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SENSATIONAL
NEWS FOR ELITEXC:
IT
RE-SIGNS KIMBO SLICE, GINA CARANO,
ROBBIE LAWLER TO LONG-TERM CONTRACTS
MMA Standouts Will Appear
On Landmark May 31 “CBS ELITEXC SATURDAY NIGHT FIGHTS’’
LOS ANGELES
(April 14, 2008) – Fans can continue to expect to see mixed
martial arts standouts and fan favorites Kimbo Slice, Gina
Carano and Robbie Lawler fighting for Los Angeles-based
ProElite, Inc.’s live fight division, EliteXC, for a long,
long time.
“I am proud and very excited to announce that
Kimbo, Gina
and Robbie have all re-signed with us,’’ EliteXC Live Events
President Gary Shaw said today. Terms of the long-term,
multi-year agreements were not disclosed.
Kimbo,
Carano and Lawler are three of EliteXC’s most popular,
talented and exciting fighters and all will be featured
Saturday, May 31, in the first of four prime time events on
the CBS Television Network in 2008.
Kimbo (2-0) of Perrine,
Fla., and Carano (5-0) of Las Vegas will face fighters to be
announced while the exciting Lawler (15-4) of St. Louis will
defend his EliteXC middleweight title against hard-hitting
Scott “Hands Of Steel’’ Smith (15-4) of Sacramento, Calif., in
a slugfest that figures to be non-stop, toe-to-toe action.
The official lineup for
the historic MMA card, the first on network television, will
formally be announced in the next few days. The highly
anticipated event will emanate from the Prudential Center in
Newark, N.J.
“We’re extremely happy
to get these deals done with Kimbo, Gina and Robbie,’’ Shaw
said. “Fighters know EliteXC is the place to be and the
organization to fight for, which is why we’ve always been able
to sign or re-sign almost each and every one of our fighters.
“You don’t see our guys
leaving. With us, it’s family and all about the fighters.
Every fighter who has fought on an EliteXC card has come away
being ambassadors for EliteXC.
“Kimbo has already
become an MMA star due to his incredible popularity on
YouTube. His backyard street fights are legendary. No question
Kimbo has made a successful transition from Street to Elite
and is on his way to becoming a superstar and world champion.
“Gina became an instant
star after her first fight for EliteXC and has gone on to gain
even more national prominence. She truly is the face of
women’s MMA, an inspiration to many up-and-coming athletes and
is a perfect illustration as to why women do indeed have a
place in this sport and with EliteXC.
“Robbie’s nicknamed
‘Ruthless’ – what more you need to know? He’s tough,
hard-nosed and always been highly regarded. EliteXC is
extremely proud to have Robbie as its world middleweight
champion. Robbie has shown time and again that he’s one of the
most thrilling fighters in any weight class in MMA.
“For sheer action and
power, it doesn’t get better than ‘Ruthless’ Robbie Lawler
versus Scott ‘Hands Of Steel’ Smith.’’
For more information on
EliteXC and other MMA-related stories, including bios,
video-on-demand, photos, stats, Fantasy Fight Game
TM and
more, please visit ProElite.com and EliteXC.com.
Elite XC and UFC land Big Deals while Boxing Spins its
Wheels
By:
Phil Santos - Overhandright.com
It was recently
announced that Elite XC had inked a deal with CBS to
broadcast its shows in prime time on Saturday nights and
that the UFC has signed on with a monster sponsor in
Anheuser-Busch and Bud Light. So MMA and UFC fans can now
look forward to more televised action and the increased
exposure that a premium sponsor can bring while boxing
slips further into mainstream obscurity.
Ask anyone 28 years
old and younger who Kimbo Slice, Randy Couture and Rampage
Jackson are and most likely you'll get an answer. There
are times when I'm just channel surfing and you can't help
but come across some sort of ultimate fighting and now
they're going to be on network TV?! What the hell! Where
is boxing while all this is going on? Where are the fight
promoters and marketing people when these sponsorship and
network television deals are being signed? It's
disgusting.
I won't pretend to
be impartial, I'm a boxing guy. And this really kills
me. The fact that these human cock fights are succeeding
is good for them, seriously more power to them, but why
does boxing continue to be left standing in the cold with
a thumb stuck up its rear?
Unless you have HBO
and Showtime, which not everyone does, the only boxing
that mainstream viewers are exposed to is ESPN2 Friday
Night Fights. Now I don't want to knock ESPN because I
think its great that they put fights on but to be honest
you very rarely, if ever, see elite level fighters on
their fight cards. ESPN is more of a jumping off point
for young fighters in order to get exposure and land
bigger fights and paydays on HBO and Showtime. Bottom
line once you have made it as a fighter you aren't
fighting on ESPN. That brings us right back to square
one.
