Monday, October 11, 2010

Nick Diaz Beats KJ Noons to Retain Strikeforce Belt

by Michael David SmithNick Diaz keeps his Strikeforce welterweight belt with a win over KJ Noons.Three years after being bloodied and beaten in their first fight, Nick Diaz got his revenge against the last man to defeat him, KJ Noons, winning a unanimous decision and retaining his Strikeforce welterweight title on Saturday night.

Diaz was bloodied this time, too, but he was also the more effective fighter for 25 minutes of hard-charging action, weathering some hard punches from Noons and landing plenty of punches of his own. At the end of the fight, which was billed as a grudge match, Diaz and Noons exchanged a hug. They had earned each other's respect.

"I beat this guy on the ground or standing up," Diaz said afterward. "I'll beat this guy in a boxing match but I'll also tap him out on the ground. ... I just want to display my skills to the world because I can do it all."

 

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Cerrone takes rematch with Varner at WEC 51

The bad blood did not end between Donald "Cowboy" Cerrone and Jamie Varner as Cerrone took the unanimous decision at WEC 51 in Colorado on Thursday night, 30-27 on all three judges cards.

The fight started out furiously, with Varner and Cerrone immediately locking horns. Cerrone struck first, landing punches and a flying knee that seemed to shake Varner up. Varner, a Division I wrestler at Lock Haven, was not able to finish a takedown but Cerrone was. The two sprang back up quickly, and continued the fight from their feet. The back and forth continued until the bell, with Cerrone wobbling Varner in the final seconds of the round.

The pace slowed down in the second, but still featured great back and forth action. As the crowd chanted "Cowboy," Cerrone took Varner down, lateraling him to the ground before moving to side control, then the north-south position. Varner was able to muscle out and return the fight back to stand-up. Cerrone continued to land knees and control the center of the cage.

By the third round, Varner's mouth and nose were bleeding. Varner knew he was down on the scorecards, swinging for the fences with every punch. It didn't help, as every punch he landed was shaken off by Cerrone. The takedown continued to be a favorite move of Cerrone's. Near the end of the round, Cerrone took Varner straight to the ground and landed several elbows, bloodying up Varner's face.

When the round ended, the bitter enemies exchanged a high-five, but then Cerrone gave Varner a push with his forearm. As Cerrone walked away, Varner shoved him before referee Herb Dean stood between the two to settle them down. It wasn't as bad as when Paul Daley threw a cheap shot at Josh Koscheck after the bell, but it was the kind of silliness that has no place in MMA.

"Jamie, you asked for a rematch, I'd be much obliged to give it to you in Arizona," Cerrone said after the fight, referring to the December WEC card in Glendale, Ariz. He said that things won't change between him and Cerrone. "Aw, hell no. No way. I'm going to even up the score."

Melissa Sagemiller Mena Suvari Mia Kirshner Mía Maestro Michael Michele

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Babies, Bon Jovi and the middle finger: Japan's opening montages rule

If you didn't see DREAM 16 last week you missed another classic lead-in video for the fight card. It's difficult to decide what was most pleasing. Was it the Tsuyoshi Kohsaka playing out his Blue Man Group drummer fantasy, the animation or the fact that Japan's bad boy of fighting, Shinya Aoki, announced that his wife is with child while also holding back flipping the double bird? Just weirdness across the board.

Virginie Ledoyen Vitamin C Vogue Whitney Able Whitney Port

Strikeforce: Josh Thomson Beats JZ Cavalcante

by Michael David SmithJosh Thomson and JZ CavalcanteJosh Thomson fought a tough, back-and-forth 15-minute battle with Gesias "JZ" Cavalcante at Saturday night's Strikeforce event and walked away with what will be a controversial unanimous decision in a fight that easily could have gone either way.

Thomson, who said afterward that he "fought like s**t," said he's hoping for a third fight with Strikeforce lightweight champion Gilbert Melendez, with whom he's split two previous fights.

"Gilbert and I are good friends," Thomson said. "I'm looking forward to getting the title back. ... Everyone's waiting for the trilogy."

 

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Meet Marlon Sandro, the man who could take out Jose Aldo

Jose Aldo's title defense on Thursday night made the featherweight fighter look near invincible. He tore through Manny Gamburyan in barely two rounds. He's already taken out Mike Brown and Urijah Faber, two of the best featherweights in the world, and has a place in the conversation about who the world's best fighter is. Is there anyone who can unseat him?

Yes. Meet Marlon Sandro, a Sengoku fighter. Check out what he did to Masanori Kanehara at the Sengoku Raiden Championship 13 in June. (The action starts around 1:30, and doesn't last for long.)

What's the catch? (You knew there was going to be a catch.) Sandro is Aldo's teammate. As is the case with many MMA fighters who train together, Aldo and Sandro don't want to fight each other. It doesn't even make sense for the WEC to pursue signing Sandro unless he and Aldo would agree to fight.

Aldo is not concerned about a lack of contenders.

"The same way that Manny earned his title shot, there's a lot of guys that are going to come up and earn their title shots," Aldo told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com) through his interpreter.

He said he has no problem fighting whoever the WEC puts in front of him. In the meantime, enjoy Sandro and Aldo ripping through lesser fighters. Compare the symmetry between Sandro's knockout of Kanehara and Aldo's KO of Gamburyan, and think about what might be.

Jolene Blalock Jordana Brewster Josie Maran Joss Stone Jules Asner

Overeem video before and during his K-1 appearance

Alistair Overeem was back at it again this weekend. The Strikeforce heavyweight champ isn't fighting MMA in the U.S. for the remainder of 2010 because of his participation in K-1's Final 16. This lead-in video seems way to good to be relegated to the internet. There's pretty funny stuff including Overeem finally getting manhandled. He gets worked over by an older masseuse.

You can see the results of his hard work below. Ben Edwards takes the best Overeem can dish out but can't stand any longer after a dozen-plus sledgehammer overhand rights and three knockdowns. HDNet announcer Michael Schiavello makes Gus Johnson sound less than enthusiastic. 

