Ẹka Archives: women’s MMA

YOUNG FEMALE ATHLETES LOOK TO MAKE THEIR MARK AT NEF 27

Lewiston, Maine (December 14, 2016) -New England njà (NEF) pada si Androscoggin Bank Colisee lori Kínní 11, 2017 pẹlu iṣẹlẹ atẹle adalu-ti ologun-ọna, “NEF 27: IKADUN.” Sẹyìn loni, the fight promotion announced the addition of an amateur women’s bout to the card. Alex Walker (2-1) makes her return to Lewiston to take on the debuting Katie Baker (0-0) in a strawweight matchup.

 

24-year-old Alex Walker has appeared twice previously in the NEF cage. Walker debuted in the spring of 2015 ni “NEF 17against Randi Beth Boyington (1-3). She returned earlier this year to defeat Nicole Burgess (0-1) with a third-round armbar. This past summer, she captured her first regional title on a fight card in Vermont. Walker is a member of Team Kaze based in Lancaster, New Hampshire.

 

I can’t wait to get back to work in the NEF cage,” exclaimed Walker. “2017 is going to be a good year and I am looking forward to entertaining the great fans in Maine! I can’t think of a better way to start the year. The two times I have fought in Maine, they were both FOTN, looking to Threepeat!”

 

Katie Baker, an 18-year-old from Gardiner, Maine, might be new to the NEF cage, but she is well-known within martial arts circles in the Pine Tree State. Baker began training in combat sports at the age of five. She won the Isshinryu World Karate Championship in 2009 ati 2013, and has been a practitioner of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu for seven years, regularly taking part in local tournaments. Sẹyìn odun yi, Baker began competing in amateur boxing. She currently trains with Young’s MMA in Bangor, Maine.

 

I’m really looking forward to the opportunity to square off against Alex Walker at ‘NEF 27,'said Baker. “I have a high level of respect for Alex and her accomplishments. We’re not taking her lightly, and this is going to be a hell of a fight for my debut.

 

Iṣẹlẹ atẹle ti NEF, “NEF 27: IKADUN” gba ibi lori Saturday, Kínní 11, 2017 ni 7 p.m. Tickets bẹrẹ ni $25 ki o si ni o wa lori tita to bayi ni www.TheColisee.com tabi nipa pipe awọn Colisee apoti ọfiisi ni 207.783.2009, itẹsiwaju 525.

 

Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii lori iṣẹlẹ ati ija kaadi awọn imudojuiwọn, jọwọ lọsi awọn igbega ká aaye ayelujara ni www.NewEnglandFights.com. Ni afikun, o le wo awọn fidio NEF ni www.youtube.com/NEFMMA, tẹle wọn lori Twitter @nefights and join the official Facebook group “New England njà."

 

Nipa New England njà

New England njà ("NEF") ni a ija iṣẹlẹ ni igbega ile. NEF ká ise ni lati ṣẹda awọn ga didara isele fun Maine ká onija ati awọn onijakidijagan bakanna. NEF ká executive egbe ni o ni sanlalu iriri ni ija ogun idaraya isakoso, isele gbóògì, media ajosepo, tita, ofin ati ipolongo.

FIGHT WEEK FOR ‘BELLATOR 169’ IN DUBLIN HAS ARRIVED

 

NEW WOMEN’S FEATHERWEIGHT FIGHT ADDED TO THE LAST EVENT OF THE YEAR

Santa Monica, CALIF (December 12, 2016) – After an incredible year that saw Bellator MMA host events in international territories all around the globe, it is only fitting that the promotion’s year-ending event, "Bellator 169: King Mo vs. Ishii," gba ibi yi Friday, December 16 at the 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland.

 

Shortly after her fight against Helen Harper (4-1) was announced, Bruna Vargas (2-1) has withdrawn from the bout due to injury. Harper will be paid her show money and a new women’s featherweight bout has been added to the SPIKE-televised card between undefeated fighters Sinead Kavanagh (3-0) ati Elina Kallionidou (5-0).

 

The Spike-televised main card will be highlighted by a heavyweight main event pitting “King Mo” (19-5, 1 NC) against Olympic Judo Gold Medalist Satoshi Ishii (14-6-1). Ni afikun, a pair of anticipated featherweight scraps will see Anthony Taylor (1-1) look to quiet the crowd as he enters enemy territory to challenge Northern Ireland’s James Gallagher (4-0) ati, Ireland ká Brian Moore(9-4) take on the always-game Daniel Weichel (37-9).

Tiketi fun "Bellator 169: King Mo vs. Ishii” are on sale now and start at 35€ at Bellator.com, Ticketmaster.ie and the 3Arena Box Office. The event can be seen free on SPIKE at 9 p.m. ATI/8 p.m. CT, and will be immediately followed by "Bellator Kickboxing: Florence.”

 

Fighting out of Straight Blast Gym (SBG) ni Dublin, “KO” Kavanagh has fought all three of her professional bouts with BAMMA, and has earned her nickname bye scoring two knockouts in her first three fights. Kavanagh fought in BAMMA’s first-ever women’s fight, and ended her opponent’s night in just 17 -aaya. Originally slated to compete in a bantamweight fight against Eeva Siiskonen (5-4-2) on the BAMMA portion of this co-promoted night of fights, Kavanagh now moves up in weight to face Kallionidou under the Bellator banner.

 

Ni nikan 18 ọdun ti ọjọ ori, Kallionidou has already made a name for herself in her home country Greece, where she holds the Cage Survivor women’s featherweight title. Incredibly, “Gunner” started her professional career off with a bang, scoring a first-round TKO just a month after her 16th ọjọ ìbí. Lati igbanna, the Greek fighter has gone 5-0, pẹlu mẹta knockouts. The fight this Friday night, will be her first fight outside of Greece.

 

In addition to a full card of Bellator action, ticketholders will also have the unique opportunity to experience an additional fight card from Europe’s leading mixed martial arts promotion, BAMMA. The bantamweight belt will be on the line at “BAMMA 27,” as Tom Duquesnoy (13-1, 1 NC) ati Alan Philpott (16-8) prepare to duke it out for the division gold. Lastly, the stacked event features a featherweight world title fight pitting former Bellator competitors Ronnie Mann (25-8-1) lodi si Martin Stapleton (18-4).

 

 

Pari "Bellator 169: King Mo vs. Ishii” Main Card:

Heavyweight Main Event: Muhammed "Ọba Mo" Lawal (19-5, 1 NC) la. Satoshi Ishii (14-6-1)

Featherweight Co-Main Event: James Gallagher (4-0) la. Anthony Taylor (1-1)

Featherweight Feature Bout: Daniel Weichel (37-9) la. Brian Moore (9-4)

Featherweight Feature Bout: Sinead Kavanagh (3-0) la. Elina Kallionidou (5-0)

Bantamweight Feature Bout: Shay Walsh (14-4) la. Luiz Tosta (9-2)

 

Updated “BAMMA 27” Main Card:

Bantamweight World Title Bout: Tom Duquesnoy (13-1, 1 NC) la. Alan Philpott (16-8)

Featherweight World Title Bout: Ronnie Mann (25-8-1) la. Martin Stapleton (18-4)

Featherweight Main Card Bout: Dylan Tuke (3-0) la. Sean Tobin (4-2)

Featherweight Main Card Bout: Brian Moore (9-4) la. Niklas Backstrom (10-2)

Welterweight Main Card Bout: Kiefer Crosbie (1-0) la. Conor Riordan (Uncomfortable)

Welterweight Main Card Bout: Nathan Jones (9-5) la. Walter Gahadza (16-0)

THE BLACK WIDOW AND THE BLACK BELT; FIRST WOMEN’S FIGHT ANNOUNCED FOR NEF 26

Lewiston, Maine (October 6, 2016) – New England njà (NEF) ṣe afihan iṣẹlẹ atẹle adalu-ti ologun-ọna, “NEF 26: SUPREMACY,” lojo satide, Kọkànlá Oṣù 19 ni Androscoggin Bank Colisee. Sẹyìn loni, NEF executives announced the addition of an amateur bantamweight women’s bout to the fight card. JessicaThe Black WidowBorga (2-2) returns to Maine to take on Brianne Genschel (0-0) ni a ija àdánù ti 135-poun.

