Showing posts with label Muay Thai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muay Thai. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

FULL CONTACT MUAY THAI/ K-1 KICKBOXING BOUTS




DAY OF FIGHT
Date: Saturday, October 4th 2014
Time: Doors open at 6:00pm; First fight at 7:00pm
**** FIGHTERS MUST ARRIVE @ 4 FOR PAPER WORK & DOCTOR ****
Address: Greater Newark Boys & Girls Club 109 Glasgow Dr, Newark, DE 19702

BOUT ORDER
Red Corner vs Blue Corner
1- James McCaffrey (Cowboy International) vs Daniel Diwysoekie (Mckenzie and Yates Martial Arts) 172 lbs K1
2- Mike Gallagher (Weapons 9) vs Anthony Del-Cid (Eastern Academy of MMA) 132 lbs MT
3- Dejour Bailey (Rami Elite) vs Daniel Stribling (Champion Boxing & Fitness) 147 lbs MT
4- Niki Lorinczy (Nak Muay) vs Sami Rice (Dragon Gym) 127 lbs MT
5- Daniel Champa (Rami Elite) vs Paul Carbary (Capital MMA) 159 lbs MT
6- Malik Joe (New World MMA) vs Brian O'Halloran (Capital MMA) 153 lbs MT
7- Carryn Keys (Jack’s Gym) vs Abbe Pannucci (Maryland Combat Sports) 100 lbs K1
8- Dwayne Lynch (New World MMA) vs Bassil Badre Hafez (New Balence) 172 lbs MT
9- Luis Guaillas (Rami Elite) vs Kyle Tyler (Capital MMA) 137 lbs MT
10- Miguel Mayorga (Weapons 9) vs Allen Hargrove (Champions Boxing & Fitness) 179 lbs MT
11- Jobe Lee Jobe Lee (MVJ) vs Tyler Lowe (Maryland Combat Sports) *exhibition bout*
12- Jake Kelly (MVJ) vs J.B. Lamb (Maryland Combat Sports) 153 lbs K1
13- Jon Curtis (Weapons 9) vs Jhalani Battle-Williams (Amerikick) 143 lbs MT
INTERMISSION
Co-main event title fight
14- Elias Melendez (Rami Elite) vs Shawn Keys Jr. (Jack’s Gym) 115 lbs K1
Co-main event title fight
15- Amin Almelik (Warrior Muay Thai) vs Namron Bibbins (Champion Boxing & Fitness) 147 lbs MT
Main event title fight
16- Brima Kamara (Jacks Gym) vs D.j. Miller (Sidthilaw Muay Thai) 159 lbs K1
Tickets are avialable here -- TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Kids 10yrs and under are $10 at the door.


Thursday, September 11, 2014

Real MMA hosts another sold out success!





By Thomas “Psychic Tom” Padgett

   Las Vegas, Nevada. On Friday, September 5th, the packed house at the Silverton Casino's Veil Pavilion witnessed a night of exhilarating, raw, blood-and-guts amateur MMA and Muay Thai competition that left the crowd totally spent by the night's end.

   The card was the second promotion of Real MMA (www.realmixedmartialarts.com) and featured six MMA fights and five Muay Thai battles. As always, every single fighter “brought it”, and gave it their all.

   The action took place in a hexagon, which is a ring with six equal sides. Also, in lieu of a cage, the boundaries of the hexagon were ropes. This served to prevent excessive standing clinches, or what is often referred to as “wall & stall.” In addition, the view of the action was very clear for the fans, regardless of where they were sitting.

   The first bout of the evening was in the lightweight division and featured Julius Lopez squaring off with Bryce Kim. Early in the first round, Kim demonstrated his Taekwondo skills by throwing some wild, high spinning kicks, which gave Lopez something to think about. Bryce then shot in and took Julius down. Lopez immediately pulled guard, but Kim was able to progress to half-guard. But Lopez regained full guard as Bryce began a ground & pound. With seconds left in round one, Lopez secured a triangle choke, but Kim hung on and unfortunately for Julius, the round ended. 

   In round 2, Lopez came out strong, and was met with more high kicks from Kim. Bryce once again scored a take-down, Julius pulled half-guard, and Kim began a ground & pound, similar to the first round. Also like the first round, Lopez secured full guard, and toward the end of the round, clamped on an arm-bar. But as before, he ran out of time.

   Round 3 witnessed Lopez again coming out aggressively, only to be taken down. As Julius scrambled to pull guard, they wound up in the north-south position, then Kim moved to side mount. Julius fought him off, and they both were back to their feet. Bryce then scored a brutal, slamming take-down, and as the round ended, Lopez was attempting a kimura from the guard.

   Kim was awarded a unanimous decision. But Lopez is to be saluted for his submission skills, along with his presence of mind. Bryce also kept calm in defending against these submissions, and fought a smart fight. Both of these young fighters deserve to be watched closely, as they will only be getting better.

   The second fight of the evening was a Muay Thai contest that seen Bryan Moonsinghe going against Paul Madrid. Right from the outset, Madrid's strategy became quite clear: he felt that his edge was in the clinch, and he used all of his physicality to push that issue. Moosinghe, on the other hand, had somewhat more of a technical approach, which made the fight difficult to score.