So the public
perception of what boxing is all about is seen through a
washed up Zab Judah or an over hyped Darnell Wilson. Guys
like Sechew Powell and Allan Green just don't inspire the
type of fan following that boxing needs to place itself
back on the map. Meanwhile some truly entertaining
fighters like Rafael Marquez, Israel Vazquez, Manny
Pacquiao, Kelly Pavlik and Miguel Cotto remain unknown to
anyone who isn't a hardcore fight fan.
What ESPN is doing
is good for boxing if, and only if, the people involved in
boxing can score a network deal. It has been talked about
for years and now is the time to shut up and act on it.
Boxing needs a network deal! NBC, ABC, FOX anybody come
on lets get this done.
UFC and MMA are not
taking over the youth market because it is better or more
exciting than boxing its just more accessible plain and
simple. Have you ever watched a UFC fight? They can be
just as, if not more, dull as an uneventful boxing match.
In fact I have given Ultimate Fighting many chances to
entertain me and every time its come up short. What I
have seen is ground fighting, grappling, choke holds and
very little action. Pretty boring if you ask me even with
Joe Rogan giving all the garbage going on in the octagon
technical terms.
If boxing fails to wake up and put it premier fighters in
front of a prime time audience than the future of the
sport I love appears very bleak. 2007 brought great match
ups and an outstanding year for fight fans now lets hope
2008 can bring some hope in the battle for exposure that
our sport is badly losing to the UFC and MMA.
PS
TOUGH-TALKING, CROWD-PLEASING PHIL BARONI
SIGNS MULTI-YEAR CONTRACT WITH ELITEXC
LOS ANGELES (Feb. 9,
2008) – One of the toughest-talking, hardest-fighting, most
colorful competitors in Mixed Martial Arts, Phil “The New
York Bad Ass’’ Baroni, has signed a multi-year contract
with Los Angeles-based ProElite, Inc.’s Live Fight Division,
EliteXC.
“You
know any Jersey boy like me likes a ‘New York Bad Ass’ and
Phil’s definitely as bad as they come,’’ said EliteXC Live
Events President, Gary Shaw, who made the announcement
Saturday. “Phil is a promoter’s dream. He’s a character but
also as courageous a fighter as I’ve been around.
“ But
what I truly love about him is he always comes not only to
fight but to win and put on a show. He’s a crowd-pleaser
extraordinaire. This is a great addition to the EliteXC
family and we are thrilled to sign him. Fans can expect to
see Phil back in the cage and fighting his heart out very
soon.’’
Baroni’s next fight is
March 15 on the EliteXC Hawaii-based Icon Sport promotion.
Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
“This is a great deal
and opportunity. I appreciate EliteXC sticking with me and
believing in me enough to sign me,’’ said Baroni ( http://philbaroni.proelite.com),
whose last fight came against Frank Shamrock (http://frankshamrock.proelite.com)
on June 22, 2007.
A native of Long Island, N.Y., Baroni didn’t win an
incredibly exciting slugfest that
lived up to its hype and
anticipation, but he showed as much grit and determination
as anyone could expect.
“I’m looking forward
to returning to the cage and kicking (butt),’’ said Baroni,
whose EliteXC contract will allow him to continue to perform
for Strikeforce. “Everybody knows I got hurt early and
couldn’t do everything I wanted to do against Shamrock. But
I’m 100 percent now, ready for anybody. I pity the guy I
fight next, or the one after that. Trust me, everybody is
going to pay from here on out.’’
For more information on EliteXC and other
MMA-related stories, including bios, video-on-demand,
photos, stats, Fantasy Fight Game TM and more,
please visit ProElite.com and EliteXC.com
POPULAR PHILADELPHIA FAVORITE EDDIE ALVAREZ
PUTS ON A SHOW EN ROUTE TO KNOCKING OUT
ROSS EBANEZ IN THE SECOND ROUND ON SHOXC
Friday,
Jan. 25, 2007, at 11 p.m. ET/PT on SHOWTIME
Trump Taj Mahal Atlantic City Hotel & Casino
ATLANTIC CITY (Jan.
26, 2008) – On an exciting night that featured solid, non-stop
action and entertaining fights, crowd favorite Eddie Alvarez
(12-1) of Kensington, Pa., sent the hometown fans home
deliriously happy by knocking out Ross Ebanez (18-6-1) of Hilo,
Hawaii, in the second round Friday on the 2008 premiere of
ShoXC: Elite Challenger Series on SHOWTIME.