K-1 Final Results:
Sergey Kharitonov def. Takumi Sato by KO (Round 1, 2:50)
Dzevad Poturak def. Chalid Arrab by TKO (Corner stoppage, Round 2, 0:06)
Tyrone Spong def. Ray Sefo by Decision (Unanimous decision, 3-0)
Gokhan Saki def. Freddy Kemayo by KO (Round 1, 2:14)
Daniel Ghita def. Errol Zimmerman by KO (Round 2, 0:18)
Kyotaro def. Jerome Le Banner by forfeit
Peter Aerts def. Ewerton Texiera by Decision (Ext. Round, 3-0)
Mighty Mo def. Raul Catinas by Decision (Unanimous decision, 3-0)
Semmy Schilt def. Hesdy Gerges by Decision (Unanimous decision, 2-1)
Alistair Overeem def. Ben Edwards by TKO (Round 1, 2:08)

 

Natalie Imbruglia Natalie Portman Natalie Zea Natasha Bedingfield Natassia Malthe

Queens Birthday Weekend

Lorri Bagley Lucy Liu Luján Fernández Magdalena Wróbel Maggie Grace

MotoGP Signs-on Sepang for Three More Years

Announced this week, Sepang International Circuit will host MotoGP for three more years, bringing GP racing to Malaysia through 2013. Sepang has hosted MotoGP since 1999, and has become a favorite track for many of the GP riders. The Malaysian GP is an important stop for MotoGP, as it not only services GP fans from [...]

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Fight of the Year? Just wait, several more candidates on tap to close 2010

MMA stars like Mauricio "Shogun" Rua, Anderson Silva, Fedor Emelianenko, Rashad Evans all may be sidelined until early 2011, but that doesn’t mean 2010 won’t close with a bang. There’s plenty of good fights to focus on down the stretch this year. Which fights will produce the most fireworks before and during the fight? ?

1. Georges St. Pierre vs. Josh Koscheck -- UFC 124, Dec. 11
Nothing can match the hype produced by months of reality television. You may think the trash talk on Season 12 of "The Ultimate Fighter" will be one-sided. But all of it won't be from Koscheck. GSP will get in his little digs. He’s a confident guy bordering on cocky and the show should be able showcase that a bit. That said, on fight night Koscheck will be battling 21,000-plus angry Canadians in Montreal and 95 percent of the audience watching will be rooting against him.

Fans really should embrace Koscheck in this fight, because for those of you who are tiring of GSP’s wrestling dominance, Kos should be able to make this into a stand-up war. That should bring the best out of St. Pierre, who’s gone away from his dynamic striking game. A devastating knockout win from GSP should only strengthen his spot as MMA’s best pound-for-pound.

2. Nick Diaz vs. K.J. Noons -- Strikeforce, Oct. 9
This has all the makings of a mega-fight. Unfortunately, outside of MMA websites and hardcore fans it won’t get much attention. Clearly Diaz, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace, should take this one to the ground against the self-proclaimed jiu-jitsu white belt Noons, but he won’t. Noons is primarily a boxer who took out Diaz in 2007. Diaz, who’s volume-style of striking has been devastating opponents, will want to brawl with Noons.

Noons will be a big underdog, but he’s got a good shot at winning. Diaz is great, but you have to question the competition during his recent seven-fight win streak ,. Diaz is also willing to take a few shots to deliver his own. Will he survive if Diaz cracks him with a clean shot on the chin?

If Diaz chooses to participate in media functions next week, the fight could also possess the best trash talk of the fall.

3. Brock Lesnar vs. Cain Velasquez -- UFC 121, Oct. 23
After watching the first round of his fight against Shane Carwin, all the talk of Lesnar being unbeatable has gone out the window. Is Carwin just that good or does Lesnar have huge holes in his game? We’ll find out a lot about the UFC’s heavyweight champ against a thoroughbred like Velasquez. If Velasquez can stay out of the monster’s clutches and be mobile, he could tear apart Lesnar on the feet. Lesnar has switched up his training camp by adding smaller heavyweights who can strike. Does he have enough time to fix the issues that allowed Carwin to tee off at UFC 116?

Velasquez has been touted by many as a beast and the future of the division. We’ll find out if a 240-pounder can compete with the guys at the top of the class who cut weight to get to 265.

4. Dan Hardy vs. Carlos Condit -- UFC 120, Oct. 16
Condit’s time in the UFC might be a bit of a disappointment from a win/loss standpoint, but his three fights have been fight of the night quality each time out. That’s good and bad. Great for the fans but too often Condit brawls instead of fighting to his strengths. You know Hardy will unload verbally on Condit over the next few weeks. The former WEC welterweight champ should respond by taking him down at will and pounding the Brit on the ground but he won’t. This will be a stand-up war and we’ll find out quickly if Condit has a chin.

5. Scott Smith vs. Paul Daley -- Strikeforce, Dec. 4
If you appreciate wrestling and have a thirst for high-level jiu-jitsu turn off your televisions when this one comes on. Daley will deliver some solid lines before the fight and then test Smith’s chin from the get-go. But don’t forget, Smith (pictured, on right) is coming down from middleweight where he’s taken punches from some big hitters over the year. This could be the nastiest stand-up fight of the year or it could end in 30 seconds.

6. Lyoto Machida vs. Quinton Jackson -- UFC 123, Nov. 20
This is a counter-striker dream. Machida should be even more cautious now that he was steamrolled by Rua. That should leave an opening for Jackson to close space and get back to his bread and butter, the takedowns. But can Jackson execute that kind of game anymore? Does he still possess the athleticism to pull off the big slams?

He’s only 32 years old, but you think he was 45 by some of the talk following his close loss to Evans at UFC 114. On the flip side, if Machida can land his big shots on the feet, does he have the power to take out Jackson? In 38 fights, "Rampage" has only  gone down for the count against in the Wanderlei Silva and Rua fights.