   In round 2, Madrid suffered a point loss, due to grabbing the ropes. Both exchanged powerful kicks, and the pace slowed a bit. Moonsinghe kept cool, and stayed with his clean, crisp technique, which made for another close round. Madrid kept up the pressure, and was a tad bit more aggressive.

   Going into the third round, it was anyone's fight, and it unfolded pretty much the same as the first two rounds. The fight was scored a draw, which appeared to be the correct call, even though both fighters had to be disappointed.

   The third fight of the night featured heavyweights Cole Curtiss going up against Josiah Alipate. Both fighters had a vibe about them that screamed “Buckle up” when they entered the hexagon...and they didn't disappoint. Alipate charged forward with bad intentions, and landed a powerful kick to Cole's left leg. Cole shot in and took Josiah down and began raining down a vicious ground & pound. Alipate tried rolling over, but was not quite quick enough to avoid the rear naked choke, which forced him to tap out at 0:38 seconds of round one. Both fighters have a large local following, and both will hopefully be returning to action soon.

   The fourth fight of the evening was a Muay Thai rumble between Tommy Morales and Frederic Fine. Real fights, including boxing, Muay Thai and MMA, are not always thrilling, back-and-forth barn-burners. For the most part, when a fighter is hurt, it is very difficult to come roaring back, like a Rocky movie. But there are those rare fights when both fighters rise to the occasion, and even go beyond it...in essence, becoming seemingly possessed with something beyond themselves.

   This has nothing to do with supernatural “possession” or anything along those lines. No, this refers to the fighter becoming “more than himself”, and creating a classic. It's hard to pinpoint exactly what this force is, but fans know it when they see it. And they undoubtedly seen it in this classic struggle. Both fighters went well beyond the call of duty, much to the delight of the fans.

   In round one, Morales began quickly, landing a spinning back kick directly to Fine's chiseled, six-pack abs. Fine answered with a devastating punch combination...and the battle was on. The toe-to-toe action continued non-stop, with both fighters giving and taking, much to the delight of the crowd, which roared its approval. Morales seemed to be gaining a slight edge, and was successful in launching spinning attacks. But Fine didn't seem to know how to open his dictionary to the word “quit”, and gave almost as good as he got.

   After the first round ended, Fine hobbled back to his corner, with his foot bleeding. The doctor immediately went to Fine's corner to check on the foot, and the crowd gave a collective sigh of relief when Frederic was ruled able to continue.

   The second round began where the first one let off. One of Tommy's powerful kicks put Fine down, but it was ruled a slip, not a knockdown. Morales also seemed to be favoring his foot, but it didn't slow the insane pace a bit. Almost like a macabre game of tag, one fighter would land a combination that would knock down a cement wall, then the other would come roaring back...like a movie!

   This may be a stretch, but they almost seemed to be defying the laws of physics. Back and forth, ebb and flow...the three minutes of round two must have seemed like an eternity to the gladiators engaged in this war. Toward the end of the round, Fine trapped Morales in a corner, and unleashed an annihilating onslaught of knees, one right after the other. Tommy didn't go down, and came blasting back with combinations of his own to set Frederic back on his heels as the round ended.

   The crowd was strangely silent, considering the blistering pace of this struggle, and it took an admonishment from the ring announcer to get them back into the fight. It appeared that they were awestruck over the pier-six brawl they were watching.

   Round three began right where the second round left off. Blood was pouring from Fine's nose, and Morales looked slightly worse for the wear (who wouldn't be?). But neither fighter was willing to give in to their pain and fatigue...and began the rumble for one final round. The pace immediately cranked up, and seen both fighters once again threw caution to the wind. About half-way through the round, Tommy unleashed a punch combination from hell that had to be seen to be believed...left hook...right cross...left uppercut...right cross...left hook...right cross...all landing precisely on Frederic's chin! The crowd was gasping, and the question in everyone's mind had to be “WHAT'S HOLDING FINE UP?” Fine staggered backward, but hung on and, in Zombie-like fashion, somehow found the where-withal to move forward and land a combination of his own!

   The last thirty seconds was a scene from “The Night of the Living Dead”, with both fighters totally spent. But their incredible fighting hearts propelled them forward, and the crowd erupted in a loud, well-deserved standing ovation for both warriors.

   Morales was awarded a well-deserved, unanimous decision. But what a battle...what a battle! Afterward, the referee, the experienced UFC and K-1 veteran Chris Tognoni, stated that this was “The best amateur Muay Thai fight I have ever seen”, and coming from Chris, that's really saying something.

   Both fighters were respectful of their opponent in post-fight interviews. Fine stated that he sprained his foot in round one, and that's why he was relying on punches more than kicks. He had nothing but praise for Morales, and Tommy felt likewise. The great sportsmanship displayed by both fighters exemplified the spirit of martial arts. In truth, there was really no loser in this fight. Both fighters seen their stock rise dramatically, and both are names to watch in the future.          