In the co-feature presented by Los Angeles-based
ProElite, Inc.’s Live Fight Division, EliteXC, talented
Paul "Semtex'' Daley
(17-6-2) of England scored a first-round knockout over Sam “The
Squeeze’’ Morgan (19-10) of St. Paul, Minn.
The SHOWTIME telecast
aired at 11 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the West Coast) from Trump
Taj Mahal Atlantic City Hotel & Casino.
PHOTOS OF
EVENT BY TOM CASINO
Paul Daley (right) kn Other
televised fights:
Bao
Quach
(12-8-1), of Huntington Beach, Calif., registered an upset
three-round unanimous decision over Bobby
McMaster
(8-3), of Boston, “The
Hawaiian Rocky Balboa,”
Kala Kolohe Hose
(5-1), of Honolulu, scored an impressive first-round knockout
over Fred Belleton (5-2), of Stoughton, Mass., and
Tonya Evinger
(6-2), of Reno, Nev., by way of Oak Grove, upset Julie
Kedzie
(9-7), of Albuquerque, N.M., by way of Greenwood, Ind., with a
shockingly easy first-round submission.
In non-televised undercard
bouts, promising Wilson Reis (3-0), of Philadelphia, submitted
Zach Makovsky (3-1), of Philadelphia, at 1:15 of the second
round (side choke), James “Binky’’ Jones (5-5), of Baltimore,
Md., submitted Mark Getto (1-4-1), of Philadelphia, at 1:12 of
the first (kimura), Brett Linebarger (3-1), of New Jersey,
knocked out Sergio Vinagre (2-2), of New Jersey, at 2:29 of the
third round, Matt Makowski (2-0), of Philadelphia, submitted
Joe Shilling (0-1), of Los Angeles, in the first (choke) and
Charlie Brennemen (5-0), of Philadelphia, remained undefeated
with a split three-round decision over Drew Puzon (1-2) of New
Jersey.
With the crowd chanting
“Ed-Dee, Ed-Dee’’ even before he made an appearance into the
arena, Alvarez
(eddiealvarez.proelite.com)
was clearly the evening’s most
popular winner. After dropping Ebanez during an excellent,
fast-paced opening round, he downed the Hawaiian again in the
second.
Ebanez
(rossebanez.proelite.com)
quickly made it to his feet after
going down the first time, but Alvarez pounced on him
immediately after the second. He landed three big right hands
before the referee stepped in and waved off the fight at 2:32.
For Alvarez, it was his
11th victory inside the distance.
“I was a little
hesitant in the first round after he caught me with a couple of
good shots,’’ the exciting Alvarez said.
“But I knew I won the round and that he would try and come out
strongly in the second. So I stayed patient, continued to circle
to my left and closed the show.
“Fighting and
winning on SHOWTIME was really a great thing.’’
Daley
(pauldaley.proelite.com)
overcame a fast start by Morgan to win his fifth in a row inside
two rounds. Morgan (sammorgan.proelite.com) may have been
slightly ahead after the initial two minutes, but Daley
delivered a right elbow that landed flush and that was that.
“There are a lot of good
fighters in EliteXC, and Eddie Alvarez is one of them,’’ Daley
said. “But I am the best. I came to the United States to become
a world champion. I’ll fight anybody. Line ‘em up.
“He got me
with a
couple good left shoulders, but I was never hurt. I think the
referee did a good job stopping it when he did.’’
In a minor surprise, the
soft-spoken, streaking Quach (baoquach.proelite.com) dealt
McMaster (bobbymcmcaster.proelite.com) a second straight defeat
by the scores of 30-27 twice and 29-28.
“I wasn’t worried when he
had me down,’’ said Quach after winning for the seventh
consecutive time. “I always felt stronger. My leg kicks were
the difference.
“This was a great win for
me, but all wins are great. What I really wanted was to knock
him out.’’
Evinger (tonyaevinger.proelite.com)
was perhaps the most impressive winner on the telecast, mostly
dominating Kedzie from the outset before getting Kedzie (juliekedzie.proelite.com)
to tap out (rear naked choke) after only 1:43 had elapsed.
“It was a hard fight, but
I finally did what I had to do and planned to do and, for once,
didn’t screw it up,’’ Evinger said. “Lots of people were picking
Julie to win and saying bad things about me. I like Julie; she
is one of the top-rated girls in the world and I really don’t
care what they say about me.
“But I think now the fans
have to take me seriously. I really wanted to win this. I guess
it does make a big difference when I actually listen to my coach
(Ken Shamrock).
“If Gina (Carano) is ready
for a rematch, let’s do it. I really want to avenge my loss to
her.’’
In the telecast’s opening
bout, Hose (kalakolohehose.proelite.com) won a slugfest with
Belleton (fredbelleton.proelite.com), stopping him with a
perfect right hand to the chin at 4:32 of the first.