7. Eddie Alvarez vs. Roger Huerta -- Bellator 33, Oct. 21
Huerta dropped a fight since his exit from UFC, but he still carries the promotion’s name into this one against a guy that many consider a top-five lightweight in the world. Alvarez (pictured, on right) completely wrecked UFC-veteran Josh Neer in his last fight. He’s got it all showing off solid wrestling and knockout power while winning 10-of-11. Huerta’s gas tank is in question and so is his defense standing. In his defense, before he left the UFC he lost a close decision to lightweight title challenger Gray Maynard and went the distance with Kenny Florian.

8. Ben Henderson vs. Anthony Pettis -- WEC 53, Dec. 16
This is a real litmus test for the fighters and the promotion. Is Henderson way ahead of the class in the 155-pound division of the WEC or are Donald Cerrone and Jamie Varner just average fighters that allowed him to shine? At 23, Pettis is the new breed of mixed martial artist. He’s not coming from a particular background and trying to shore up weaknesses. Pettis has trained all aspects of MMA from an early age. This is a great showcase for two guys who probably belong with the big boys in the UFC’s lightweight division.

9. Sarah Kaufman vs. Marloes Coenen -- Strikeforce, Oct. 9
Kaufman stepped up in her last fight and finally delivered a finish, with her devastating slam of Roxanne Modafferi. Now she steps in with a big 135-pounder who can trade with her and probably use her power to get the fight to the ground. Kaufman is more skilled with her hands than the other Strikeforce women’s champ, Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos. Now we get to see if she can win more impressively against Coenen than Cyborg did.

10. Tito Ortiz vs. Matt Hamill -- UFC 121, Oct. 23
Neither guy is anywhere close to a top-10 light heavyweight in the world but Ortiz keeps talking about being healthy and making a run at his old UFC title. This is where it starts or really ends. If Ortiz gets destroyed by Hamill his career may be over or he's headed for side-show/senior-tour status. It’s a tough matchup for Ortiz, who's still primarily a takedown artist. Hamill may have his weaknesses, but outside of Jon Jones, who’s been able to muscle the former college wrestling champ? If Ortiz can’t get the fight where he wants it does he have more than eight minutes in his gas tank?

This list is incomplete until we know what Japan has planned for the close to the year. DREAM's event in December will probably feature Shinya Aoki with the possibility that he's facing Gilbert Melendez or Diaz. We could also see Alistair Overeem in a superfight. Strikeforce's December card is also still in the planning stages.

Jamie Lynn Sigler Janet Jackson January Jones Jennie Finch Jennifer Aniston

Strikeforce fighters Walker, Santos and Santos in the buff in ESPN

ESPN the Magazine's Body issue hits newsstands this week, and as it has in year's past, the edition features athletes posing nude. (Tastefully, of course.) Last year, Gina Carano posed; more Strikeforce fighters make the issue this year.

The woman who beat Carano, Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos, is featured with her husband and fellow fighter Evangelista "Cyborg" Santos. 48-year-old Herschel Walker is also profiled in the magazine. Looking at the picture, it's hard to believe that Walker is older than 28.

Walker will show off that 48-year-old body in a bout at Strikefore in St. Louis in December, though no opponent has been announced. 

Dominique Swain Donna Feldman Drea de Matteo Drew Barrymore Ehrinn Cummings

Cspeedphotos from Laguna Seca

MotoGPBlog has been following Dan Lo of CornerSpeedPhoto, (Twitter: @cspeedphoto) for a while now. He’s a talented photographer based in the States, and we’re honoured to feature some of his shots from this year’s Laguna Seca MotoGP round. In particular, the shot of Canepa at turn 2 is awesome. Thanks Dan!
Dan used the following kit [...]

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Behind and Below - 18 July 2010

Victoria Silvstedt Vinessa Shaw Virginie Ledoyen Vitamin C Vogue

Pro Mini Ramp Contest at Pacific Drive, Saturday, October 9th

Should be a goood one. See flier for info.Pacific Drive Mini Ramp contest

Patricia Velásquez Paula Garcés Paulina Rubio Paz Vega Penélope Cruz

Anzac Monday 2010

Jessica White Jill Arrington Jill Wagner Joanna Krupa Joanne Montanez

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Irvine Sucks ICP Montage

After the Gather of the Juggalos, ICP has been on everyone's mind. Irvine Sucks found inspiration in their Miracles video and remixed it into a skate montage.

Rosario Dawson Rose Byrne Rose McGowan Roselyn Sanchez Rozonda Thomas

K-1 Champ Semmy Schilt Holds on for Tough Decision Over Hesdy Gerges

by Michael David SmithSemmy Schilt battles Hesdy Gerges at the K-1 World Grand Prix 2010 Final 16.The reigning king of kickboxing held on to his crown after a much closer fight than expected, with Semmy Schilt winning a hard-fought decision after nine minutes of fighting a game Hesdy Gerges at the K-1 World Grand Prix 2010 Final 16 in Seoul.

"I think it was a very tough fight," Schilt said afterward. "It was probably the toughest K-1 fight for me recently."

The enormous Schilt threw jab after jab after jab in the first round, and although Gerges blocked a lot of Schilt's punches, enough of them got through that Gerges had a welt on his forehead by the end of the first round. Schilt was mixing in body kicks with his jabs, while Gerges was accomplishing almost nothing offensively.

 

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Strikeforce: Diaz vs. Noons 2 Predictions

by Michael David SmithNick DiazTwo Strikeforce belts are on the line Saturday in San Jose, with Nick Diaz defending his welterweight title in a rematch with K.J. Noons, and Sarah Kaufman defending her 135-pound title against Marloes Coenen. There are also a couple of entertaining undercard fights, and we've got the full preview and predictions right here.

What: Strikeforce: Diaz vs. Noons II

When: Saturday, the Showtime card starts at 10 PM ET

Where: HP Pavilion, San Jose

Predictions on the four televised fights below.