   The fifth fight on the card was an MMA heavyweight contest, and featured the return of Jose Camacho taking on Alan Aldabbagh. Alan is a professional wrestler, but confessed to not having trained specifically for MMA, and was curious to test his skills. It was assumed that Alan would attempt to take the fight to the ground, but Jose didn't give him that option. Camacho mixed punches with knees and brutal kicks, seemingly landing at will. To his credit, Alan hung tough, but just didn't have an answer to the withering barrage of strikes that he was subjected to. He was fighting back, but never seemed to come close to a take-down, and the referee soon had seen enough, stopping the contest at 2: 27 of the first round.

   Congratulations to Camacho for rebounding from a tough, close decision loss in his last fight. He showed a leaner, meaner version of himself, and will attempt to build on this momentum. As for Aldabbagh, he proved his courage, and showed the ability to take a shot and keep on coming. But if he is going to continue in MMA, he will need to focus on his stand-up game, both offensively and defensively. 

   Real MMA is blessed to have Lisa “The Black Widow” King as its ring announcer. After her “bring down the house” performance at Real MMA's inaugural event, it was hard to see how she could possibly live up to those unbelievably high standards...yet she did, and then some!

   Like a maestro conducting a sympathy orchestra, Lisa has an uncanny sixth sense for the crowd's energy level. When she felt it was waning, one or two words from her worked like the flick of a conductor's switch, bringing the crowd right back into things, with more energy than ever.

   Without a doubt, Lisa is the total package. From her background as a professional Muay Thai fighter and her study of the fighters, to her stunning presence and dazzling beauty, it is not difficult to see why she is in such demand. Check her out at www.blackwidow.us


   If you are looking to meet world-class fighters, RealMMA is the place to be. Maurice “The Gorilla” Jackson was introduced to the crowd, and was well-received. Ranked at number 19 in Bellator's heavyweight division, Maurice is climbing the ladder, and will be fighting next month on one of Bellator's televised promotions. Jackson has a devastating stand-up game, and is also bringing in new tricks on the ground. With his impressive physicality and his insane work ethic, Maurice is a definite title threat, and is an exciting fighter to watch. Don't forget to tune in next month and see him in action.

   The World Boxing Council (WBC) Heavyweight champion, Bernard Stiverne also was in the crowd, as was Ishe Smith of The Contender fame. Both were introduced, and pumped up the crowd. Stiverne recently captured the title with a sixth round TKO of Chris Arreola, and is looking forward to a possible clash with Wladimir Klitschko. For his part, Smith won his last fight, and is looking to return to action soon.

   The crowd was also treated to an exhibition of Muay Thai, courtesy of NAKMUAYTHAI of Las Vegas, as well as a T-Shirt toss.  

   The sixth fight of the evening was a Muay Thai match-up featuring Eric Watt throwing down with Robert Lara. The powerfully built Lara immediately decided that his edge was physicality, and he intended to impose his will in the clinch, with several knees. However, the quick-handed Watt was having none of it. After a separation, Lara moved in to again make the fight “in a phone booth”. But Watt launched a missile of a right hand that landed exactly where he wanted it: on Lara's chin. Robert made every effort to get up, but it was to no avail, and was counted out at 1:25 of round one.

   Remember the name of Eric Watt. He has crisp, clean technique, superb conditioning, and is truly a thinking man's fighter. He should be moving to the top quickly.

   The seventh fight on the card was an MMA battle, and witnessesed the popular local favorite Kaine Marzola get after it with Alex Giron, a tough, no-nonsense fighter. Early in round one, Giron threw a straight kick, which was caught by Marzola. Kaine secured the take-down, went to side mount, then full mount. But Alex didn't come to roll over, and was able to reverse the position. With both fighters  back on their feet, Kaine was able to get the fight to the floor again, and began a ground and pound, and attempted various submissions. Giron was able to fend them off, but Kaine was persistent with his ground and pound. Giron had no answer to the bombardment, which caused the referee to stop the fight in round one.

   Marzola has strung together a few wins, and is dedicated to his craft more than ever. Stay tuned for his next fight.

   The eighth fight of the night seen Anthony Arroyo square off in a Muay Thai contest with Jo Jo Aluague. Arroyo was coming off a decision loss, but shrugged it off and landed a devastating head kick early in round one. Aluague was unable to continue, and that one kick earned Arroyo the Knockout of the night. Anthony certainly showed how to make a quick comeback!

   The ninth fight was an MMA scrap between Shawn Dodaro and Alesio Velasquez. Shawn quickly took the fight down, went to side mount, then mount, then took Alesio's back, put the hooks in and secured a rear naked choke, forcing the tap out at 1:15 of round one. This was an excellent display of Brazilian Jiu-jitsu 101.

   The tenth fight was a hard-fought Muay Thai action that seen Damian Jackson sqauring off against Ryan Spellman. The first round was a chess match, with two highly-skilled Muay Thai technicians probing for openings. It appeared that Spellman was a little more active, but the round was close.

   In round two, Jackson came out aggressively, and pushed the pace enough to win the round. In the third, Spellman suffered a low blow, which resulted in a point deduction against Jackson...which had huge implications in the scoring. Spellman was awarded a close, split decision.