It was Hose’s fifth
straight victory inside the distance since losing his pro debut
(when he fought as a 250-pound heavyweight) and his fourth in a
row that ended by KO or TKO in the first round.
This one went a little
longer than usual, however. Hose’s last two fights ended in 20
seconds and 38 seconds, respectively.
“I knew I had to keep pressuring and get inside because he was
so tall.
I knew I had to close the distance,’’
said Hose, who was scheduled
to face EliteXC/ICON Sport middleweight champion Robbie Lawler
in Hawaii in December ’07, but the match was postponed after
Lawler suffered a torn bicep in training.
“If I fight Lawler next, that would
be great. But I will fight anybody. I just like to figColorful
play-by-play announcer Mauro Ranallo called the ShoXC
action with the “Fight Professor” Stephen Quadros serving as
color analyst. Legendary Frank Shamrock, who fights Cung Le
March 29 in San Jose, Calif., on SHOWTIME, was a guest
commentator on the telecast. The executive producer of ShoXC
is David Dinkins, Jr. with Richard Gaughan producing and Rick
Phillips directing.
The next EliteXC fight
card on SHOWTIME is Saturday, Feb. 16, at the BankUnited Center
at the University of Miami. In a long-awaited grudge fight, the
incredibly popular pride of Perrine, Fla., Kimbo Slice will take
on David “Tank’’ Abbott of Huntington Beach, Calif., in the main
event.
Tickets for a spectacular
10-bout event start at $35 and are available at all Ticketmaster
locations, online at
www.ticketmaster.com
and at the BankUnited Box Office at the University of Miami.
For more information on
EliteXC and other MMA-related stories, including bios,
video-on- demand, photos, stats, Fantasy Fight Game
TM and more,
please visit ProElite.com and EliteXC.com.
Alvarez-Ebanez,
Daley-Morgan, McMaster-Quach, Kedzie-Evinger, Kolohe Hose-Belleton
Featured
As ShoXC Returns to SHOWTIME Friday, Jan. 25 at
Trump Taj Mahal Atlantic City; Tickets
On Sale
LOS ANGELES (Jan. 22, 2008) – During
its initial year, Los Angeles-based ProElite,
Inc.’s live fight division, EliteXC, made an instant impact in
Mixed Martial Arts while gaining a reputation for consistently
delivering competitive, thrilling and memorable events that featured
the world's top fighters.
Under the expert direction of the respected
Live Events President, Gary Shaw, EliteXC had a banner 2007. Among
its numerous noteworthy accomplishments, EliteXC became the first
and remains the only MMA organization whose fights are shown on
premium television.
EliteXC’s historic premiere on SHOWTIME on
Feb. 10, 2007, included a Shamrock (Frank), a Gracie (Renzo), a
“Krazy Horse” (Charles Bennett) and the first women’s fight on
premium television. Since an emotional, hard-fought victory over
Julie Kedzie on “DESTINY,” Gina Carano has become a superstar while
Kedzie now is one of the most recognizable female fighters in the
world.
Stressing inclusion, not
exclusion, the ensuing six SHOWTIME telecasts featured many exciting
battles that included MMA standouts such as Robbie Lawler, KJ Noons,
Jake Shields, Nick Diaz, Antonio Silva, Malaipet, Phil Baroni,
“Ninja” Rua and Kimbo Slice, the legendary, incredibly popular
backyard brawler and YouTube sensation who was smashing in his
Street-To-Elite MMA debut.
There was seldom a dull moment in ’07 and
fans can expect the same as EliteXC kicks off another tremendous
year of live MMA events. First up, ShoXC: EliteXC Challenger
Series returns to SHOWTIME (11 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the west
coast) on Friday, Jan. 25, at Trump Taj Mahal Atlantic City Hotel &
Casino.
Tickets,
starting at $40, are available at the Trump Taj Mahal box office and
online at
www.ticketmaster.com. The live card
begins at 9 p.m.; doors open at 8.
“My job as a promoter is to make the best
fights with the best fighters and to leave the fans in attendance
or those watching on SHOWTIME with a good taste and feeling that
they got their money’s worth, and I feel good about the fact we did
that every show,” said Shaw, who made his mark in MMA while
remaining one of the leading boxing promoters in the world.
“We’ve earned the respect of fans and media
and got the attention of everybody. Fighters know now there’s more
than one organization. Our track record with fighters we signed has
been tremendous. Almost all the fighters we signed have re-signed
with us. EliteXC is family and the fighters know that.