 

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Strikeforce's heavyweight division looks great, but where are the fights?

The tough talk started back June. But nothing came of it. That's when Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker began to suggest the promotion wasn't going to be pushed around anymore by its biggest heavyweight star, Fedor Emelianenko. Fedor would be matched up against Alistair Overeem, where his management liked it or not. It looks like Fedor still wears the pants in the family. He's not fighting  in 2011. In fact, the matchmaking games spread to the entire Strikeforce heavyweight roster. It's impressive crew led by the champ Fabricio Werdum, Alistair Overeem, Fedor, Josh Barnett, Antonio Silva, Brett Rogers and Sergei Kharitonov, but they may all sidelined as far the promotion goes for the remainder of 2010. What gives? Coker again said, he's putting his foot down.

"... all those guys are all going to fight each other in 2011,” Coker told Sherdog's Beatdown Radio. "We’re not going to hold anything back. You’re going to see these guys fight the toughest guys because really, if you’re a heavyweight, there are no easy fights in Strikeforce."

Yet there are two fall cards and none of these elite big men are squaring off. The most glaring absence is Overeem. The Dutch muscleman had a tremendous amount of U.S. momentum on his side after smashing Rogers back in May and we haven't seen him since. That's unless you're an HDNet devotee and you love kickboxing. Overeem blocked out his entire fall calendar to take part in K-1's Final 16.

"It’s very clear in our agreement with Alistair that we have booking priority," Coker said of allowing Overeem to fight in K-1. "So we could have easily said no, but then is it really fair to him? It’s a personal goal of his. Let him go try to be the best standup fighter in the world. … we’re going to support him and we’re going to wish him well and hopefully he can win the whole tournament. Then he can come back the Strikeforce champion and the K-1 heavyweight champion. As far as accomplishments, I’ve never seen that done before."

That sounds great for the future of Strikeforce.The promotion must be very healthy if its in a position to allow its heavyweight champ to disappear from Showtime for nine-plus months. Overeem isn't the only big omission. Where is Fedor?

"He’s not going to be back this year because the schedule is already full." said Coker.

Really? It's full? Strikeforce has two solid cards to close the year but they're far from full.

Maybe we're all being impatient but it seems like Strikeforce is whiffing on an opportunity to show off what has turned into an intriguing heavyweight division. You take a look at the top five big men for both the UFC and Strikeforce and there's certainly a legitimate argument which promotion has the best. 

Strikeforce - UFC (rankings according to USA Today/Bloody Elbow)
1. Fedor - Brock Lesnar
2. Werdum - Cain Velasquez
3. Overeem - Shane Carwin
4. Silva - Junior Dos Santos 
5. Barnett - Frank Mir

Julie Berry K. D. Aubert Karen Carreno Karolína Kurková Kasey Chambers

Northside News


You can pre-register for a access to Norfolk's new Northside skatepark. Norfolk residents like me are stoked. Everyone else is bummed. No official opening date has been set but it's looking like the first weekend in October.

Fees:

Norfolk Residents FREE
Non-residents (Youth ages 17 & under) $25 annually
Non-residents (Adults) $50 annually

Scarlett Johansson Selita Ebanks Shakara Ledard Shakira Shana Hiatt

Northside News


You can pre-register for a access to Norfolk's new Northside skatepark. Norfolk residents like me are stoked. Everyone else is bummed. No official opening date has been set but it's looking like the first weekend in October.

Fees:

Norfolk Residents FREE
Non-residents (Youth ages 17 & under) $25 annually
Non-residents (Adults) $50 annually

Vanessa Minnillo Vanessa Simmons Veronica Kay Veronika Vaeková Victoria Beckham

Aldo's roll continues at WEC 51, uppercut spells end for Gamburyan

Fight fans, Jose Aldo is maturing as a mixed martial artist so forgive him if he doesn't finish opponents in the first round. He even lost the first round on two of three cards against Manny Gamburyan. The Brazilian dynamo picked his spots and stayed patient. When it was time to pounce, he was lethal. Early in the second round, Gamburyan got a little overconfident, Aldo closed space and let his hands go. Aldo stopped Gamburyan in his tracks with a right cross. Gamburyan ducked for a takedown attempt and got drilled by an uppercut. That was it. When the Armenian dropped to his knees, Aldo unloaded 10 more punches and Gamburyan went limp. Herb Dean stopped it at 1:32 of the second round as Aldo retained his WEC featherweight title in the main event of WEC 51 in Broomfield, Colo.

Aldo wasn't worried about exploding in the first round.

"It was the same thing they did in the fight against Urijah (Faber)," Aldo said of losing the round on two scorecards. "I try to study my opponent. And then in the second round I was able to execute my gameplan."

Gamburyan (11-5, 3-1 WEC) was competitive in the first round. It's open for discussion whether he actually won the round. He tried to show off his hands but at 5-foot-4 with limited reach, he couldn't land his big overhand right. His best chance to win the fight was to slow it down and take it to the ground, yet Gamburyan really never tried to clinch or lock up Aldo (18-1, 8-0 WEC). And takedown attempts were almost non-existent. 

Now the question at hand is where does the 24-year-old Aldo rank among the best in the world in all weight classes? This was a good win but it also came against a guy who left the UFC's 155 class when he couldn't handle Thiago Tavares. That shouldn't take away from Aldo's 8-0 start in the WEC. His speed on both offense and defense is excellent. He uses leg kicks as well as anyone in the sport. But we have yet to see him against a great takedown artist. Maybe it's time for the UFC to encourage some of its smaller lightweights to drop to 145 pounds. Aldo isn't ready for a change to a different weight class.

"The same way Manny moved up to earn a title shot, other guys are going to earn a shot," said Aldo. "I'm here for the WEC."

Either way, it's going to be exciting to see  Aldo add to his already lofty reputation.