   The final fight of the night witnessed Adrian Gutierrez taking on Saul Ayon in an MMA contest. Gutierrez was coming off a win in his last fight, and wasted no time in this one. He immediately clinched and delivered a power slam that practically shook the rafters. This lead to an arm-bar that forced the tap out at 46 seconds of round one. 

   Gutierrez without a doubt seems to be putting it all together, and his future opponents had better be ready for war...because that's what Adrian brings.     

   Fight of the night (FOTN) went to Tommy Morales and Frederic Fine, and as mentioned earlier, KO of the night went to Anthony Arroyo.

   Thanks goes out to the folks at Real Water who worked so hard behind the scenes to make this event the huge success it was: Anthony, Nicholas, Amy, Melissa, Blaine, Bailey and the “California crew” of Jack and Tony. Also, kudos to Rudy “Ruthless” Morales, who did an outstanding job as matchmaker. Rudy fought as an amateur for Real MMA, and has launched a successful pro career, competing in BAMMA, Bellator, and currently in the World Series of Fighting (WOSF). Rudy definitely has the potential to become a future world champ, and his fights should be added to your “must see” category.
Also, thanks go out to Ralph Cook, the Nevada State Director of the International Sports Karate Association (ISKA). Mr. Cook explained the rules to the fighters in a no-nonsense, clear-cut manner that left no doubt as to what was expected of them.

   Special thanks to the sponsors of the event:

ü  Tapsnap
ü  Graphics 2000
ü  Herbally Grounded Herbal Supplements
ü  Winder Farms
ü  Max Health
ü  Vegas Royalty
ü   Sup Kulture
ü  Veterans in Politics
ü  ISKA Mixed Martial Arts
ü  Preferred Chiropractic of N. Las Vegas
ü  iHumanityCharity.org
ü  Nevada Beverage Company

   Finally, don't forget to try Real Water. 


   Real Water is a purified water that has been treated by a unique, revolutionary process called E2 Technology. This exciting, cutting-edge breakthrough adds electrons to the water, giving Real Water it's ability to alkalize the body.

   Real Water is able to dissolve and remove toxins from the cells far more efficiently than regular tap water. Tap water has a high concentration of hydrogen ions, which makes it acidic. After being treated with E2 Technology, Real Water forms hydroxyl ions, which is the secret that makes Real Water highly alkalized.

   What does this mean to you? Simply this: The molecular structure and electrical charge of Real Water allows it to quickly and thoroughly penetrate and hydrate your cells, effectively destroying dehydration...and making the cells far more efficient in removing toxins.

   Let Real Water protect you by solving several potential problems at the same time: staying properly hydrated, maintaining the correct acid/alkaline balance and getting rid of toxins before they can wreck havoc.
  
   Remember this: an acidic body is a breeding grounds for disease, and disease has far more trouble gaining a foothold in an alkaline environment. Stop these problems before they happen...with Real Water! You will taste and feel the difference.

   To learn more about Real Water, go to: https://drinkrealwater.com

      There is no doubt that Real MMA is rapidly expanding. The goal of the organization is to be known as the most “fighter first” and “fighter friendly” organization in the world of MMA and Muay Thai. With more events of this caliber, this vision is well on its way to becoming reality. Stay tuned for more exciting action, and watch tomorrow's champions today!

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Bellator Adds Italian Featherweight Annalisa Bucci To Expanding Women’s Division



#6 Ranked Featherweight Makes North American Debut This Year

Newport Beach, Calif. (August 27, 2014) – The roster additions continue for Bellator as the promotion has added the #6 ranked featherweight in the world as Annalisa Bucci (7-3) has joined Bellator and will compete in the United States for the first time in her career.

“I feel extremely honored, excited and thankful to be part of the first group of females, fighting for Scott Coker in the new Bellator MMA Women's Division,” Bucci said. “I cannot find the right words to truly express how I feel. This is more than a payoff for years of hard work, love and dedication to this sport. This is a dream come true!”

Known for her dangerous kickboxing and Muay Thai, Bucci has become synonymous for pushing the pace and keeping her opponents on their heels, and is simply known as “No Fear” within MMA circles.

With the signing, Bellator now has a collection of four of the best featherweights in the sport, as Bucci joins the #2 ranked Marloes Coenen, #3 ranked Julia Budd, and #8 ranked Talita Nogueira.  
For more information, visit Bellator.com, follow Bellator on Twitter @BellatorMMA, and check out Bellator on Facebook at www.facebook.com/BellatorMMA        