“With the acquisitions (ProElite obtained
Hawaii-based ICON Sport, United States-based King Of The Cage,
England-based Cage Rage and Korea-based Spirit MC), our talent pool
is definitely as good and varied as anybody’s, and it is getting
stronger all the time.
“Much of the credit goes to Ken Hershman and
SHOWTIME. Thanks to them, EliteXC is growing and will continue to
grow. I’m really looking forward to a very exciting 2008 and doing a
show in Atlantic City for the first time. I expect the place to be
packed.
“The incredibly popular and talented Eddie
Alvarez will headline a great event against a strong, hard-hitting
Hawaiian like Ross ‘Da Boss’ Ebanez on Jan. 25 and then we come
right back with Kimbo-Tank (Abbott) on Feb. 16 in Miami. We are off
to a tremendous start. But it’s just the beginning.’’
Friday’s
ShoXC will showcase Philadelphia’s Alvarez (11-1), who is
perhaps the most popular East Coast MMA fighter ever, against Ebanez
(16-5), of Hilo, Hawaii, in a fight at 160 pounds.
The
co-feature will match England's
Paul "Semtex'' Daley
(16-6-2) with Sam “The Squeeze’’ Morgan (19-9), of St. Paul, Minn.,
in a 170-pound scrap.
Other
televised fights: Bobby
McMaster (8-2), of Boston, Mass., will try to regain
his winning ways against the dangerous
Bao
Quach
(11-8-1), of Huntington Beach, Calif., at 150 pounds; “The
Hawaiian Rocky Balboa,”
Kala Kolohe Hose
(4-1), of Honolulu, faces Fred Belleton (5-1), of Stoughton, Mass.,
at 185 pounds; and in a bout that
further illustrates EliteXC’s unyielding commitment to women’s
fighters, Kedzie (9-6),
of Albuquerque, N.M., by way of Greenwood, Ind., will attempt to win
her fourth straight when she battles
Tonya Evinger
(5-3), of Reno, Nev., by way of Oak Grove, Mo., at 140 pounds.
Scheduled non-televised undercard
bouts include: Zach Makovsky (3-0), of Philadelphia, vs. Wilson
Reis (2-0), of Philadelphia at 140; James “Binky’’ Jones (4-5), of
Baltimore, Md., vs. Mark Getto (1-3-1), of Philadelphia, at 160;
Sergio Vinagre (2-1), of New Jersey, vs. Brett Linebarger (2-1), of
New Jersey, at 185; Joe Shilling (pro debut), of Los Angeles, vs.
Matt Makowski (1-0), of Philadelphia, at 170; and Drew Puzon (1-1),
New Jersey, vs. Charlie Brennemen (5-0), of Philadelphia, at 170
pounds.
The fights are scheduled for three,
5-minutes rounds with the exception of Kedzie-Evinger, which is
slated for three, 3-minute rounds.
“The timing and
situation of this fight couldn’t be better,’’ said the flamboyant,
charismatic Alvarez (eddiealvarez.proelite.com), who will be making
his EliteXC debut. “I am super excited about putting on a great
show. That it is in my backyard and on SHOWTIME is as good as it
gets.
“The ball is in
my court. It’s my job to blow the roof off the place. Ebanez is a
slugger. He brings it every time. With our styles, it is a really
good main event. It can’t be anything but a tremendous fight.’’
A two-time high school All-American
wrestler, Alvarez, 23, is an explosive striker who battled his way
into MMA from the mean streets of Kensington, Pa., a blue-collar
neighborhood near Philadelphia.
“Trouble
seemed to find me and I wound up getting into fights on the street
so I decided to take it a little more seriously and really learn how
to fight,’’ said the former Bodog star, who signed with EliteXC a
couple weeks ago.
“Like I said, the timing of signing for this
fight with EliteXC couldn’t be better,’’ Alvarez said. “I
was wishing an opportunity like this would come along, and it did.
“I’ve
been looking for a fight for a couple of months. But instead of
sitting around the house, I kept in the gym. I train three times a
day. My weight is always good. I never have to cut a ton of weight
at the end. So I can focus on becoming a better fighter and not have
to worry about anything else.’’
Almost from the
beginning, it has been a lovefest between East Coast fans and
Alvarez, who not only is a top-notch wrestler who can move fast,
sprawl and shoot, but a non-stop puncher with quick hands – he
delivers uppercuts from every possible direction -- quick feet and
excellent head movement.
“Philly is a
hard town, but they like their fighters,’’ Alvarez said. “I’m a
normal dude and very approachable, so that, coupled with fact I have
a lot of friends make for a great support system for me.’’
It doesn’t hurt
that the crowd-pleasing kid makes for extremely exciting fights. Ten
of his 11 victories have ended inside the distance; the one that
didn’t came in his last start when he easily outpointed Matt Lee on
July 14, 2007.