 

Borga made her NEF cage debut last month against Rachael Joyce (2-0). She traveled more than 1500 miles from Lakeland, Florida for the fight. While Borga was on the losing end of a unanimous decision to Joyce, she realizes that the most important part of her amateur career is gaining experience through taking tough fights.

 

I’m not slowing down anytime soon,” said Borga, “and love to take on any challenges and get better each fight. The more experience the better! So thankful for the girls that are stepping up to fight! I’m ready to put on an amazing show.

 

Brianne Genschel, while making her in-cage debut at “NEF 26,” is a longtime practitioner of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) in which she holds a black belt. She is a BJJ instructor at The Foundry in Farmington, Maine. Genschel also trains with, and will represent, First Class MMA based in Brunswick, Maine. Like her opponent, she promises an exciting fight for the fans on Kọkànlá Oṣù 19.

 

I’m really looking forward to stepping into the cage for my first fight with NEF, and especially against such an established opponent,” said Genschel. “I can’t wait to represent my teams- Foundry BJJ and First Class MMA. I have been training hard for this opportunity, and promise to put on a good show and leave it all in the cage!”

 

The opening bell on Saturday, Kọkànlá Oṣù 19 ti wa ni ṣeto fun 7 p.m. Tickets bẹrẹ ni $25 ki o si wa o si wa ni www.TheColisee.com tabi nipa pipe awọn Colisee apoti ọfiisi ni 207.783.2009, itẹsiwaju 525.

 

Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii lori iṣẹlẹ ati ija kaadi awọn imudojuiwọn, jọwọ lọsi awọn igbega ká aaye ayelujara ni www.NewEnglandFights.com. Ni afikun, o le wo awọn fidio NEF ni www.youtube.com/NEFMMA, tẹle wọn lori Twitter @nefights and join the official Facebook group “New England njà."

 

Nipa New England njà

New England njà ("NEF") ni a ija iṣẹlẹ ni igbega ile. NEF ká ise ni lati ṣẹda awọn ga didara isele fun Maine ká onija ati awọn onijakidijagan bakanna. NEF ká executive egbe ni o ni sanlalu iriri ni ija ogun idaraya isakoso, isele gbóògì, media ajosepo, tita, ofin ati ipolongo.

FROM MAINE TO FLORIDA, FINDING FIGHTS IS THE CHALLENGE FOR FEMALE MMA ATHLETES

 

FUN lẹsẹkẹsẹ Tu: Lewiston, Maine (Kẹsán 4, 2016) – Rachael Joyce has her civil engineering degree from the University of Maine. Jessica Borga is a veterinary technician from Lakeland, Florida.

Read those one-line biographies of the two women and they probably do not fit whatever is your personal profile of a mixed-martial-artist. And perhaps that presumption, and maybe a lingering societal bias against female fighters, is the reason Joyce and Borga have struggled mightily to find opponents in their corners of the country.

Each woman will end what is almost a one-year hiatus from the cage when Joyce (1-0) welcomes Borga (2-1) to Maine in a bantamweight bout at “NEF 25: Heroes and Villains.” New England Fights returns to its hub venue, Androscoggin Bank Colisee, lori Saturday, Kẹsán 10.

“I’ve had one fight, kẹhin October. I’ve found it really hard to find fights. It’s just tough. Maine doesn’t have the population density for it. It’s just hard to find that pool of fighters,” Joyce said. “Early in your career you want to build that experience close to home. It’s the best thing for your whole team, given the commitment that is involved.”

Joyce, who lives in the Penobscot County village of Veazie, splits her training time between Bangor, Portland and Boston.

The competitive grass is no greener for Borga, who is known to her fans as “The Black Widow” and is coached by Ross Kellin.

“My coach has scheduled fights for me that have fallen through. I was supposed to fight eight times this year, and this will be my first one.

Borga was beaten badly in her previous bout, a November 2015 clash against Caitlin Sammons for which she weighed in at 126.5 poun, just above the flyweight limit.

She said that women feel added pressure to make drastic weight cuts due to the lack of available fight opportunities, and in her case it was especially dangerous.

“I learned that I will never fight at 125 lẹẹkansi,” Borga said “It was my own fault. I lost 25 poun in two weeks. I was sick in camp, and I fought sick.”

Before the episode was over, Borga was hospitalized twice with strep throat, a kidney infection and a bladder infection.

“I do believe (the weight cut) was part of it,” she said. “You’re putting that strain on your body and your mind. My mental game struggled with what I had to put myself through. I think it’s harder for women, also. I won’t ever do that again. I learned that it’s better to withdraw than to take a loss.”

Borga has experienced no such issues in this camp. She said her energy level is way up and that she can train harder for longer periods of time.

She also is eager to visit from the Sunshine State, an eagerness that isn’t lost on her opponent.

“When an opponent is flying up from Florida, that’s exciting,” Joyce said. “It shows that she’s really committed to it. It is hard to find opponents who are as committed as you are.”

Both women are BJJ blue belts. Joyce has trained in the discipline for more than two years.

It is an extension of her childhood, when she played three varsity sports in each year of high school. She joked that she strongly considered a fourth.

“I was always the girl who tried to convince my parents to let me play football,” Joyce said. “They would not hear any of it. I’m sure they’re thrilled that their 20-something-year-old daughter is now a fighter. Ṣe Ko, they’re supportive, but now it’s my decision.”

Joyce never tried individual sports before the combat realm, but she quickly developed into a fan of women’s MMA as it exploded in popularity at the UFC level.

“Miesha Tate and Ronda Rousey were coming up, ati igba yen (UFC president) Dana White had his famous line that ‘there will never be women in UFC,” Joyce said. “I saw what they were doing and I said, ‘I can do that. I’m going to do that.’”

Now the women wait for a spike in female participation that has not appeared to follow the success of those international role models.

Joyce said she received invitations to fight in New Jersey earlier this year but that those, also, would have required an uncomfortable cut to a same-day weigh-in of 125 or even 115 poun.

So she retreated into a game of train-and-wait. Thanks to the like-minded, equally fight-challenged Borga, the wait is almost over.

“I’ve always loved MMA, always loved fighting. I guess I was known for that as a kid. Everybody who knows me always pushed me to get into this,” Borga said. “I tried eight years ago and found out right away that I was pregnant, so that put a stop to it. When my son turned five, Mo ti wi, ‘It’s now or never.’ I started training and developed really fast. My coaches said I had a knack for it.”

Nsii Belii on Kẹsán 10 ti wa ni ṣeto fun 7 p.m. The current docket for “NEF 25: Heroes and Villains” includes four professional boxing matches, six pro mixed martial arts bouts and five amateur MMA scraps. Tickets bẹrẹ ni $25 ki o si wa o si wa ni www.TheColisee.com tabi nipa pipe awọn Colisee apoti ọfiisi ni 207.783.2009, itẹsiwaju 525.

Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii lori iṣẹlẹ ati ija kaadi awọn imudojuiwọn, jọwọ lọsi awọn igbega ká aaye ayelujara ni www.NewEnglandFights.com. Ni afikun, o le wo awọn fidio NEF ni www.youtube.com/NEFMMA, tẹle wọn lori Twitternefights ki o si da awọn osise Facebook egbe "New England njà."

MARLOES COENEN RECEIVES NEW OPPONENT AHEAD OF ‘BELLATOR 155’ — ALEXIS DUFRESNE REPLACES JULIA BUDD

Santa Monica, CALIF. (Le 10, 2016) – Due to injury, Julia Budd (8-2) has been forced to withdraw from her inaugural Bellator MMA Women’s Featherweight Championship Bout against Marloes Coenen (23-6). Nitorina na, Alexis Dufresne (5-2) will take her place and challenge Coenen during the featured preliminary contest of "Bellator 155: Carvalho vs. Manhoef " ni CenturyLink Arena ni Boise, Idaho, lori Le 20.