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

The Empire Strikes Back

With the UFC’s wind beneath Its Wings, Lion Fight has launched a retaliatory strike against Glory’s campaign to vanquish American independence.  Whilst blood spills by the barrel all around us from wounds that trace to Europe’s colonial legacy, who’d have thought they’d ever be back on American soil?  Well think again.
Muay Thaimes®
Volume VI, Number 7
July 30, 2014
TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                               The Empire Strikes Back
                                               Starship Glory’s Orbit towards Oblivion
                                               Epitaph for Sanity in a Sport’s Fairy Tale
The Empire Strikes Back
Here comes a European juggernaut in Glory Sports International (GSI).  It is registered in Singapore and aims for world domination in what you’ve known until now as K-1 Kickboxing.  Like so many other world beaters, GSI has set about to corner the (human) resource market for “products” to brand with its own Glory logo.
Don’t take my word for it.  Here’s the smoking gun:  Scott Rudmann, Managing Partner of Nectar Capital said:  “We are delighted to have acted as corporate finance advisor to Glory Sports International…[to] effectively place all of the world’s top kickboxing athletes under the same promotional umbrella and solidify GLORY and the Glory World Series as the unquestioned world leader with the number one kickboxing series… there can be no doubt that the GLORY franchise is on its way to becoming one of the largest new sport leagues in the world and that it has quickly come to dominate global kickboxing.” Never mind who’s supposed to develop the next beat generation with the chump change that’s left over?
How better to conjure an industrial strength “sports content and branding solution” than by claim jumping the entire world’s (athletic) resource market in order to lock down Kickboxing’s “content IP rights holders”?  Take GSI’s North American property portfolio (talent pool) in its entirety.

It was Scott Kent’s Lion Fight series, where the rivalry between Joe Schilling and Simon Marcus made national headlines. “Bazooka” Joe Valtellini fought Gregory Choplin in Scott’s ring, where Ky Hollenbeck was once a regular.  Simon Marcus even did battle there with GSI’s Russian star Artyom Levin.
Glory Sports International developed none of these careers.  U.S. career developers like Scott Kent did all of the heavy lifting, along with Montri Supanich and Anthony Lin in California, as well as Justin Blair and Aziz Nabih in New York City.  It was there thatWayne Barrett and Gabriel Varga also did their apprenticeships.

So maybe it was just a coincidence that America’s top fight impresario Dana White put Lion Fight XVI on the calendar for UFC Fight Week and scheduled the show for America’s 238th birthday.  It might even have been a coincidence for the show to feature two “name brand” mixed martial artists going bada bing bada boom in full rules Muay Thai.  Then again a case could be made for The Empire Strikes Back.  [EDITOR]

Show Coverage by Brian O’Hara.  Photography by Ray Kasprowicz.

Las Vegas, NV – LION FIGHT 16 ignited an explosion of spectacular Muay Thai action inside the Pearl, at Palms Casino Resort on July 4th, 2014.  The excitement was not limited to fireworks over Las Vegas Boulevard, as the premier Las Vegas based promotion featured a super lightweight championship fight between Muay Thai Champion, Kevin Ross, and Australia’s Muay Thai prodigy, Michael “Tomahawk” Thompson.

Lion Fight Super Lightweight Championship
Kevin Ross (U.S.A.) vs. Michael Thompson (Australia):

The crowd erupted as the two fighters exchanged blows for a full five rounds of hard-hitting combat entertainment.  Although Thompson proved his toughness, it was Ross who dictated the pace of the championship bout.
 
It was Ross (left) who dictated the pace of the championship bout.  Photo by Ray Kasprowicz.
Ross punished Thompson round after round with a mix of blows to his opponents head and midsection.  During the closing seconds of the last round, Ross almost put his challenger away with a well-executed flying knee that crashed into Thompson’s face.  The crowd erupted as Thompson was visibly hurt.  Rattled and defeated, Thompson held on in the clinch to survive the round, despite losing the title bout.

Kevin Ross def. Michael Thompson by Unanimous Decision:  50-45, 49-46, 49-46 for the Lion Fight Super Lightweight Championship, Professional 142 lbs. Men.  5 x 3 Rounds.

Tiffany Van Soest (U.S.A.) vs. Sindy Huyer (Italy):

In the co-main event, former LION FIGHT featherweight champion Tiffany Van Soest squared off against Italy’s Sindy Huyer.  The opening round could have gone to either fighter, but it was Van Soest who turned the heat up on her opponent inside the ring for the remainder of the fight.
Van Soest (left) battered her game Italian opponent.  Photo by Ray Kasprowicz.
Van Soest battered her game Italian opponent, while winning the following four rounds.  A percussion of excitement ripped through the venue when the American standout, Van Soest, landed a jaw-shattering front-kick that stopped Huyer in her tracks.  Stunned and vulnerable, Huyer seemed to be out on her feet when she absorbed a final left hook, which caused referee Kamijo to jump in and call a halt to the punishment.

Tiffany Van Soest def. Sindy Huyer by TKO (Front Kick to Face) at 0:56 of Round 5.  Professional 125 lbs. Women.  5 x 3 Rounds.

Rungravee Banchaemek Sasiprapa (Kingdom of Thailand) vs. Adrian Morilla (U.S.A.):

The night also included Thailand’s superstar, Rungravee Banchaemek Sasiprapa, who made his American debut with LION FIGHT promotion that evening against Adrian Morilla.  The bout lived up to the billing as a special attraction fan superfight when Sasiprapa showed of his skill set from bell to bell.
Rungravee Banchaemek Sasiprapa got the better of the exchanges.  Photo by Ray Kasprowicz.
Morilla put forward a valiant effort, however he could not prevent getting stalked down by his veteran opponent round after round.  Sasiprapa got the better of the exchanges during all five rounds to earn a split-decision victory.