Ebanez, a true
ambassador to Hawaii MMA and an affable young man
outside the cage, has a purple belt in Jiu Jitsu and has
mixed in many other forms of martial arts.
Nicknamed “Da Boss’’ for an
intimidating, aggressive style, a heavy-handed,
experienced, fan-friendly fighter
with solid overall skills on his feet or on the
ground, Ebanez is unbeaten in his last three outings (2-0
with one no-contest) and 6-1 in his last seven (with the NC).
Ebanez, a three-round
decision winner over Michael Brightman in his last fight on Sept.
28, 2007, has seldom been given any “gimmes’’ since turning pro; in
fact, he seemingly always is matched tough.
“I like challenges,’’ said
the BJ Penn-trained fighter, whose lone defeat since March ’06 came
to Mike Pyle on the historic EliteXC “DESTINY’’ fight card on Feb.
10, 2007, on SHOWTIME. “If there's someone for me to fight,
I'll fight them.’’
Growing up, Ebanez loved
sports. “Two of my favorites were playing football and boxing.
I did a lot of boxing when I was young,’’ he said. “I did it
through high school. That's why I'm not too nervous going into
fights. I don't get butterflies at all. It's from the competitions I
was part of when I was young.’’
On Aug.
4, 2007, a rematch against Mark Moreno was ruled a second-round NC
after Ebanez got hit during a break while he was down and could not
continue.
Daley
(pauldaley.proelite.com)
is one of the fastest-rising stars in MMA. Nicknamed
“Semtex” after an explosive that British armed forces use to
demolish large structures, the exciting, sensational scrapper has
won four straight – all inside two rounds -- and five of his last
six.
In his most recent outing, the promising
24-year-old registered a second-round TKO over Mark Weir on Sept.
22, 2007. In his United States debut the previous June 22, Daley
scored an impressive second-round TKO (strikes) over Duane Ludwig on
the EliteXC-StrikeForce “Shamrock Vs. Baroni’’ undercard. Daley has
also defeated notable MMA campaigners Jess Liaudin and Dave Strasser
While his style has been described as an
aggressive mix of striking, striking and more striking, with the
occasional bit of extra striking thrown in for good measure, the
Cage Rage champion has made a conscious effort to be a well-rounded
fighter.
“I am a striker – there is no secret about
that,’’ said Daley, who rejected overtures from other organizations,
including the UFC, to sign with EliteXC. “I like to knock people out
aggressively and quickly. That's my game and no opponent's going to
change that.
“But my wrestling is underrated because it’s
something people have not seen a lot of. I constantly work to learn
different things. It’s not just about stardom and fame. I want to be
the best fighter in the world at all ranges. It is hard to achieve,
but that’s my ultimate goal, no matter what ups and downs, wins or
losses I may have. With this I will be undisputed as the greatest
MMA fighter ever.’’
When he’s
not fighting, Daley is involved in a project with Mothers Against
Guns in London. “As well as trying to fulfill my goals, I want to
set an example for the younger generation that there are other
things that you can do rather than get into guns, crime, drugs,
etc.,’’ he said.
Morgan
(sammorgan.proelite.com) had made a
career of re-inventing himself. Fans’ jaws dropped when he stopped
Duane “The Bang’’ Ludwig in the first round on April 9, 2005, and
now he will try and manufacture another upset one fight after losing
by third-round KO to unbeaten Cung Le
Nov. 16, 2007.
A competitor on
“The Ultimate Fighter 2,” Morgan showed great heart against Le and
caught and rocked Le a few times.
“I’ll be ready
to fight,’’ said Morgan, a former welterweight. “I hope for his
sake, Daley is, too. This is a great fight and an even greater
opportunity for me. I am very confident. Every fight for me from now
on is all or nothing.
“This should be a
very good and interesting fight.’’
In his start
before last, Morgan conquered Sam Jackson with ease, winning by
submission (rear naked choke) in the first round on Aug. 2, 2007.
“I want to fight
all the top name guys in this sport. I'm not scared of any of
them. I want to take them all on,’’ said Morgan, who got into MMA
“to help vent some off my life issues and I just kept doing it.
Although I lost to Le, I feel I'm getting better all the time.’’
McMaster
(bobbymcmaster.proelite.com)
might have extended his winning streak to nine in his last start if
not for a questionable (some say premature) move by a referee to
stand the fighters up that led to a
first-round submission
(guillotine) loss at 4:59 to Mushin
Corbbrey Oct. 26, 2007, on SHOWTIME.
