would enable nothing short of blinding speed and dexterity. Victories would have to be highlight reel-worthy, with each finish acting as a firm declaration.

Jones knows this to be true—he tends to end his fights in ways that guarantee water cooler talk.



Stir in Equal Amounts of BJ Penn's Raw Talent

There's something to be said for a fighter that has the natural it factor.

Movements would have to be so fluid and natural that even the most casual MMA fans could feel like they were witnessing something special. Penn was not only the first American to win the World Jiu-Jitsu Championships, but also the first to be simultaneously ranked No. 1 in two, separate weight divisions.

Our star would need to be a replicate of the innate talents of "The Prodigy" in order to break such boundaries.


Add a Hint of Ronda Rousey's Magnetism

Enormous media coverage, polarizing interviews and a willingness to cull fans from untapped resources would have to be second nature to a superfighter of the next generation. Ronda Rousey managed to introduce UFC fans to entirely new subset of mixed martial arts—nearly half a million pay-per-view buys isn't too shabby for your first time at bat.



Season it with a Dash of Chael Sonnen's Wit and Intellect

Arguably the most interesting figure—though certainly the most quotable—in all of MMA, Chael Sonnen has mastered the the art of selling a fight. Fans can squabble over his fight game, but few would be foolish enough to argue his skill at self-promotion. Sonnen knows just how to use his mouth to achieve a desired result—so would our superstar.

When the lights shine bright, the camera gains focus and all ears are directed at what our fighter might say, nothing is more promising and pivotal than the delivery. Sonnen has proved it time and time again.



And Then Let it Marinate in Anderson Silva's Aura

The recipe wouldn't be complete without adding Silva's preternatural ability to evoke awe from the crowd. He lost interest in mere victory long ago—cementing his legacy is at the forefront of his mind as he inches toward the conclusion of his record-breaking career.

Our dream combatant would need a certain overwhelming characteristic that words fail to accurately describe. Each fight would need to reverberate throughout his or her career—a special place in history would be reserved for when the curtain closed.


There's little to no doubt that we'd be left with a crazy concoction.

But those individual ingredients—if adhered together as part of a complete package—amount to the epitome of a superstar. Winning streaks would serve as mere stepping stones on the path to the title. And even then, the next-generation champion would be unwilling to rest.
Casual fans would associate his or her name with the entire sport of mixed martial arts—akin to Michael Jordan's effect on basketball or Tiger Woods' impact on the landscape of golf. Boundaries would be broken because this fighter would consider no feat too daunting to attempt.

Sounds like crazy, wishful thinking, doesn't it?

Well, before you toss the recipe aside, just consider that we never saw Jon Jones coming—nor did we see Anderson Silva before him.

The ebb and flow of mixed martial arts is less like a gentle river and more like a violent white-water rapid. Ordinary fighters are routinely swallowed by the rushing tides, whereas the truly extraordinary manage to stay afloat.

Somewhere, somehow and in some random suburb, there is a young, hungry fighter training relentlessly. Posters of MMA's greats adorn his or her walls.

That novice could potentially mature into the realization of this ideal recipe—a genuine superstar in the making. (Source)


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