Rungravee Banchæmek Sasiprapa def. Adrian Morilla by Split Decision:  48-47, 49-46, 49-45.  Professional 132 lbs. Men.  5 x 3 Rounds.
See Ray Kasprowicz’s Photo Gallery HERE.

Bennie E. Palmore II’s entire Photo Gallery is also a CLICK away.
LION FIGHT XVI delivered a blowout of Muay Thai excitement on Independence Day from the Fight Capitol of the World.  Despite GSI’s claim jumping so many North American properties, Scott Kent’s All-American resourcefulness continues to develop spectacular talent on our own native soil.  For full show coverage, CLICK HERE.

It turns out that indigenous is integral to this enterprise through its affiliation withUSMTA, which began as the Native American League.  No big surprise, then, that the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation hosts the Eastern edition of Scott Kent’s Lion Fight series.

Fans are looking forward to the next installment of America’s premier Muay Thai showcase at Foxwoods Resort Casino in the Northeast Corridor about midway between Beantown and the Big Apple on August the 1st.  It airs live on AXS TV starting at a special time, 9:00 p.m. ET/6:00 p.m. PT.  We’ll give you a report in our next edition.
Starship Glory’s Orbit Towards Oblivion
”Bazooka” Joe Valtellini, right, vs. Marc de Bonte at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
Let me see a show of hands.  How many of you are hard core into stand-up and hail Glory Sports International’s (GSI) campaign to deliver us to the Promised Land?  Well guess what?  You just flunked Capitalism 101.

The triple threat that’s vowed “to dominate global kickboxing” – Pierre Andurand (a hedge fund manager heavy into trading commodities), Marcus Luer (Total Sports Asia’s world beater in sports content and branding solutions) and Andrew Whitaker (Kings Highway Media’s erstwhile Managing Partner in a brand and media distribution advisory) – actually includes a fourth swashbuckler.  There is also Nectar Capital’s Scott Rudman.  He brokers deals, like GSI’s funding to acquire “It’s Showtime”.  He has also stayed on board to police the deployment of his equity stake.  (09 07 12 // Glory Sports International Pte. acquires Kickboxing Competitor ‘It’s Showtime’ at http://nectarcapital.com/glory-sports-international-pte-acquires-kickboxing-competitor-its-showtime/#09-07-12)
Wayne Barrett (airborne) vs. Joe Schilling at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
Exactly what kind of corporate mission do you suppose these operators in the sports entertainment business aim to accomplish?  No matter what agenda they’ve been selling (understandably) for public consumption, here’s the bold print on theirinvestment prospectus.  They’re pledged to “serve the content IP rights holders, private equity and venture capital space”.

Truth or consequences, Glory Sports International brings us the working capital this sport so desperately needs but has missed since K-1 went flat line.  So we’re all down with the pursuit of happiness that their money can buy us.  Lest we forget, though,there is no such thing as a free lunch.  So we’ve also got to read the fine print in GSI’s pitch, which is supposed to make its patrons rich(er).

Where none before have been able to conjure the Midas touch in stand-up, GSI’s Managing Director Marcus Luer tells BJ Penn “The problem has always been lack of funding…The money behind it hasn’t been there because there hasn’t been enough television, funding, and advertising in place to make those events happen and to pay that money out.”  Judge for yourself what kind of omen it is for a sports content and branding solutions guru to omit live gates from his  bucket list in a business that until now has lived or died at the box office.
Joe Schilling (right) vs. Simon Marcus at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
Reports of twofers reaching us from L.A. (Glory 17) – on top of what we know to have been gratuitous freebie ticket offers in NYC (Glory 12) possibly from a panic attack – disguise wonder in this thunder of so much public chest thumping.  By way of comparison, Dana White tells Yahoo! Sports that the paid gate at UFC 175 in Las Vegas just a couple of weeks ago was estimated to surpass $5 million.  What whiz kid worth his MBA skips the part about paying customers?

Ask not for whom the bell tolls in any sports entertainment business.  It tolls for popularity pure and simple.  While Spike TV might be the best available broadcast platform for Glory Sports International to get there, the metric of viewership factors into how much advertisers will pay and how the subscription cable network will split the proceeds with a content provider.  Since this is the aim of a Total Sports Asia’s ad salesman’s game, let’s go to the score cards.

Viewership averages 459,000 for GSI’s U.S. shows.  This pegs it around ⅔ of Bellator’s 712,222 benchmark but perennially troubled brand on the identical broadcast platform during the same time span.  From Chicago’s (Glory 11) ground zero rollout, tv ratings seems to have peaked at 498,000 in Denver (Glory 16).  They then fell back into a 483,000 groove with the collateral damage of leaving only a Russian man standing in the L.A. ring at Glory 17, plus two Canadians.
Gabriel Varga (right) vs. Shane Oblonsky at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
So GSI’s audience metrics are calendar comparable to the UFC’s 457,857 average, only those are pay-per-views (ppv’s).  In the campaign to monetize whateverpopularity its $millions have bought, Glory’s “Last Man Standing” Grand Prix middleweight elimination tournament sold an estimated 6,000 ppv’s.  “According to Dave Meltzer from this week's edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter…the PPV ‘bombed’.” (“GLORY Last Man Standing PPV Sales Disappoint” by Dave Walsh onLiverKick.com)  Having already given up the gate, weak impulse control now seems also to be giving up the ghost.