A tough
kid from South Boston, McMaster mostly dominated Corbbrey, who had
created some buzz with an impressive win in his previous ShoXC
fight. But McMaster took down Corbbrey almost immediately and
unleashed a relentless assault of ground and pound assault. He
appeared to be in total control, working a lot, throwing a lot and
landing punches in bunches from the top.
But as he
continued to connect with solid shots, the referee stood the
fighters up with 44 seconds remaining.
Once on their feet, McMaster looked to clinch, but
Corbbrey did an outstanding job of
getting a hip toss takedown. Moments later, McMaster found himself
caught in a guillotine. A scramble
ensued. McMaster picked up and
slammed Corbbrey, but all that did was cinch the guillotine in
tighter.
“I
wasn’t disappointed with my last fight,’’ said McMaster, a
self-described ‘’hood rat" and street fighter who spent four years
in the Marine Corps that included an eight-month tour of duty in
Iraq. “It was my first fight at
the master level, and I thought I beat him pretty good for the whole
round. I will know next time what not to do. I’m not happy because I
lost but these are the rules of the game.’’
Quach (baoquach.proelite.com), a winner of six
in a row, has become an all around fighter
with a strong background that includes five years of wrestling, six
years of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and two years of Muay Thai.
Until his career took a
dramatic turn, the member of Team Oyama was lightly regarded and
known as a one dimensional fighter. He was losing more than
he was winning.
But since returning to action after a near
18-month layoff in February 2006 – in his comeback effort, he fought
a surprising draw with one of the top featherweights in the world,
Hatsu Hioki -- Bao has won five of six while significantly improving
his ground and pound and striking.
The Vietnamese fighter’s biggest victory
during the streak came on a three-round decision over top 10
featherweight Tenkei Fujimiya Aug. 18, 2007. In his last start, Bao
registered an exciting, crowd-pleasing unanimous three-round
decision over Chris David in the fight of the night on Oct. 27,
2007.
Kedzie gained instant fame after a gutsy
performance against Carano in a thrilling fight that won over a live
crowd (that gave them a standing ovation) and the millions more
watching on SHOWTIME. That fight stole the show, and this one might
too.
“It was an amazing opportunity
to be part of a history-making, first women’s fight on television,’’
said Kedzie, who lost a close decision but showed incredibly
resiliency and took the final round.
“Going in I had hoped that the
fact we were women would diminish from the minds of the fans once
they saw us going at it, and it did. I think we showed that women
fighters are here to stay and that we're going to be around for a
long time. People really do love to see the girls fight.’’
Shortly after the memorable clash with Carano,
Kedzie (juliekedzie.proelite.com)
relocated to New Mexico to join a team
headed by Greg Jackson and Joey Villasenor. “As difficult as it was
for me to leave, I felt like I needed to go to a place that would
push me to the next level,’’ she said.
The decision paid off. Kedzie, a former Hook N
Shoot 135-pound champ, closed out 2007 with three victories in a row
– a second-round TKO (strikes) over Julie Berezikova in Russia April
14, a three-round decision over Kelly Kobald on Aug. 24 and a
second-round TKO over Jan Finney on Sept. 29.
A victory over Evinger would give Kedzie a
career-best four-fight winning streak. “It’s a pretty bold statement
but I really don’t think I’m going to be losing any more fights,’’
Kedzie said. “Everybody says that before they fight, but it’s how I
feel with the confidence I have now.’’
A third degree black belt in
Tae Kwon Do
who specializes in
Brazilian
Jiu-Jitsu, Kedzie has a Bachelor of
Arts in
English
Literature from
Indiana
University. When she is not
competing, “I’m the girl that
sits in the corner with a book, when the rest of the party is going
strong,’’ she said.
EXCELLENT MATCHUPS HIGHLIGHT 2008
PREMIERE OF SHOXC: ELITE CHALLENGER SERIES – JAN. 25
If Kedzie is the girl next door, Evinger is
the neighborhood bully.
A slammer and banger in the truest sense,
Evinger doesn’t come to merely win, but to dominate and destroy. A
nationally recognized former grappling champion who participated in
the Pan American Games, she has been wrestling 13 years, training in
jiu-jitsu for four years and kick-boxing for three.
The free-wheeling, tough-talking Evinger has a
ton of potential because she’s rough and tough, has an amazing
wrestling background and can box a little. But she knows she needs a
win against Kedzie.
“I can fight better than I did the last time
on SHOWTIME,’’ Evinger (tonyaevinger.proelite.com)
said. “This is a big fight, an
important one for both of us. I am looking forward to a great
fight.’’
Evinger is coming off a submission (armbar)
victory over Katrine Alendal Dec. 9, 2007. It was her first fight
since losing to Carano on EliteXC’s “Uprising” in Honolulu Sept. 15,
2007, on SHOWTIME.