Tina Fey Tricia Helfer Tricia Vessey Trista Rehn Tyra Banks

Diaz passes on promoting his fight; Noons rips him

It's one of the best fights of the year, but if you're a casual fan, you may not be familiar with the skills of Nick Diaz and KJ Noons. And more importantly the history between the two fighters. They're fighting under Strikeforce, which is already fighting an uphill climb. So when Diaz bails on a teleconference for next weekend's fight, it's got to eat away at Showtime and Strikeforce.

Diaz never called in, but his trainer and manager Cesar Gracie did. Then he offered up a weak excuse.

"Nick doesn't really do the conference call with the guy he's fighting thing. He just never has. It's just not in his psyche. He's too busy training to be on the phone and everything like that right now," said Gracie.

Really? He's too busy to pop on the phone for an hour to sell the fight and potentially boost Strikeforce and Showtime?

"He just doesn’t operate in that mindset of, ‘This is a sport, and we’re going to talk about it.’ It gets to the point where you’re making up some kind of rivalry, and it’s a fake thing. With Nick, it’s not a fake thing. That’s how the Diaz brothers are. Their mindset is that they’re going into battle, and you wouldn’t fight a friend. That’s what makes Nick exciting," said Gracie.

Diaz (22-7) is exciting, but his actions are also stupid and counterproductive. It's also why he's not fighting for the top promotion in the world, the UFC. Dana White admires Diaz but said last year that he can't bring him back because "Diaz won't play the game."

The Diaz no-show especially irked his opponent, KJ Noons, who fulfilled his job duties and promoted the fight with the various websites on the call.

“That’s pretty unprofessional," said Noons. "Like I said I can't stand the guy, but I like to watch the guy fight. I like to watch his brother fight. From different people, I've heard he's a really nice guy. I believe I'm a nice guy ... but when he pulls [expletive] like this, doesn't show up on a conference call,  it's [expletive] hard to like a guy like that. Or he punks off. You just want to slap this [expletive] sometimes." 

The matchup has a tremendous back story but for folks new to MMA, the first fight back in 2007, is like ancient history. Noons, with just five fights under his belt, pulled the upset on Diaz when they were fighting under the EliteXC banner. Then, after at fight card seven months later, Diaz rushed the cage after a Noons' win and nearly started a riot.

Since then, Diaz has won seven straight, but he's also shirked media responsibilities and blew off a California prefight drug test last August, which prompted Ken Hershman, Showtime's VP of Sports, to go off on the fighter.

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Creative Freedom

If you've got 27 minutes, check out Creative Freedom.

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Fathers Day 2010

Jenny McCarthy Jessica Alba Jessica Biel Jessica Cauffiel Jessica Paré

Fight of the Year? Just wait, several more candidates on tap to close 2010

MMA stars like Mauricio "Shogun" Rua, Anderson Silva, Fedor Emelianenko, Rashad Evans all may be sidelined until early 2011, but that doesn’t mean 2010 won’t close with a bang. There’s plenty of good fights to focus on down the stretch this year. Which fights will produce the most fireworks before and during the fight? ?

1. Georges St. Pierre vs. Josh Koscheck -- UFC 124, Dec. 11
Nothing can match the hype produced by months of reality television. You may think the trash talk on Season 12 of "The Ultimate Fighter" will be one-sided. But all of it won't be from Koscheck. GSP will get in his little digs. He’s a confident guy bordering on cocky and the show should be able showcase that a bit. That said, on fight night Koscheck will be battling 21,000-plus angry Canadians in Montreal and 95 percent of the audience watching will be rooting against him.

Fans really should embrace Koscheck in this fight, because for those of you who are tiring of GSP’s wrestling dominance, Kos should be able to make this into a stand-up war. That should bring the best out of St. Pierre, who’s gone away from his dynamic striking game. A devastating knockout win from GSP should only strengthen his spot as MMA’s best pound-for-pound.

2. Nick Diaz vs. K.J. Noons -- Strikeforce, Oct. 9
This has all the makings of a mega-fight. Unfortunately, outside of MMA websites and hardcore fans it won’t get much attention. Clearly Diaz, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu ace, should take this one to the ground against the self-proclaimed jiu-jitsu white belt Noons, but he won’t. Noons is primarily a boxer who took out Diaz in 2007. Diaz, who’s volume-style of striking has been devastating opponents, will want to brawl with Noons.

Noons will be a big underdog, but he’s got a good shot at winning. Diaz is great, but you have to question the competition during his recent seven-fight win streak ,. Diaz is also willing to take a few shots to deliver his own. Will he survive if Diaz cracks him with a clean shot on the chin?

If Diaz chooses to participate in media functions next week, the fight could also possess the best trash talk of the fall.

3. Brock Lesnar vs. Cain Velasquez -- UFC 121, Oct. 23
After watching the first round of his fight against Shane Carwin, all the talk of Lesnar being unbeatable has gone out the window. Is Carwin just that good or does Lesnar have huge holes in his game? We’ll find out a lot about the UFC’s heavyweight champ against a thoroughbred like Velasquez. If Velasquez can stay out of the monster’s clutches and be mobile, he could tear apart Lesnar on the feet. Lesnar has switched up his training camp by adding smaller heavyweights who can strike. Does he have enough time to fix the issues that allowed Carwin to tee off at UFC 116?

Velasquez has been touted by many as a beast and the future of the division. We’ll find out if a 240-pounder can compete with the guys at the top of the class who cut weight to get to 265.

4. Dan Hardy vs. Carlos Condit -- UFC 120, Oct. 16
Condit’s time in the UFC might be a bit of a disappointment from a win/loss standpoint, but his three fights have been fight of the night quality each time out. That’s good and bad. Great for the fans but too often Condit brawls instead of fighting to his strengths. You know Hardy will unload verbally on Condit over the next few weeks. The former WEC welterweight champ should respond by taking him down at will and pounding the Brit on the ground but he won’t. This will be a stand-up war and we’ll find out quickly if Condit has a chin.