The fight joins a card that already features a colossal Middleweight World Championship main event, ninu eyi ti Rafael Carvalho (12-1) defends rẹ igbanu lodi si awọn Idaj Melvin "No Mercy" Manhoef (30-12-1). Ni afikun, former Bellator MMA featherweight titlist Pat Curran (21-7) yoo pada si igbese fun igba akọkọ niwon June, nigbati o bi mẹẹta awọn resilient Georgi Karakhanyan (24-5-1) ninu awọn kaadi ká àjọ-akọkọ iṣẹlẹ. The last two men to challenge for Will Brooks’ lightweight title, Marcin Held (21-4) ati Dave Jansen (20-3) yoo tun jẹ ni igbese. Rounding out the televised portion of the event will be two heavyweight fights, nigbawo Dan Charles (10-3) pàdé Augusto Sakai (9-0) ati Joey Beltran (17-12) gba lori Chase Gormley (12-5).

Tiketi fun "Bellator 155: Carvalho vs. Manhoef " bẹrẹ ni o kan $25 ki o si wa lori tita bayi ni Bellator.com, awọn CenturyLink Arena Box Office tabi CenturyLinkArenaBoise.com. Awọn iṣẹlẹ airs ifiwe ati ki o free lori Spike ni 9 p.m. ATI/8 p.m. CT, while the can’t-miss preliminary card airs live on Bellator.comati The Bellator Mobile App.

A former Strikeforce Women’s Bantamweight Champion, Marloes Coenen, is riding a two-fight winning streak and undefeated record under the Bellator MMA fray into her bout with Dufresne. “Rumina” began her career winning eight consecutive fights and 13 of her first 14. The 35-year-old has been competing professionally since 2000 and has been an integral part of the progression of women’s mixed martial arts, challenging some of the best that the sport has to offer. Bayi, it’s back to the drawing board for the Dutch submission specialist when she looks to spoil the Bellator MMA debut of Alexis Dufresne.

The 25-year-old Alexis Dufresne began her career with a blazing start, earning victories in her first five scraps, all of which she ended in the first round. Born in Temecula, Calif., “Sneaky Zebra” has strung together an impressive resume, including three straight first round knockout wins dating back to her 2013-14 seasons and most recently two appearances for the UFC. Dufresne will be making her Bellator MMA debut tókàn Friday and hopes to get back to her winning ways when she fills in for the absent Julia Budd on short notice.

Pari "Bellator 155: Carvalho vs. Manhoef "Ija Card

Bellator MMA Middleweight World Title ija: Rafael Carvalho (12-1) la. Melvin Manhoef (30-12-1)

Bellator MMA Featherweight Co-Main ti oyan: Pat Curran (21-7) la. Georgi Karakhanyan (24-5-1)

Bellator MMA Heavyweight ẹya ara Bout: Dan Charles (10-3) la. Augusto Sakai (9-0)

Bellator MMA Lightweight ẹya ara Bout: Dave Jansen (20-3) la. Marcin Held (21-4)

Bellator MMA Heavyweight ẹya ara Bout: Joey Beltran (17-12) la. Chase Gormley (12-5)

 

Alakoko Kaadi

 

Bellator MMA Featherweight Alakoko Bout: Marloes Coenen (23-6) la. Alexis Dufresne (5-2)

Bellator MMA Bantamweight Alakoko Bout: Joe Hamilton (3-0) la. Tyler Freeland (3-0)

Bellator MMA Flyweight Alakoko Bout: Veta Arteaga (1-0) la. Jackie Vandenburgh (0-1)

Bellator MMA Featherweight Alakoko Bout: Vince Morales (3-1) la. Hamilton Ash (3-1)

Bellator MMA Bantamweight Alakoko Bout: Brendon Raftery (4-2) la. Casey Johnson (4-0)

Bellator MMA Lightweight Alakoko Bout: Scott Thometz (9-5) la. Josh Tyler (7-3)

Bellator MMA Middleweight Alakoko Bout: Sean Powers (9-5) la. Will Noland (15-6)

Bellator MMA Bantamweight Alakoko Bout: Ricky Steele (5-0) la. Erick Cronkhite (2-1)

Bellator MMA Bantamweight Alakoko Bout: Jesse Brock (21-8) la. Olly Bradstreet (39-12)

 

An Open FU to UFC President DanaEffing” funfun!

wtf

Nipa: Rich Bergeron

Those who know me personally would all say I am a mellow individual, until you seriously cross me, bi, for instance, if you become the subject of an investigative report I’m working on, tabi sue me for $25 million. Sometimes I may take things like that as a sign you might not want me to really find out who you are and what you do behind closed doors to screw hard working people over.

Ose yi, a certain individual who won’t even let me follow him in Twitter (https://twitter.com/danawhite) pissed me off to the point where I could only think of one thing to do. Because I’m officially blacklisted in every possible way by the UFC brass, and have even had restraining orders placed against my directly contacting the Fertittas and ANY UFC fighter, my best option is to publish a drastic diatribe here I am just going to call myOPEN FUto DanaEffing” funfun.

I’m sure Mr. White will not take my calls or subject himself to a one on one interview with me. Nítorí, I will have to settle for a written FUand a multi-tiered and multi-purpose FU.

FU, DanaEffing” funfun… for many, many reasonstoo many for one small blog post to do justice, but let’s just say Most of all FU….

For what you THINK you know about Holly Holm

Hey, Dana, you wanna talk about youreffingreality showLooking For a Fight????” I was actually looking for a fight when I watched that old realityshit show when you were supposed to box Tito Ortiz, but HE magically backed out at the last minute.

Bayi, you, DANAEFFINGWHITE, are telling Holly Holm about a decision YOU think she didn’t think through enough??? And now you act like someone pissed in your Wheaties because you have two upset wins at UFC 196 to work around and figure out how to make sense of somehow.

Booeffinghoo, buddy.

Welcome to how things don’t go as planned sometimes in the fight business, you ungrateful prick.

Do you wanna be aneffing” Olugbeleke, Danaeffing” funfun???

Holly Holm Was the Bantamweight Champion of the UFC when she allowed HER Manager (not Danaeffing” funfun) to negotiate the Tate fight on her behalf, and she knew (and her long-time manager knew, ju) what she was doing and what she wanted. And guesseffingwhat, Dana? She wanted to fight.

Binu, DanaEffing” funfun, but Holly didn’t want to sit on aneffingsideline waiting for Ronda Rousey to finish hereffingROADHOUSE REMAKE!

Holly wanted to go to workbut unfortunately she has to work for a boss who has no idea what it’s like to step into HER office and handle HER daily workload with such tenacity, kilasi, dignity and grace.

And I think maybe she looks back a bit differently than you do, Dana, with noeffingregrets whatsoever for putting her absolute all into that fight and just plain getting caught in her one area of weakness in a battle where she likely would have won a three-round fight. Maybe if YOU were a fighter, Dana, you might get that whole concept. Maybe losing in this case only makes her better, ni okun, and more durable as a career mixed martial artist. Who gives a damn if it makes her less marketable in your eyes? What do you really know, anyway?

UNLIKE YOU, DanaEffing” funfun, Holly actually respects Miesha Tate and thought it would be a challenge to fight her. Yeah, she lost, but damn, she was absolutely correct about it being a challenge. I think the fight will go down as one of the greatest battles in female MMA history.

Bayi, why don’t you open youreffingeyes, Dana, watch the fight again, and quit bitching about what should have happened in that cage you never fought in yourself.

Be grateful you have a champion you just paid $92,000 in fight pay (before bonuses) to take your organization’s belt from the girl you WANTED TO WIN (and paid $500,000 just to be there). It may not be what you expected, but the anxiety you feel about it is what you DESERVE to feel for being such a douchebag to the fighters who built the UFC.

My biggest questions on this subject for Dana are: Why are you such a biased, crooked asshole who can’t bother to give Miesha the time of day FOR ALL HER HARD WORK? Why can’t you give credit where it is dueon both sides of that fight? Why can’t you shut theeffup about what you think Holly or her management should have or could have waited for?