Any commercial strategy that amounts to strip mining the top off of our sport’s popularity potential – until it hits a plateau below the surface – is destined to produce a lot of rubbish.  How stoked are you for a Joe “Stitch ‘Em Up” Schilling rubber match with Artyom Levin or Wayne Barrett?  The truth or consequences of this killer strategy is nothing more than koombaya with sugar coating.  Execution means getting the job done, which appears to be a stretch for someone inhaling his own fumes.
Chris Weidman (left) vs. Anderson Silva at UFC 168 in Las Vegas on December 28, 2013
What does Dana White know that informs his own success in the sports entertainment business?  He knows what the numbers mean and how they tell him what the fans want.  Toss out a single outlier in UFC 168 and his ppv average goes from 457,857 to 363,333.  That’s because Weidman vs. Silva II got 1,025,000 ppv’s on December 28, 2013.  This is a business that prospers from the goose that lays golden eggs.  Who in his right mind would put Floyd Mayweather in a Grand Prix elimination tournament?

Short of folding up its tent, Glory Sports International has to parachute into venues where it can fill a house with paying customers.  If that means some local pay-to-play, so be it.  Don’t stage a show that can’t pay the rent.  How hard is this?

I can recall Ky Hollenback forfeiting a WMC world title shot at 160 lbs. because he couldn’t shed the weight.  Climbing through the ropes at Glory 17, he looked to me like a shadow of himself at 153 lbs.  Whoever is piloting Starship Glory has to learn impulse control.  It would probably be a good idea, also, to take a refresher course in risk/reward tradeoffs.
Andy Ristie (left) vs. Ky Hollenbeck at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
A pretty convincing case could be made for mission control to stop inhaling its own fumes and to learn from its mistakes.  This means toning down the gimmicks and novelties, like Grand Prix elimination tournaments.  Where GSI has already bought a hot rivalry – say Joe “Stich ‘Em Up” Schilling vs. Simon Marcus or Wayne Barrett or Artyom Levin – it makes a whole lot more sense to prolong the shelf life instead gambling everything on 6,000 ppv’s.  This is just plain bad merchandising.

Locking the barn door after the (middleweight) cow has already gone to pasture probably isn’t going to fill any milk pails.  Fresh prospects will come along, though, from career developers without whom GSI would be shooting blanks.  It’s going to take more patience than GSI has so far shown for athletes to win over enough fans to begin moving tv ratings back up the growth curve.  This is what they’ve got to watch like it’s a deal breaker, because it is.
Joe Schilling (right) vs. Artyom Levin at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
They’ve also got to refrain from any temptation to cheat the scale with cheese in the milk pail.  Don’t play fans for suckers, because guaranteed we’re going to take their measure.  (See “Epitaph for Sanity in a Sport’s Fairy Tale”)  If fans think the game is rigged, it’s going to be sayonara señorita might as well pivot to WWE.

No matter how many horses you can put under a hood, they can’t pull the buggy if the ignition switch doesn’t work. (“Why did GM take so long to respond to deadly defect?  Corporate culture may hold answer.” by Michael A. Fletcher and Steven Mufson in The Washington Post on March 30, 2014) Authenticity is job #1 for “sports content and branding solutions” that’s got any realistic prospect of paying dividends for whom the bell tolls.
Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller (right) vs. Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
There is an art to match making.  It’s obviously going be done better by a pro than an ad salesman.  Hire the right guy for a job this important.  Get rid of anyone who thinks that throwing money at a problem is sufficient to solve it.  The whole idea is to reverse the direction of cash flow down out the door.  No business succeeds by pissing away all of its working capital.

Throwing in the towel now would be snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.  A good corner man would tell this wounded warrior to stop swinging wildly and grind it out.  Even though sunk costs aren’t recoverable, stock should be bought on the basis of future earnings prospects.  That’s why GSI’s patrons went into this and – for an exorbitant tuition in the school of hard knocks – they’ve proved that it is entirely possible.

Glory Sports International has only itself to blame for getting backed into the corner.  It is incumbent on these world beaters now to show the heart to fight their way outand pile up some points with time still on the clock.  Otherwise they really deserve to fail.  Getting it right is the only possible way they can earn a return on their investment.  Our photographer, Dan Eric, can be contacted at danericphotography@gmail.com.
Epitaph for Sanity in a Sport’s Fairy Tale
If you’re wired into tech toys, then you’re not just a fan of the fights.  You’re also a fan of technological innovation.  The latest epitaph for sanity in corporate fairy tales is ‘Disruptive Innovation’.  We think of mixed martial arts (mma) as an ‘innovation’, for example, that’s been ‘disruptive’ of boxing.  Never mind boxing dug its own grave for mma to dance on it.

Now we’re seeing Glory Sports International (GSI) stand up to ‘innovation’ with a campaign for ‘disruption’ of the UFC’s choke hold on brand recognition.  If this sounds more WSJ than ESPN, take a peek at the wizardry behind the curtain in Singapore’s Emerald City.