5. Scott Smith vs. Paul Daley -- Strikeforce, Dec. 4
If you appreciate wrestling and have a thirst for high-level jiu-jitsu turn off your televisions when this one comes on. Daley will deliver some solid lines before the fight and then test Smith’s chin from the get-go. But don’t forget, Smith (pictured, on right) is coming down from middleweight where he’s taken punches from some big hitters over the year. This could be the nastiest stand-up fight of the year or it could end in 30 seconds.

6. Lyoto Machida vs. Quinton Jackson -- UFC 123, Nov. 20
This is a counter-striker dream. Machida should be even more cautious now that he was steamrolled by Rua. That should leave an opening for Jackson to close space and get back to his bread and butter, the takedowns. But can Jackson execute that kind of game anymore? Does he still possess the athleticism to pull off the big slams?

He’s only 32 years old, but you think he was 45 by some of the talk following his close loss to Evans at UFC 114. On the flip side, if Machida can land his big shots on the feet, does he have the power to take out Jackson? In 38 fights, "Rampage" has only  gone down for the count against in the Wanderlei Silva and Rua fights.

7. Eddie Alvarez vs. Roger Huerta -- Bellator 33, Oct. 21
Huerta dropped a fight since his exit from UFC, but he still carries the promotion’s name into this one against a guy that many consider a top-five lightweight in the world. Alvarez (pictured, on right) completely wrecked UFC-veteran Josh Neer in his last fight. He’s got it all showing off solid wrestling and knockout power while winning 10-of-11. Huerta’s gas tank is in question and so is his defense standing. In his defense, before he left the UFC he lost a close decision to lightweight title challenger Gray Maynard and went the distance with Kenny Florian.

8. Ben Henderson vs. Anthony Pettis -- WEC 53, Dec. 16
This is a real litmus test for the fighters and the promotion. Is Henderson way ahead of the class in the 155-pound division of the WEC or are Donald Cerrone and Jamie Varner just average fighters that allowed him to shine? At 23, Pettis is the new breed of mixed martial artist. He’s not coming from a particular background and trying to shore up weaknesses. Pettis has trained all aspects of MMA from an early age. This is a great showcase for two guys who probably belong with the big boys in the UFC’s lightweight division.

9. Sarah Kaufman vs. Marloes Coenen -- Strikeforce, Oct. 9
Kaufman stepped up in her last fight and finally delivered a finish, with her devastating slam of Roxanne Modafferi. Now she steps in with a big 135-pounder who can trade with her and probably use her power to get the fight to the ground. Kaufman is more skilled with her hands than the other Strikeforce women’s champ, Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos. Now we get to see if she can win more impressively against Coenen than Cyborg did.

10. Tito Ortiz vs. Matt Hamill -- UFC 121, Oct. 23
Neither guy is anywhere close to a top-10 light heavyweight in the world but Ortiz keeps talking about being healthy and making a run at his old UFC title. This is where it starts or really ends. If Ortiz gets destroyed by Hamill his career may be over or he's headed for side-show/senior-tour status. It’s a tough matchup for Ortiz, who's still primarily a takedown artist. Hamill may have his weaknesses, but outside of Jon Jones, who’s been able to muscle the former college wrestling champ? If Ortiz can’t get the fight where he wants it does he have more than eight minutes in his gas tank?

This list is incomplete until we know what Japan has planned for the close to the year. DREAM's event in December will probably feature Shinya Aoki with the possibility that he's facing Gilbert Melendez or Diaz. We could also see Alistair Overeem in a superfight. Strikeforce's December card is also still in the planning stages.

Melissa George Melissa Howard Melissa Joan Hart Melissa Rycroft Melissa Sagemiller

Lynch Mob Montage

Kevin Lynch headlines this Lynch Mob montage by Thom Musso. The slams end about a quarter of the way through if you want to skip all that bullshit.

Lacey Chabert Laetitia Casta Lake Bell Larissa Meek Laura Harring

Friday, October 8, 2010

Bowie Montage

Jeff Mikut's new site, Things For Friends To Look At has tons of stuff to watch, I'm choosing this Bowie montage but you could spend the day watching everything else too.

Paula Garcés Paulina Rubio Paz Vega Penélope Cruz Pink

Shake Junt, Frankly, Rumble, Dezort, Tum Yeto, and Volcom

Shake Junt has a commercial for their new Chicken Wax. We continue to get to know Tony Miorana on episode two of Frankly Speaking. Strange notes has a trailer for the upcoming Rumble in Ramona. Adio has some Drew Dezort warm ups. Tum Yeto has episode nine of their pocket cam series. Volcom reaches part four of their Korean tour video.

Gisele Bündchen Giuliana DePandi Giulianna Ramirez Grace Park Gretha Cavazzoni

20kms of coast - 17 September 2010

Freida Pinto FSU Cowgirls Gabrielle Union Garcelle Beauvais Genelle Frenoy

Ian Smith


Ian Smith does some very gnarly shit.

Natalie Zea Natasha Bedingfield Natassia Malthe Nelly Furtado Nichole Robinson

Crowd favorite and Indy firefighter Lytle wins at UFC 119

INDIANAPOLIS -- Chris Lytle said all week that he wanted to put on a show for the fans in his hometown of Indianapolis. He delivered, winning a decision over Matt Serra at UFC 119, 30-27 on all three judges' cards. 

With the crowd chanting "Lytle," the two started out at the fight at a furious pace, with both fighters throwing bombs to start the fight. Lytle appeared to win the early exchanges, and just grew stronger headed into the second.

Serra began to slow in the second round, which Lytle took advantage of. Lytle wobbled Serra on a few occasions, using his uppercut to do damage. This continued in the third round. With a beat-up face, Serra tried in vain for a takedown, but Lytle continued to hammer away.

The two good friends embraced after the bout. Lytle asked the crowd in Indianapolis to cheer on his friend, and Serra admitted that he didn't execute a good game plan.