It’s not your place to look back with 20/20 hindsight and act like Holly and her manager should have gone all Nostradamus on this fight when you obviously didn’t see this shit coming, boya, you dome-headed dimwit.

Awọn onija “effing” ija, Dana. That’s what theyeffingdo, which you should know, since I am pretty sure you used to be aneffingmanager of MMA fighters yourself. Bẹẹni, that was many moons ago, but how could you forget?

Fighters don’t sit on their asses on corporate jets and stand at podiums in front of the press all day to earn theeffingpaltry paychecks your organization pays out to most of them. Most fighters simply cannot afford to wait around for shit to happen or for someoneworthyenough in your eyes to step up and fight them.

Some fighters need to feed their kids. All of them need to pay their bills and for everything else involved with training camps, daily living expenses, travel and whatever costs medical insurance doesn’t cover when they have to address nagging injuries. Your shitty Reebok deal made it virtually impossible to get any other outside sponsors to help pay for anything like that stuff for many fighters, Dana.

Welcome to selling out and forgetting where you came from, Dana. You used to care more about fighters. Now you act like fighting in a cage is just like doing any other 9-5 ise. It’s not. O ni “effinghard work.

Nítorí, Yeah, Holly chose to fight instead of waiting for Rousey to be ready for the rematch. And you think she needs your opinion now that everything didn’t work out as planned for you both?

FU, Dana.

She hurts a lot worse than you, and I can guaran-effing-tee that.

Oh…ati…bi o ti le je pe…fighters are way more responsible for the growth and success of the UFC/Zuffa organization than you ever have been. And that’s real talk, you rich bitch with a stick up your ass because you were never good enough in your life to ever have your own official fight.

Nítorí, get over the God complex and learn to respect ALL of your fighters, not just the ones you want to see win because you might think you can work with them better or you think they will move the organization in a better direction. Respect the effort, the sacrifice and the pain ALL your fighters go through each and every day to get where they get. That belt you put on Miesha’s waist was EARNED, and don’t you ever think it iseffingcool to call the fact that Holly Holm had the guts to face Miesha Tatea mistake.

It rings hollow, especially when I would consider that handing you a microphone to talk about MMA at all was THE greatest mistake the sport ever made, akoko! Anyone who would try to knock a former champion down a peg that way in his own organization does not deserve to be recognized as that organization’s president.

You have no clue what it’s really like to fight, and your criticism of Holly Holm tells me you can never possibly understand the mindset that led her to take the Tate fight and not wait an idle year for RondaeffingRousey to be ready to appear at one of your precious shows.

Nítorí, FU Dana White for treating your former champ like she’s an idiot who doesn’t know how to control her own career without you butting your stupid, bald head into it. Holly’s fine without your advice, and she trusts her manager, which might be something you’re not familiar with, but for other people it is actually a reality of doing business with legitimate people.

 

FU, Dana for being a piss-poor ambassador for the sport, disrespecting fighters who bleed (and sometimes suffer lifelong injuries) for you and the sport, and totally underestimating and failing to grasp what it really takes to actually be a professional fighter who actually competes against other fighters

Do you remember the days when you had to settle for being a lowly boxercise instructor because your boxing trainer Boston slapped you too hard in the ear once? You never had a single competitive fight in your life, Danaeffing” funfun, and that’s a DOCUMENTED FACT!

Do you ever even look back at those days before the silver-spoon-fed Fertittas helped you claw your greedy, selfish, egotistical ass into the position of OFFICIAL UFC MOUTHPIECE?

Do you remember those hairy days when you blew through $40 million of Fertitta funds to perpetrate theZuffa Mythwhile claiming credit for the UFC brass singlehandedly legitimizing the sport and getting it regulated all by youreffingselves? As if not a single FIGHTER nor any other industry professional who pioneered MMA before you dipped your greedy little paws into it had anything to do with it?

Your Mom remembers thosecoulda been a contender” ọjọ, Dana..when you thought you might be able to have an actual fight with another human being. Your own mother remembers even though you and one of your sleazy friends tried to silence her, BASH HER ONLINE, and even blacklist her BOOK, ju.

Do you remember the days when even Floyd Mayweather, Jr. thought you were cool, back when your daily driver was aneffingHonda, Dana? Floyd Remembers. He knew you long before you could afford to blow a normal person’s yearly pay on a single hand of poker.

You’re in a different place now, Danaeffing” funfun, and it’s a delusional place. Like on the distant planet you live on, people actually believe YOU really, nitootọ, trulyeffingknow what it’s ACTUALLY like to be aneffingfighter? Do you actually believe YOU somehow could ever REALLY know that feeling?

REALLY?

Se o mo what A FIGHTER is, don’t you, Dana? A fighter is a man or woman who has the courage to willingly step into unarmed combat against another actual man or woman instead of just criticizing up and down the guys and girls who do have the guts to actually stand across from another human being while knowing and internalizing that the accepted goal is to physically destroy each other.

A fighter, in more simple terms, ni “one who fights.And let’s be clear about oneeffingthing, Danaeffing” funfun, I know fighters, ati YOU are no fighter.

You are nothing like a fighter, Danaeffing” funfun, and you nevereffing” yoo jẹ. You are too weak, both physically and mentally. Until we see you go through a six-week training camp and then get into the cage against someone and kick his ass, we shouldn’t have to listen to one damncoulda,” “shoulda,” tabi “wouldaout of your cornfed mouth about what you think of any particular fighter’s performance or decision making process. Those people have the guts to do what you will NEVER do yourself, and you ought to respect that.

FU Dana WhiteFor not recognizing Real Fighters Like Miesha Tate and Nate Diaz who keep at it no matter what and NEVER seem to earn your ULTIMATE RESPECT….

Nate Diaz stepped up to fight Conor McGregor for a reason. He had nothing to lose, and he wasn’t intimidated one bit. He famoulsy went on television with Fox Sports 1 on a split screen with Conor before that welterweight fight and quipped that his nemesis had already been choked out before, “by two lames.Diaz also had the perfect instinct to add humourously that McGregor’s choke losses happened, “like a week ago.

Diaz beat Conor in the shit-talk game long before he ever slapped him down and slipped that choke around his neck in the cage. The media created by that freakshow fight might have stopped the unchecked rise of your big, bold, six-headed dragon champion, but it created a new monster at the same time. And he’s a Reebok-hating, scowling, swearing, Stockton-slapping Mother-F$#king BEAST who doesn’t care what anyone else thinks about what he does or says.

You might think Diaz and his attitude arebad for business,” but I think his victory was the best thing that could ever happen to all you smug punks running the UFC. It just proves once and for all that you do not control the MMA universe.

Nate Diaz went without respect and credit for being an MMA pioneer and a good UFC soldier for far too long. The bitterness brewed and boiled within him, and I loved every second of him letting it pour out in post-fight interviews after he choked the shit out of Conor until the Irish bloke tapped theeffout and left Dana White drooling in a stupor at the thought of having to congratulate a man who’s become more of a mortal enemy than a member of the bigteam.

More power to Nate and all the crazy, abrasive, in-your-face Diaz brother types out there in the UFC who will fight DanaeffingWhite’s flamboyant fire with even more bravado and brash talk of their own. They can always say, “I learned it by watching you, Baldfather!”

As for Miesha Tate, she deserves true respect and admiration for being champ now after picking herself off the mat twice in the face of grueling losses to Rousey. Kudos to Tate for continuing her career and relentlessly focusing on getting by that Rousey armbar once and for all.

Though Miesha never did solve that Rousey submission dilemma, trying at all costs to get another crack at the belt paid dividends at UFC 196. Her never quit attitude led her to an opportunity of a lifetime, and she capitalized on it. Bayi, Dana, you actually have to pay this young lady what most of her fans would say she was worth a long time ago.