Full disclosure:  the hyperlink to an ESPN url is a WSJ key word.  “In 2011, multi-award winning hedge fund investor and martial arts enthusiast Pierre Andurand along with well-known media investor and asset manager Scott Rudmann and Marcus Luer, CEO of sports marketing agency Total Sports Asia (TSA), became the catalysts for the formation of Glory Sports International…In his role as Managing Director, Marcus taps into his 18 years of experience across the global sports marketing world and brings the core skills of TSA:   Asia’s global leader in sports content and branding solutions.
 
Bet you never thought that prize fighters could be commodified into investment properties like such erstwhile best-selling brands as Hulk Hogan, Randy “Macho Man” Savage and André the Giant.  Herein lurks a temptation to bake artificial flavors into meals on wheels the better to own every stall in the mall across the entire planet.

There've been some sketchy episodes in GSI's entertaining new series, where certain plots seem tuned to the kind of wishful thinking that’s sometimes contiguous to the realm of scripting.  A case in point was Glory 9, where NYC fans got a taste of FIFA officiating at its worst, which is ground zero in why soccer isn’t main stream here.  What fans took away from this was that Tyrone Spong seemed to have been spared having to earn his Grand Prix tournament win over Danyo Ilunga – with the plot twisting on a foreign ref – who’d been imported for a job that a local like Chris Wagner obviously does a whole lot better. (See “How to Kill a Sport” by Mark Jacobs)
Tyrone Spong vs. Danyo Ilunga at Glory 9 in New York City on June 22, 2013
It just so happens that Glory Sports International operates outside of the law – meaning outside of regulatory jurisdiction – in both New York and California.  You can blame your politicians for this, but exactly who the hires them to endorse WKA in New York and ISKA in California for the pursuit of happiness on a metric of customer satisfaction?  When an industry like this regulates itself, shareholders decide which customer has to be satisfied.  Fans and fighters both, thus, are effectively traded like derivatives on an unregulated exchange.

Following the weigh-in, I once attended a rules meeting inadvertently for officials at an ISKA sanctioned show in Chicago.  What made it memorable was the hidden handicap:  “When in doubt, give it to the home team”.  You can interpret “home team” to mean whoever’s paying a for-profit’s “sanctioning” fees.  Whatever it takes to satisfy such a customer is a matter of “sports content and branding solutions” to solve the profitability puzzle as GSI alone defines it.

Orbiting outside of public policy’s gravitational pull, you’d expect market incentives to lift off Starship Glory’s rocket thrust in live gates, paid subscriptions and Spike TV viewership.  A 3% loss of altitude over L.A. (Glory 17) discerned this truth in the consequences:  “The fact it was slightly off from its last outing could be a concern.  Mirko Cro Cop appeared on the prelim portion here which provided name recognition to hopefully garner viewers.” (Jason Cruz in mmmpayout.com on June 24, 2014)  So there was enough riding for Starship Glory on Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic to merit a corporate urine sample on the possibility of performance enhancement.

Viewers around the world saw Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller’s knees crumble “Cro Cop” repeatedly.  Time and again, Brooklyn’s “Big Baby” had the Croatian in trouble.  Only the ref “Big” John McCarthy nullified all of them, as did apparently the judges, all of whom ultimately were on GSI’s payroll by way of ISKA.

Now it’s more rule than exception for a ref to give the benefit of the doubt to close calls in the foul zone.  Never mind we've got different rules than boxing about below the belt, basically because of the low kick.  So McCarthy exercised his prerogative to give “Cro Cop” safe passage out of harm’s way from Miller’s first two borderline yellow cards, even though very few males of our species bounce back that fast from genuine ball busters.

If two’s company, the third wasn’t even close.  It was bull’s eye on Mirko’s solar plexus.  See for yourself.
Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller vs. Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic at Glory 17 in L.A. on June 21, 2014
“Cro Cop” was in visible trouble.  He could have been down and out in L.A. had the ref kept his finger off the scale.  Instead of a count and mandatory point deduction for GSI’s tv ratings mascot – which almost certainly would’ve made a difference in the verdict – “Big” John McCarthy declared yet another cease fire.  Even though the re-play made manifest this mistake, the network’s talking heads were like soccer commentators:  much too eager to go with the flow.

The whole point about knees in this sport is that they're supposed to matter.  So we’ve now got to wonder whether a veteran mma ref blew it, or was he caught up in a corporate culture (like General Motors) that preaches the practice of following the herd?  (“Why did GM take so long to respond to deadly defect?  Corporate culture may hold answer.” by Michael A. Fletcher and Steven Mufson in The Washington Post on March 30, 2014) Competitive sports just aren’t a natural fit for contrived content and branding solutions.
No one succeeds in this mall, who doesn’t heed common sense:  “You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you can’t fool ALL of the people ALL of the time.”  (From: “A Lincoln Album:  Readings by Carl Sandburg.” Caedmon TC 2015, 2 LP set, (c) 1957, last 2:25 of Side 1.)  Outsourcing public policy to circumvent the regulation of athletics is like gambling in casinos outside the jurisdiction of gaming commissions.  Caveat Emptor  Let the buyer beware. CLICK HERE for the full story.
The Soul in the Savagery
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