"What was I doing boxing with a boxing champion? What the hell's wrong with me?" Serra said after the fight.

"He could’ve just tried to take me down, but that’s about as ballsy as you can get," Lytle said. "I had plenty of respect for Matt beforehand but now it’s just so much more.”

Amanda Swisten Amber Arbucci Amber Brkich Amber Heard Amber Valletta

Marloes Coenen: Winning a Title Again Would Be Life-Changing Experience

by Michael David SmithMarloes CoenenThe first time Marloes Coenen won a mixed martial arts title, she was a 19-year-old girl from Holland, fighting in Japan, and winning a title motivated her to decide to try to fight for a living, rather than go to a university.

That was in 2000, and neither Coenen nor anyone else had any idea of how much MMA would change over the next decade. But as Coenen prepares to fight Sarah Kaufman for the Strikeforce 135-pound women's title on Saturday night, she says she's motivated by the opportunity to earn a second championship belt.

"It was so different then," Coenen said. "This was an open-weight tournament for the ReMix World Cup, and the rules were different and there was a tiny Japanese girl fighting a Russian girl who was 330 pounds. Ten years ago, when I won that title in Japan, I had so many hopes and expectations, and now if I could win another title I would feel like it's the beginning of a new decade."

 

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Missy Peregrym Molly Sims Monet Mazur Monica Bellucci Monica Keena

Iron Mike? Iron Mike: What you need to know from TUF Episode 3

"The Ultimate Fighter" moved to a third episode, where Team Koscheck tried to recover from losing the first fight, and Georges St. Pierre brought in a few special coaches to motivate his team. 

-- Josh Koscheck was not pleased with the focus of his team. He ripped them halfway through their training session and lit a fire under them. 

-- Georges St. Pierre brought in 1996 Canadian Olympic silver medalist Gia Sissaouri to work with the team. He brought in another champion, some guy by the name of Mike Tyson.

Dana White called Tyson to come in for a fight by GSP's request, and Iron Mike was seriously geeked to come to one of the TUF fights. This man, who has been part of some of the biggest boxing events of all time, was overjoyed about watching exhibition bouts. GSP was equally geeked, telling Tyson how he loved him in Mike Tyson's Punch-Out. Really, GSP? The video game was the best you can do?

Fight of the week: Michael Johnson vs. Aaron Wilkinson 

With Tyson watching, Wilkinson surprised Johnson, GSP's No. 1 pick, by withstanding a bevy of strikes, and followed up with a takedown and ground and pound in the first round.

On Tyson's scorecard, Wilkinson won the round.

Johnson started the second round strong, with a takedown and crisp striking, but Wilkinson was able to get a takedown. Koscheck called Wilkinson "English" while begging for a takedown. I wonder if that's a not-so-witty nickname for the British fighter, or if Kos just forgot his name. Johnson controlled the rest of the round in the clinch, winning the round. That means only one thing: We're going to a third round.

Johnson started round three with an immediate takedown and ground and pound. He then takes Wilkinson's back, sinks in a rear naked choke, and taps him out.

With that win, GSP is 2-0.

Quotes of the week:

"Undestirating my skills" -- Bruce LeRoy, in response to Jason Lentz, the opponent he beat

"It's not my first rodeo" -- Georges St. Pierre, after Koscheck and his coaches parked their cars so that GSP couldn't open his car door.

"He beat a little confidence out of him". -- Tyson, about Michael Johnson

"Ya gotta come out, Mike. No more playin' Mike." -- Tyson

"I thought that, um, the English guy, had very good boxing."-- Tyson

Sienna Guillory Sienna Miller Simone Mütherthies Sofía Vergara Soft Cell

WEC 51: Mark Hominick Beats Leonard Garcia by Split Decision

by Michael David SmithIn 15 active minutes fought entirely standing up, Mark Hominick was the more effective striker and won a split decision over Leonard Garcia at WEC 51.

As he usually does, Garcia came out swinging wildly, landing some good body kicks in the first round but missing more often than he was connecting. Hominick wasn't as active in the early going but was more accurate with his strikes, landing several good jabs in the first round.

 

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Kristen Bell Kristin Cavallari Kristin Kreuk Kristy Swanson Kylie Bax

Watch Miguel Torres go to work before WEC 51

Miguel Torres has important work to do at the Ecko offices. In full fight gear, he commutes via subway, then makes sure everyone is doing their job.

Torres has more important work to do tonight at WEC 51. Against Charlie Valencia, he is hoping to break a two-fight losing streak.

Samantha Mathis Samantha Morton Samantha Mumba Sanaa Lathan Sara Foster

Fathers Day 2010

Mariah OBrien Marika Dominczyk Marisa Coughlan Marisa Miller Marisa Tomei

Sachsenring 2009 MotoGP race analysis

While the weather had produced torrential downpours thoughout the preamble to this GP, it stayed dry for the action in Germany. As the riders lined up on the grid, there was a real feeling of anticipation as Rossi and Lorenzo, so close through practice until that awesome final qualifying lap from Valentino, pulled up next [...]

Kristen Bell Kristin Cavallari Kristin Kreuk Kristy Swanson Kylie Bax

Ian Smith


Ian Smith does some very gnarly shit.

Katie Holmes Katy Perry Keira Knightley Kelly Brook Kelly Carlson

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Into Darkness with Neckface in LA

Ty Evans made a trailer for The upcoming Neckface show opening Halloween night at Oh Wow.

Neckface into darkness

Amy Cobb Amy Smart Ana Beatriz Barros Ana Hickmann Ana Ivanovi

Marloes Coenen: Winning a Title Again Would Be Life-Changing Experience

by Michael David SmithMarloes CoenenThe first time Marloes Coenen won a mixed martial arts title, she was a 19-year-old girl from Holland, fighting in Japan, and winning a title motivated her to decide to try to fight for a living, rather than go to a university.