And now you simply have to treat Tate with a bit of reverence and appreciation for once in your ungrateful life, Danaeffing” funfun. I know it must pain you so much to give this young lady the credit she’s worked so incredibly hard for, because maybe she touched a nerve when she called you out in the past for being the true clueless and disrespectful prick you really are. She was right, and you were wrong about how great she really is at fighting. Then again, weren’t you also WRONG about women fighting in the cage, akoko?

Nítorí, you DON’T wanna be a fighter, Ogbeni. funfun? Then step aside and let the people who DO wanna be fighters go to battle for you so you can ride around the world on your jet and act like you know what theeffyou’re talking about when you stand in front of a microphone to describe the sport’s true athletes and what they do to make a living in mixed martial arts.

The line from Dana that most stands out to me as comblete BS in this whole debacle is this one:

“He’s an old boxing guy who thinks he’s smart and he isn’t,” White said of Fresquez [Holm’s Manager]. “I feel bad for Holly because I don’t know if she really knows what she lost.”

I have only two moreeffingquestions for you Danaeffing” funfun…

1.) What makes you think you are really in anyeffingposition to EVER know or understand what Holly Holm lost the other night? Aside from a few bad poker hands and tons of respect, the only thing you ever lost is your mind.

2.) Doesn’t your backhanded quote about Holm’s manager describe your own shitty character a whole lot better than that of Mr. Fresquez?

ATI…just in case after reading all this anyone STILL needs yet another reason to have beef with the Baldfather:

AWON OBIRIN ṣàkóso MMA ẹyẹ AT NEF XIX IN Lewiston

 

Kira Innocenti (l) ati Angela Young (r) Fọto ti iteriba Tracey McCue
Kira Innocenti (l) ati Angela Young (r), Fọto ti iteriba Tracey McCue

Lewiston, Maine (August 31, 2015) - New England njà (NEF), America ká nọmba-ọkan agbegbe ija igbega, yoo mu awọn oniwe-ọgọrun adalu-ologun-ona (MMA) ìṣẹlẹ, “NEF XIX,” lojo satide, Kẹsán 12, 2015 ni Androscoggin Bank Colisée in Lewiston, Maine. The fight card will feature two amateur women’s bouts. Angela Young (0-0) ti Young ká MMA ni Bangor wa ni se eto lati ṣe rẹ Uncomfortable lodi si Rachel Reinheimer (1-0) from team Sityodtong. Young’s teammate Kira Innocenti (0-0) ti wa ni tun se eto lati ṣe rẹ Uncomfortable lodi si Hannah Sparrell (0-0) lati First Class MMA ni Brunswick.

 

Angela Young ni awọn aya ti Chris Young – owner and founder of Young’s MMA. She views her debut fight as a way of testing herself.

 

It’s important for me to test myself,” wi Young, “ko nikan ninu agọ ẹyẹ wáKẹsán 12th, but also through the fight that’s happened the last eight weeks leading up to the NEF event. I feel the fight is essentially a showcase and representation of the grueling training sessions and endless hours in the gym that took place prior to fight night. Living the MMA lifestyle to me meant more than diet modifications and strict training schedules. Athletically, o je diẹ ẹ da nipasẹ awọn idiwo ati titari mi ifilelẹ lọ bi a oludije ni a ọna ti o ti ko ti ni idanwo. O je nipa tooto lati ara mi, mi ati awọn olukọni mi teammates ti mo ti mina mi ọtun lati Akobaratan ninu agọ ẹyẹ.”

 

Nibo ni awọn ti o ti kọja obirin ti a ti relegated si awọn sideshow ati aratuntun ipin ti ija idaraya iṣẹlẹ, bi Boxing, obirin MMA ti ko nikan jinde si dogba ipo pẹlu awọn ọkunrin ká MMA, o ni o ni, ni diẹ ninu awọn ọna, surpassed it. One has to look only to the highest level of the sport to see this trend. Women’s fights are now routinely present on the main cards of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). The promotion’s top star, ati awọn oniwe-ga san elere, ni awọn oniwe-obirin bantamweight asiwaju Ronda Rousey (12-0). The women competing on the September 12 kaadi yoo wa ni forefront ti a ronu lati faagun anfani fun awon obirin ni awọn agbegbe ipele.

 

“MMA fun awọn obirin ni ko hugely o yatọ ju ti o jẹ fun awọn ọkunrin,” so Young. “O han ni, MMA jẹ akọ a bori idaraya, but successful women in the MMA world are on the rise. Latara iwe yi mo ti ija ibudó grappled, sparred ati jijakadi pẹlu awọn Young ká MMA ija egbe ati ti wọn ti ti unrelentingly atilẹyin. Jije ọkan ninu awọn akọkọ obirin awọn onija jade ti Young ká esan ni awọn oniwe-mọni (bi daradara bi ni iyawo si Ọgbẹni. Young) but it’s also a spotlight I’m hoping will inspire other women who otherwise wouldn’t have pursued MMA. I would bet the women’s fights on September 12th won’t be unlike the others we’ve seen at prior NEF events. Mo ti reti awọn obirin lati fi on a nla show nitori a ma ni nkankan si lati fi mule. Mo ti fi ẹjẹ, lagun ati omije sinu ikẹkọ ati awọn ti o dara gbagbọ Mo n ro mi alatako ṣe kanna. Ti o a wi, awọn obirin ti wa ni lilọ lati wa lẹhin ti o lati gbin igi ni won awọn NEF ẹyẹ.”

 

Mejeeji Young ká teammate, Kira Innocenti, bi daradara ni o ni rẹ alatako ni “NEF XIX,” Rachel Reinheimer, dabi lati concur pẹlu Young ká wiwo lori awọn dekun idagbasoke ti awọn obirin ká MMA.

 

“Women ká MMA jẹ lori awọn jinde,” Said Innocenti. “Kọọkan discipline kọni a obinrin nkankan o ko ko mo nipa ara. Mo ti ri ti o kọ igbekele ninu ara mi ati ọpọlọpọ awọn miran. Awọn obirin sii lori awọn awọn maati, awọn dara. Fans can expect my teammate, Angie, ati awọn ara mi lati fun o wa gbogbo ki o si lọ si ogun kan bi awọn ọkunrin alagbara ni Young ká MMA ṣe. A ti sise lile lati soju wa-idaraya. A yoo ja pẹlu igberaga, ife gidigidi, ati pẹlu awọn alagbara igun nwa jade fun wa. Mo le dájúdájú pé o awọn obirin bouts yoo jẹ manigbagbe.”

 

“Women ká MMA jẹ a idaraya kan fẹ eyikeyi miiran,” so Reinheimer ti Everett, Massachusetts. “O ni ko ohun igbese movie ibi ti awọn akoni gbalaye jade sinu awọn Woods fun ọjọ mẹta lati irin ni pẹlu a ti ologun ona oluwa ati ki o si ṣẹgun ohun gbogbo ogun. O ni ko bar a ataburo. O ni ko pada a horo kan ambush. Awọn obirin wọnyi ni o wa pataki elere idaraya ti o irin diligently fun years ju ni lilo awọn ikẹkọ, itanna ati oro wa. Women ti o ti njijadu ni ija idaraya na egbegberun ti awọn wakati ti ẹjẹ, lagun ati omije aṣepé wọn idaraya. Wọn ṣe ẹbọ. Pẹlupẹlu, nibẹ ni o wa ofin ati akoko ifilelẹ lọ ati ailewu ona. Nigba ti ẹnikan jẹ unfamiliar pẹlu awọn agutan ti awọn obirin ká MMA, Mo afiwe ti o si Boxing tabi adaṣe, something else that people are more familiar with. The pool of women fighters in New England is deepening fast and the fact that there are more women’s bouts on fight cards reflects that. Mi alatako ati ki o Mo ni o wa mejeeji lati pataki, wonsi ago. A ni o wa mejeeji iya ati awọn ti o gba a pupo ti ipinnu ati drive lati se yi idaraya nigba ti juggling iṣẹ ati awọn ọmọ. Mo ti a ti ṣiṣẹ tirelessly pẹlu mi egbe niwon mi kẹhin ija lati mu mi game ni gbogbo aspect. Emi ni ki dupe fun awọn iyanu ikẹkọ ati teammates ni Sityodtong ti o Titari mi ki lile. Lori Kẹsán 12, o le reti a ogun.”