Before the Carano clash, Evinger
got national notoriety for her quote,
“I’d like to make out with Gina, but
I’m here to knock her out.’’ Evinger didn’t come close to a KO, but
she did take Carano down. But once on the ground she got reversed
and lost by submission (choke-out) at
2:53 of the first.
“I made a lot of mistakes and wrestled
terribly,’’ Evinger said. “Gina doesn’t hit or kick as hard as they
say. I try to work on limiting my mistakes, but I just made too
many.’’
Hose (kalakolohehose.proelite.com)
is a Hawaii native who has won four straight inside the distance
since losing his debut. His last three outings have ended by
KO or TKO in the first round.
A
talented, hard-fighting warrior who embodies the Hawaiian spirit,
Hose has improved dramatically since trimming down to 185 pounds
after debuting as a 250-pound
heavyweight.
Hose,
whose fights are always worth watching, is coming off a
20-second TKO (strikes) over Jeff Cox on
EliteXC’s “Uprising” Sept. 15, 2007, in Honolulu, on SHOWTIME. On
March 31, 2007, he recorded a 38-second KO over Ron Verdadero March
31, 2007.
Hose was scheduled to face EliteXC/ICON
Sport middleweight champion Robbie Lawler in Hawaii in December ’07,
but the match was postponed after Lawler suffered a torn bicep in
training. They also were supposed to fight in June ’07, but an
injury to Lawler's shoulder postponed the event.
“I still want to fight Lawler,’’ Hose said.
“I was heartbroken after I heard the fight was postponed again, but
I have had time to regroup. Fighting on SHOWTIME is a great
opportunity for me to get world-wide exposure and I hope to make the
best of it, but I still look forward to the day I fight Lawler.’’
Belleton
(fredbelleton.proelite.com) is
seeking his fifth victory in a row inside the distance since losing
his debut. In his last start, a kickboxing specialist produced the
knockout of the night when he scored a second-round stoppage over
Jerry Spiegel on Sept. 21, 2007, in Wilmington, Mass.
Although he got caught a few times on his
feet in the first, Belleton, whose specialty is the “axe kick,’’
stuffed all of Spiegel’s takedown attempts and fairly dominated. A
flush kick to the head of Spiegel ended matters 24 seconds into the
round.
Belleton
has an extensive background in traditional standup martial arts
styles. He's decorated in traditional styles, holding black belts in
Shotokan Karate, Tae Kwon Do, ISKA kickboxing, and a unique form of
Kung Fu along with a silver glove in Savate, the national martial
art of his native France.
While
he's relatively new to competitive mixed martial arts, Belleton
spent several years competing in traditional martial arts styles in
Europe. He won the San Da world championship in 1992 and is also a
two-time European champion in the sport.
While
living in France, Belleton was a national police officer, which is
the equivalent to a state police officer in the U.S., and was
involved in drug raids and other high-risk assignments. While
serving as a national officer, Belleton was also a member of the
French National Police Force Savate team that competed around
Europe.
Renowned
play-by-play announcer Mauro Ranallo will call the action on the
ShoXC telecast with the “Fight Professor” Stephen Quadros
serving as color analyst. The executive producer of ShoXC is
David Dinkins, Jr. with Richard Gaughan producing and Rick Phillips
directing.
For more information on
EliteXC and other MMA-related stories, including bios,
video-on- demand, photos, stats, Fantasy Fight Game
TM and more, please visit ProElite.com and EliteXC.com.
About
Pro Elite, Inc.
ProElite Inc.
[PELE.PK]
delivers the most exciting entertainment experience in the world of
mixed martial arts (MMA) with live arena-based entertainment events,
cable television programming on Showtime Networks and
community-driven interactive broadband entertainment via the
Internet. ProElite embraces MMA with the highest levels of honor,
integrity, discipline and self-esteem all the while remaining
inclusive for fighters, fans and schools. ProElite’s live fight
division, EliteXC, delivers spectacular live MMA fight events that
showcase the world’s top fighters [elitexc.com]. ProElite’s
interactive business, ProElite.com, capitalizes on the growing
popularity of the sport of mixed martial arts by building a
community of MMA enthusiasts. In addition to streaming the most
exciting live fights to the web, ProElite expands the fan base of
the sport by providing a comprehensive set of online social
networking tools for fans, fighters and organizations. ProElite.com
– Empowering the Fight Community TM
About
Showtime Networks Inc.
Showtime Networks Inc. (SNI), a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBS
Corporation, owns and operates the premium television networks
SHOWTIME®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL® and FLIX®, as well as the multiplex
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