That was in 2000, and neither Coenen nor anyone else had any idea of how much MMA would change over the next decade. But as Coenen prepares to fight Sarah Kaufman for the Strikeforce 135-pound women's title on Saturday night, she says she's motivated by the opportunity to earn a second championship belt.

"It was so different then," Coenen said. "This was an open-weight tournament for the ReMix World Cup, and the rules were different and there was a tiny Japanese girl fighting a Russian girl who was 330 pounds. Ten years ago, when I won that title in Japan, I had so many hopes and expectations, and now if I could win another title I would feel like it's the beginning of a new decade."

 

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America Ferrera Amerie Amy Cobb Amy Smart Ana Beatriz Barros

UFC 119's Three Stars: Dollaway, Tavares and Lytle

Though the popular opinion about UFC 119 is that it was an awful event, there were plenty of good performances on the card. Unfortunately for the fans at home, much of the best was on the undercard. 

No. 1 star -- C.B. Dollaway: The former Arizona State wrestler showed what a good base can do for a fighter. He rolled Joe Doerksen into a guillotine at the start of the fight. When it was clear that the submission wasn't going to happen in that position, he Granby rolled to better his position. Doerksen had no choice but to tap.

No. 2 star -- Thiago Tavares: It's a shame that Tavares' win was on the same night as Dollaway's submission, because he lit Conseco Fieldhouse up with his standing guillotine choke of Pat Audinwood. His first-round submission shouldn't be overlooked. 

No. 3 star -- Chris Lytle: The firefighter came through on the promise he made to his city. As 15,000 people chanted his name, Lytle put on a striking show for his hometown, beating Matt Serra and his iron chin in a unanimous decision.  

Honorable mention -- Evan Dunham: It seems that the only people who thought that Dunham lost were the judges. However, Dunham was classy in defeat, pointing out the things he should have done differently in the bout. 

Dishonorable mention -- Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipovic: Along with Frank Mir, Cro Cop put on one of the most boring main events of the year. Mir is only spared the dishonorable mention because he was able to end the fight with a killer knee. 

Raquel Alessi Rebecca Mader Rebecca Romijn Reese Witherspoon Rhona Mitra

With WEC 51 debut, Zhang hoping to open doors for Chinese fighters

With the help of global acceptance and fighters from every corner of the Earth, mixed martial arts has exploded over the last decade. Amazingly, none of it's been done with any help from the nation with the world's largest population. A big step in changing that happens Thursday night as a Chinese-born fighter will compete for the first time in North America. Zhang Tiequan is the trailblazer at WEC 51 in Colorado against Pablo Garza.

China, a nation of 1.3 billion, with deep grappling and martial arts traditions, was anti-fighting for years. Things have changed. The sport is being embraced. The UFC has opened some doors on the web and television. Now it wants to mine the massive population for its next wave of fighters.

Zuffa, the parent company of both the UFC and WEC, sent matchmaker Sean Shelby to China on a three-week fact-finding mission to see if there were fighters ready for the jump to the biggest promotions in the world.

"The thing that amazed me was the spirit of the Chinese people and the Chinese athlete," Shelby [told Associated Press]. "There's absolutely no quit in them, and that's something you just can't teach an athlete. You either have it or you don't. It's the intangible."

Shelby found plenty of fighters who were well-versed in wrestling and had stand-up skills similar to kickboxers. Now the next step is to get jiu-jitsu widely accepted across the country.

[Shelby said:] "When they have the jiu-jitsu to go with the sanda, there's no telling how far they can go."

But he also believes that the wrestling background is more than enough to allow to the 25-year-old Tiequan (16-0) to be competitive.

"If you're going to be a successful MMA fighter, you have to be a good Greco-Roman wrestler," Shelby said. "They decide where the fight goes. ... If you have that kind of resume, you're set up to do very well, no matter where you come from. Chinese or not, he's got potential."

WEC president Reed Harris sees massive potential in China.

"As a country, they want their athletes to come to America, and vice versa," WEC general manager Reed Harris said. "Once this sport really grows and develops, I believe they'll be able to compete as well as any country. In the next 10 or 20 years, this is certainly going to become a big deal."

Harris is hopeful Tiequan can compete at this level.

"I'm a realist, and coming into the WEC or the UFC is certainly a huge step in a guy's career," Harris said. "We'll see how he does. Sean's report from China is he's very well-rounded, a really good striker, good on the ground. He's got the record, but we have to see what his level of competition was. I'm excited to see what happens."

Fight fans can be very nationalistic and so is the media in many nations. The first Chinese MMA fighter who becomes a star in the U.S. could jump-start something huge in China. Look to Yao Ming and the NBA as a great example. It's the same approach the UFC took in heavily promoting British fighters to ensure media coverage and tug at the emotions of British fight fans.

Update: The WEC didn't set up Tiequan with a tomato can to ensure an easy win. The promotion called Garza, as a late replacement.

MMA Junkie points out that Garza (9-0) was on the first episode of Season 12 of "The Ultimate Fighter" and lost to show favorite Michael Johnson. He's unbeaten and who knows, if he hadn't drawn Johnson in the first round, we may still be watching him compete on TUF 12. 

Christina DaRe Christina Milian Christina Ricci Chyler Leigh Ciara

Fathers Day 2010

Gina Gershon Gina Philips Gisele Bündchen Giuliana DePandi Giulianna Ramirez

WE, Paradise, Stereo, Shier, Flip, and SBN Videos

Western Edition has a sick Fall promo. Mike Peterson schralps his way through the latest clip from Paradise Wheels. Stereo has a new Benny Fairfax commercial. Paul Shier gives commentary on his recent Blueprint part. Flip has Ali Boulala talking about P2 boards. CCS has a quick Silas Baxter-Neal video promoting a contest with him.

Tila Tequila Tina Fey Tricia Helfer Tricia Vessey Trista Rehn

Melange Montage

I don't understand German, so all I can say is the latest montage from Melange Skateboarding is good.

Ivana Bozilovic Ivanka Trump Izabella Miko Izabella Scorupco Jaime King