 

Ọpọlọpọ awọn ẹni-kọọkan, mejeeji awọn ọkunrin ati awọn obirin, who join MMA gyms do not do so initially intending to become an active cage fighter. On any given day, one can walk into any MMA gym and find a diverse population of trainees. Men and women, arugbo ati ọmọde, bulu kola ati funfun kola, all train side by side. Most will never step foot in a cage in front of thousands of screaming fans. Most are there to get in shape or learn self-defense. Some, sibẹsibẹ, ti wa ni buje nipa awọn idije kokoro.

 

“Mo ti a ṣe si awọn MMA aye lẹhin wíwọlé ọmọbinrin mi soke fun Jiu Jitsu kilasi lerongba o yoo jẹ anfani ti rẹ fun awọn ara olugbeja aspect lowo ninu awọn idaraya,” idasi Hanna Sparrell. “Mo ti wo bi o ṣubu ni ife pẹlu awọn ere, nini agbara ati igbekele, and was quick to decide that it was something I needed to be doing too. It didn’t take long before I fell in love with Jiu Jitsu myself, ati ki o be fe lati Ṣawari awọn miiran ti awọn MMA aye. Kikopa ninu awọn idaraya ti di a keji ile fun mi ati awọn ọmọbinrin mi, mi ikẹkọ awọn alabašepọ, a second family. Every day I walk through the doors of the gym is a test, o ni a igbeyewo ti athleticism, bi daradara bi a igbeyewo ti opolo ati awọn ẹdun drive. Niwon ni a ṣe si awọn adalu ti ologun ona aye ti mo ti fi ara mi, okan, ati ọkàn sinu ikẹkọ, ati nfigagbaga lori yi ija jẹ pataki si mi fun ọpọlọpọ awọn idi, ko nikan lati soju fun ara mi ati iṣẹ mi lile, sugbon tun lati soju gbogbo iṣẹ àṣekára, ìyàsímímọ, ati itunu ti mo ti gba lati ọrẹ mi, oluko, ikẹkọ awọn alabašepọ, and fellow fighters along the way. I think MMA training for woman is a great outlet for many reasons, o physically jẹ nla a sere, ati ki o jẹ tun kan ti o dara fọọmu ti "therapy" ni opin ti a ṣee eni lara ọjọ. Mo ni ọpọlọpọ awọn obirin ni mo irin pẹlu, ko gbogbo awọn ti wọn wa ni gbimọ lori ija, ṣugbọn awọn anfani ti awọn idaraya ti wa ni tun wa nibẹ, nwọn si ni ife ti o kan kanna.”

 

Innocenti, bi ọpọlọpọ awọn, di lowo ninu ija idaraya bi a ona lati gba ni, o si duro ni, shape. Little did she know when her journey started some two years ago that it would take her into an MMA cage with thousands watching her compete.

 

“Dán ara mi ni a adalu ti ologun ona ija jẹ pataki si mi ni ọpọlọpọ awọn ṣakiyesi. Odun meji seyin, Mo ti wà apọju iwọn ati ki ìjàkadì lati ri kan ni ilera, a nmu ona. Lọjọ kan, Mo ji ati mu aye nipa awọn nìyí ati ni idaji odun kan, sọnu Ogota poun lori ara mi. Mo tewogba pe ipenija, tele, ati ki o fe miran. Aaron “Oró” Lacey so fun mi nipa Young ká MMA ati ki o Mo ti a compelled lati ṣayẹwo ti o jade. Lẹhin ti sokale nipasẹ awọn ilẹkun, gbiyanju jade gbogbo awọn ti awọn kilasi, ki o si pade awọn ebi ti o ṣe o bẹ pataki, Mo ti a mo e lara. Mo ti ṣe ti o a ìlépa lati wa ni ọkan ninu awọn akọkọ obirin onija lori awọn ijiyan julọ ako ija egbe ni New England. Mo ti nigbagbogbo ti a oludije. Mo gbadun ara mi ni nija ati titari ifilelẹ lọ ti o ti wa ni ro lati wa soro lati se aseyori. Ngbe awọn adalu ti ologun ona igbesi aye ni alakikanju. O nilo diẹ ìyàsímímọ ju mo ti lailai riro ṣee. O fi opin si o ati ki o duro ti o pada si oke sinu awọn eniyan ti o iwongba ti wa ni. Eleyi jẹ ija pataki nitori ti mo ti a ti spoiled pẹlu ohun iyanu egbe nipa mi ẹgbẹ ti o ti wa ni kọ nipa awọn julọ motivating ati wunilori awọn olukọni. Emi pinnu lati ṣe wọn lọpọlọpọ ati ki o dupe wọn pẹlu ọwọ mi jí dìde.”

 

“ADALU ologun Arts ni awọn Gbẹhin igbeyewo ti awọn eniyan ẹmí lori gbogbo ipele: ara, irorun, ati ki o taratara,” wi Reinheimer. “Mo ni a sisun ifẹ lati mọ bi o jina Mo le lọ. I like exceeding expectations and pushing my limits and that’s MMA in a nutshell. Since I started training in martial arts, mi aye ti di ààlà-kere. Mi aye lori akete na ti dara si mi aye pa awọn akete ki o si idakeji. O n bọ kuro gbogbo awọn kobojumu distractions ati distilled ẹmi mi si isalẹ lati ohun ti gan ọrọ, ati jade kuro ninu awọn iwọn. Mo lero bi o ti n se iranwo mi di Elo jo si mi nile ara. O ni ti o dara ju ti atijọ ti ologun ona ati igbalode aye.”

 

Ninu awọn mẹrin awọn obirin ija lori awọn “NEF XIX” kaadi, only Reinheimer has actively competed in the past. She dominated her opponent this past spring on her way to a unanimous decision victory in her debut. All of the women fighting on September 12 ni Lewiston wa ni yiya fun awọn anfani.

 

“NEF jẹ a ri to igbega pẹlu a nla rere,” wi Reinheimer. “I was a spectator at their very first fight card back in 2012. I love Maine and the crowd is awesome there. Nko le duro!”

 

“Mo ro pe awọn egeb le reti a nla show nitõtọ,” exclaimed Sparrell. “Igba diẹ sii ju awọn obirin ko njà ti fihan lati wa ni lalailopinpin idanilaraya, a ti dajudaju fẹ lati fi mule ara wa yẹ ni yi iṣafihan akọ-ti jẹ gaba idaraya. Eleyi jẹ ni Uncomfortable fun mẹta jade ti mẹrin ti awọn obinrin lori kaadi yi, ki Mo mọ nibẹ ni lilọ lati je pupo ti a okan ati ipinnu sọ sinu wọnyi njà. Mo mo, tikalararẹ, Emi ni gan yiya lati soju! I couldn’t be more excited to be making my MMA debut in the NEF cage; Emi ti ṣọ ki ọpọlọpọ ninu awọn onija mo idolize ati ki o wo soke to ni yi idaraya lati awọn ni yio ti awọn Androscoggin Bank Colisée, nini awọn anfani lati wa ni bayi jade nibẹ pẹlu wọn gan ni a otitọ ọlá.”

 

“Bi September 12th nyara yonuso, Mo n di diẹ yiya ati ki o setan lati gba ninu agọ ẹyẹ,” wi Young. “Eleyi ti oyimbo a ajo ati Mo wa dupe fun awọn anfani ti ṣiṣe mi magbowo MMA Uncomfortable pẹlu NEF.”

 

“Emi ecstatic lati ṣe mi MMA Uncomfortable pẹlu NEF on September 12th,” Said Innocenti. “Mo ti sise tirelessly lati gba anfani yi ati Emi ni yiya ti awọn akoko ti de.”

 

New England njà’ tókàn ìṣẹlẹ, “NEF XIX,” gba ibi lori Satidee, Kẹsán 12, 2015 ni Androscoggin Bank Colisée in Lewiston, Maine. Tiketi fun “NEF XIX” bẹrẹ ni o kan $25 ki o si ni o wa lori tita to bayi ni www.TheColisee.com tabi nipa pipe awọn Colisée apoti ọfiisi ni 207.783.2009 x 525. Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii lori iṣẹlẹ ati ija kaadi awọn imudojuiwọn, jọwọ lọsi awọn igbega ká aaye ayelujara ni www.NewEnglandFights.com. Ni afikun, o le wo awọn fidio NEF ni www.youtube.com/NEFMMA, tẹle wọn lori Twitternefights ki o si da awọn osise Facebook egbe "New England njà."

 

Nipa New England njà

 

New England njà ("NEF") ni a ija iṣẹlẹ ni igbega ile. NEF ká ise ni lati ṣẹda awọn ga didara isele fun Maine ká onija ati awọn onijakidijagan bakanna. NEF ká executive egbe ni o ni sanlalu iriri ni ija ogun idaraya isakoso, isele gbóògì, media ajosepo, tita, ofin ati ipolongo.

Meji-aye akoko asiwaju, obinrin afẹṣẹja Amanda Serrano blasts Ronda Rousey ká olukọni, ati ki o mu ipenija

Serrano with the WBO title
Meji-aye akoko asiwaju, Amanda Serrano (24-1-1, 18 KO ká) lati Puerto Rico, ati awọn olukọni rẹ / faili, Jordani Maldonado ro o gan alaibọwọ fun awọn Boxing awujo, awọn comments ṣe nipasẹ Edmond Tarverdyan, olukọni ti UFC World asiwaju, Ronda Rousey in www.mmafighting.com.
“Mo mọ o le se o,” Tarverdyan sọ MMA Gbigbogun, “Mo mọ o le win awọn Boxing aye akọle. Ronda spars pẹlu Boxing aye aṣaju ti o Punch ọnà le ju Cyborg,”, Tarverdyan tun fi kun pe, “Ronda ti kò nu kan yika ninu awọn idaraya. A yika. Pẹlu Boxing aye aṣaju-”.
“Pato Rousey ká olukọni ko ni eyikeyi imo nipa awọn idaraya ti Boxing. O jẹ gidigidi kan ti o dara Onija ni Octagon, ati ki o Mo gan yọ fun ohun gbogbo rẹ fun ti o ti ṣe. Rẹ alatako ko le apoti ki o si O rorun lati wo nla sugbon nigba ti nkọju si kan to ga didara afẹṣẹja pẹlu punching agbara bi emi tikarami, gba mi gbọ, ohun ni o wa maa ayipada. Ni a Boxing oruka, awọn kanfasi yio jẹ rẹ irorun agbegbe aago”.
Nipa Rousey ká ija kẹhin Saturday, ibi ti o segun Bethe Correia ni 34 -aaya, Serrano si wi, “Bi awọn kan Boxing ojuami ti wo, o si wò bi a oṣere titun magbowo Onija, gège gan jakejado punches pẹlu ko si cordination. Mo ti gbọ pe Cyborg ni kò fẹ lati wá si isalẹ lati awọn lightweight pipin lati gbejako Ronda, sugbon mo ti le lọ soke to 135, ati awọn ti a le yanju kan Boxing baramu ki emi ki o le fi mule rẹ ti ko tọ olukọni. Mo ni ẹẹkan lọ soke si awọn ti lightweight pipin, ati ki o ajo lọ si Argentina fun aye kan akọle ija. Ni igbehin, awọn esi ti o ti wà wipe mo ti di akọkọ lailai Puerto Rican obirin afẹṣẹja si gba a aye akọle ni meji àdánù kilasi”.
Serrano ká faili ati olukọni, Jordani Maldonado tokasi wipe “a ko koju ija miiran aza. A soju Boxing ati awọn ti a fẹ lati gba diẹ ninu awọn ọwọ. A wa o si wa fun eyikeyi sparring nwọn ki o le fẹ tabi a Boxing baramu, ki a le fi Edmond Tarverdyan bi o ti ko tọ si ni nipa Boxing”.
Lori August 15, 2014, Serrano ajo to Argentina lati koju si WBO Lightweight World asiwaju Maria 'Tily’ Maderna, ti o ni wipe akoko, ní meta aseyori akọle defenses, ṣugbọn kò le mu awọn aggressiveness ti Puerto Rican agbara puncher, ti o si pari ija ni kẹfa yika nipa ọna ti knockout.
Pẹlu yi gun, Serrano di akọkọ Puerto Rican obinrin afẹṣẹja lati win aye orúkọ oyè ni meji ìyapa (130-135).
Serrano ká akọkọ akọle j'oba wá ni September 2011 nigbati o ti lu jade Kimberly Connor ni akọkọ yika lati di awọn IBF World asiwaju ni Super featherweight pipin.

BELLATOR MMA SIGNS KERI ANNE TAYLOR-MELENDEZ TO AN EXCLUSIVE, MULTI-FIGHT KICKBOXING & MMA CONTRACT

 

Santa Monica, Calif. (July 24, 2015) – Bellator MMA is pleased to announce the signing of Keri Anne-Taylor Melendez si ohun iyasoto, olona-ija ti yio se. The 31-year-old has previously competed in kickboxing and muay Thai, but fully intends on transitioning to the sport of mixed martial arts in the future.

 

Taylor-Melendez will debut as a kickboxer in front of her home town on June 19 at the highly anticipated "Bellator: Dynamite”show in San Jose, Calif. An opponent for Taylor-Melendez has yet to be decided upon.

 

The oko ti tele WEC ati Strikeforce asiwaju Gilbert Melendez ati àjọ-eni ti El Nino Ikẹkọ ile-iṣẹ ni San Francisco, Taylor-Melendez akọkọ mu soke ija idaraya sunmo si 10 awọn ọdun sẹyin, making a name for herself on unsanctioned cards held in the Bay Area. Lẹhin ti racking soke a 4-1 magbowo gba, ó mú ẹbùn rẹ si awọn ọjọgbọn Circuit, Lọwọlọwọ Oun ni ibi ti o a 2-1 kickboxing gba.

 

“I’m very honored for the opportunity to fight on such a big stage with a great promotion and promoter. I actually fought for Scott Coker before Gilbert and we both have a great relationship with him, so I feel very comfortable with this situation,” Taylor-Melendez said. “Even though I haven’t been super active as a fighter I have never really stopped training and look forward to testing my skills as a muay Thai fighter and a mixed martial artist. My goal is to go out there and do my best and make my daughter, my family and team proud.”

Ija Kaadi kede FUN Kẹrin 11 NEF MMA iṣẹlẹ IN Lewiston

Lewiston, Maine (March 18, 2015) - New England njà (NEF), America ká nọmba-ọkan agbegbe ija igbega, pada si Androscoggin Bank Colisée ni Lewiston, Maine on April 11, 2015 pẹlu awọn oniwe-seventeenth adalu-ologun-ona (MMA) ìṣẹlẹ. Sẹyìn loni, awọn ile-kede ni ni kikun ija kaadi fun awọn iṣẹlẹ. Awọn kaadi ti wa ni se eto lati ẹya-ara kan ni kikun sileti ti mejeeji ọjọgbọn ati osere magbowo bouts. NEF awọn alaṣẹ jabo wipe àìpẹ lenu si awọn matchups tẹlẹ kede ti wa overwhelmingly rere.

 

“Emi ko le ranti nini yi ni irú ti esi si ija a SIM šaaju ki,” wi NEF àjọ-eni ati olugbeleke Nick DiSalvo. “Nibẹ ti wa ki Elo simi lori gbogbo ija ti a ti sọ kede. A ta jade ninu gbogbo ẹyẹ-ẹgbẹ tiketi mẹrin ọsẹ saju si iṣẹlẹ, ati awọn gbogboogbo gbigba ni o wa gan sunmo si ni lọ. A ti sọ kò ri ti o ṣẹlẹ bẹ tete ki o to. O gan wi nkankan nipa awọn didara ti awọn ọja ti a ba nri lori nibi ni Lewiston. Nibẹ ni ko si iyemeji NEF ni gbona gan tikẹti kan ni ilu.”

 

Ninu awọn ifilelẹ ti awọn iṣẹlẹ ti aṣalẹ, Bruce “Lẹwa Ọmọkùnrin” Boyington(10-7) defends ni NEF MMA Lightweight Title lodi si nọmba ọkan-contender Jamie Harrison (5-1). Awọn ija ti a se ninu awọn wọnyi wakati “NEF XV” kẹhin Kọkànlá Oṣù nigbati Boyington ni ifijišẹ gbà awọn akọle lodi si Jesse Erickson (3-4) ati Harrison manhandled Tollison Lewis (0-4) lori rẹ ọna lati lọ si awọn ọna kan ifakalẹ gun. Awọn ija ni yio je Boyington ká keji olugbeja ti awọn akọle niwon gba o kẹhin Kẹsán.

 

Awọn àjọ-akọkọ iṣẹlẹ ti aṣalẹ yoo ẹya-ara kan gíga-ifojusọna welterweight ija laarin Brazil Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) dudu igbanu Jarod “Kẹhin iseju” Lawton (4-1) ati Bellator oniwosan Dennis “Awọn ó tako” Olson (12-7). Ni to šẹšẹ ọsẹ, Lawton ati Olson ti npe ni kan ogun ti awọn ọrọ lori awujo media ti ri mejeeji elere’ oludari Olufowosi sí ninu awọn fray.

 

“Shatterproof 2.0” Derek Shorey (1-1), alabapade si pa wíwọlé kan titun ti ọpọlọpọ-ija guide pẹlu NEF, yoo pade John “Akọkọ Kíláásì” Ray (2-6) ni a “roba baramu.” Awọn pour ti ri kọọkan Onija win ọkan ija lodi si awọn miiran. Awọn April 11 ija, se eto lati ya ibi ni a catchweight ti 150-poun, yoo mọ a pataki 'segun, ni noir.

 

Kaline “The Dark Angel” Medeiros (3-4) ati undefeated Calie “Awọn Honey Badger” Cutler (3-0) yoo ṣe awọn itan nígbà tí wọn idije akọkọ ọjọgbọn obirin MMA ija lori kan Ekun kaadi in Maine. O yoo ko ni igba akọkọ Medeiros ti wa kan ara ti itan. O competed ni akọkọ obirin ija ni Rhode Island odun meji seyin.

 

Tun ni igbese lori awọn ọjọgbọn apa ti awọn kaadi yoo jẹ gbajumo NEF MMA regulars Jesse “Awọn Viking” Erickson (3-4), “Awọn Junkyard AjA” Ryan Cowette (2-2), Elias “Ewu Asin” Leland (2-0) ati Mike “awọn mustache” Hansen (2-1), laarin awon miran.

 

Awọn magbowo ìka ti awọn kaadi yoo wa ni headlined nipa “Sleepy” Norman Fox (3-1) ati “Aarin” Dave Brown (1-2) ni a flyweight idije. Akata jẹ undefeated lori Maine ile ati ki o jẹ Lọwọlọwọ awọn nọmba-mẹta ni ipo magbowo flyweight ni Ariwa. Brown jijakadi fun Pilimaotu State University ni ibi ti o si wà kan mẹrin-akoko Gbogbo-New England Winner.

 

Awọn magbowo kaadi yoo tun ẹya-ara kan lightweight ija laarinRicky Dexter (2-0) lati Makosi Davis’ Team Irish ati Steven Bang (3-3) lati Central Maine Brazil Jiu-Jitsu (CMBJJ) – Egbe New England United (NEW). Dexter ká teammate Jeremy Tyler (4-3) onigun mẹrin si pa pẹlu Alex Johnson (1-1) ti aláìláàánú MMA & Boxing ni a featherweight ija. Ati Bruce Boyington iyawo, Randi Beth Knowles (0-0), yoo pade Alex Walker (0-0) ni a ni ilopo-Uncomfortable strawweight ija.

 

Awọn ni kikun ija kaadi fun “NEF XVII” (koko lati yi ati alakosile ti awọn dojuko idaraya Authority ti Maine):

 

Ọjọgbọn

 

155*TITLE Bruce Boyington 10-7 (Young ká MMA) la Jamie Harrison 5-1 (Àkọkọ ni etikun Full Kan)

170 Jarod Lawton 4-1 (Team NEW) la Dennis Olson 12-7 (Boston BJJ / Team Ijagunmolu)

265 Brent Dillingham 1-1 (MMA Athletix) la Mike Hansen 2-1 (BerzerkersMMA)

185 Ryan Cowette 2-2 (MMA Athletix) la John Daniels 2-3 (Rock City MMA)

155 Jesse Erickson 3-4 (Team NEW - CMBJJ) figagbaga Mark DEFORD 0-3 (F2 Arena)

150 John Ray 2-6 (First Kíláásì MMA) la Derek Shorey 1-1 (Shatterproof dojuko Ologba)

135 Elias Leland 2-0 (Awọn ẹkọ ijinlẹ) la Jay Perrin 1-0 (Boston BJJ / Team Ijagunmolu)

115 Kaline Medeiros 3-4 (Gracie Amọdaju) la Calie Cutler 3-0 (Jacked N Tan ija Egbe)

 

Magbowo

 

125 Norman Fox 3-1 (MMA Athletix) la Dave Brown 1-2 (Pilimaotu ija Ologba)

265 Ryan Glover 1-0 (BerzerkersMMA) la Jason Field 0-0 (Ominira)

265 Dave Smith 0-0 (BerzerkersMMA) figagbaga Dan Marley 0-0 (Ominira)

185 Ruben Redman 0-1 (Ominira) la Chris Rideout 0-0 (Ominira)

185 Chris Smith 0-0 (BerzerkersMMA) la Nash Roy 2-1 (Young ká MMA)

185 Heath Hanson 0-2 (3Ronin Osere) la Brandon Russell 0-1 (Team Nitemare)

155 Ricky Dexter 2-0 (Team Irish) la Steve Bang Jr. 3-3 (Team NEW – CMBJJ)

155 Rick Matthews 1-1 (Team Irish) figagbaga Matthew Hanning 0-1 (Ominira)

155 Jason Lachance 1-1 (MMA Athletix) la Jesse Herrick 1-0 (Awọn ẹkọ ijinlẹ)

145 Clifford Redman 0-1 (Ominira) la Kalebu Serra 0-1 (Team Kaze)

145 Jeremy Tyler 4-3 (Team Irish) la Alex Johnson 1-1 (Aláìláàánú MMA & Boxing)

135 Mike Crespo 2-1 (MMA Athletix) la Sheldon Bang 1-2 (Team NEW – CMBJJ)

115 Randibeth Knowles 0-0 (Boyington ká TKD / Young ká MMA) la Alex Walker 0-0 (Team Kaze)

 

 

Tiketi fun “NEF XVII” bẹrẹ ni o kan $25 ki o si ni o wa lori tita to bayi niwww.TheColisee.com tabi nipa pipe awọn Colisée apoti ọfiisi ni207.783.2009 x 525. Fun alaye diẹ ẹ sii lori iṣẹlẹ ati ija kaadi awọn imudojuiwọn, jọwọ lọsi awọn igbega ká aaye ayelujara ni www.NewEnglandFights.com. Ni afikun, o le wo awọn fidio NEF ni www.youtube.com/NEFMMA, tẹle wọn lori Twitternefights ki o si da awọn osise Facebook egbe "New England njà."

 

Nipa New England njà

 

New England njà ("NEF") ni a ija iṣẹlẹ ni igbega ile. NEF ká ise ni lati ṣẹda awọn ga didara isele fun Maine ká onija ati awọn onijakidijagan bakanna. NEF ká executive egbe ni o ni sanlalu iriri ni ija ogun idaraya isakoso, isele gbóògì, media ajosepo, tita, ofin ati ipolongo.