Matt Hughes

UFC 63 Weigh In Photos by Brad Doerges - Tyson Griffin, David Lee, Jorge Gurgel, Danny Abbadi, Eddie Sanchez, Mario Neto, Roger Huerta, Jason Dent, Joe Lauzon, Jens Pulver, Rashad Evans, Jason Lambert, Melvin Guillard, Gabe Ruediger, Mike Swick, David Loiseau, Matt Hughes, B.J. Penn

UFC 63 – Hughes vs. Penn
Ultimate Fighting Championship
September 23, 2006
Honda Center,
Anaheim, California, United States

UFC 56 Weigh In Photos by Dave Mandel – Nick Thompson, Keith Wisniewski, Thiago Alves, Ansar Chalangov, Sam Hoger, Jeff Newton, Jeremy Horn, Trevor Prangley, Georges St. Pierre, Sean Sherk, Matt Hughes, Joe Riggs, Gabriel Gonzaga, Kevin Jordan, Rich Franklin, Nate Quarry

UFC 56 – Full Force

Ultimate Fighting Championship
November 19, 2005
MGM Grand Garden Arena,
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States

Mike Whitehead

If you were to ask Dana White what he wanted from the fighters he picked for The Ultimate Fighter 2, the answer wouldn’t be long.

Heart.

So far, this season, heart has eluded the heavyweight division. In its place? Fear, hesitancy, dancing: the list goes on. When I sat down to watch Monday’s episode, I wondered to myself, “What is it going to take for these guys to show me something?” Because, quite frankly, the three previous heavyweight fights had been worse than lackluster, they’d been heartless.

Dana, Matt Hughes, Rich Franklin, hell, anyone with eyes was disappointed with the earlier fights. Would today be different? Would a big man finally show up?

The show opened with everyone praising the victorious Luke Cummo, who thoroughly out-struck and outworked Anthony Torres in an entertaining bout. Matt Hughes was especially wowed by Cummo’s performance, praising his skills as “amazing”, an inrregular comment coming from the critical and perpetually dissatisfied coach.

After the positive reinforcement ended, the heavyweight storyline began to be woven by the editors, portraying Mike White as a disliked and disrespected “teacher’s pet”.

Matt made it a point to draft Mike #1, seeing as they’d been training partners for years and Mike’s skills were supposedly levels above his competitors.

Matt Hughes    Hughes continued his relentless conditioning regime, keeping his team tired and beaten, but supposedly better for it. Franklin’s training segment was short and meaningless, not because it’s easier, but because Hughes is simply more interesting. Tough luck.

The challenge rolled around again, this time with the heavyweights playing a modified version of tug of war. Two heavyweights from each team were tied to a metal octagon, the point being to work together and pull the opposing team into a designated zone to win.

The struggle was short and sweet for Team Hughes, making short work of the game. Team Hughes met and immediately decided they wanted Mike to fight Rashad, a man more renowned for his antics than his fighting. Mike seemed confident to fight Rashad, seeing as Rashad’s last 3 minutes of ring time resembled a half-time show more than a fight.

Rashad, predictably, felt “disrespected” by the pick, thinking that Hughes was underestimating him. You know what? They WERE disrespecting him, and with good reason. For a man to act like he did in a fight WITHOUT winning convincingly is inexcusable. Rashad should expect to be “disrespected” until he wins a fight decisively.

The weigh ins followed:

Rashad 222 lbs,
Mike 251 lbs.

Mike looked chubby, but that’s simply his body type. Rashad looked lean, but looked as if he could easily lose twenty pounds and fight at light-heavy. Why he chooses not to is on him. Both looked ready to fight.

Hughes showed confidence in his boy, saying that Mike did everything that Rashad did, only better. Mike seemed confident. Hindsight, maye he wasn’t too confident. Maybe he was thinking about how Tom Murphy never made a dent in Rashad’s unorthodox defense. Maybe he was nervous about the unpredictability of a man who wasn’t scared to make himself look foolish. Maybe he was injured.

Whatever the case, Rashad boasted and beamed like he had already won.

“I can only beat myself.”

“I’m going to take it to him.”

What does it say about a man when his toughest talk is done when he’s alone?

The fight was on. Mike was ready for dancing. Rashad was ready for the weight to drop.

They circled and patted one another for a minute in the first before any real action began. Shortly thereafter, Mike revealed his major technique, a right low-kick, clinch combo. It wasn’t effective the first time he tried it, and it wasn’t the next seven times either. Rashad landed a good elbow early, sending Mike back with a new respect for his range. Both started to punch, with each landing blows on the other, but causing no palpable damage.

Mike finally got the clinch later in the round, eventually slamming Rashad down on all fours. Mike went for a follow up suplex, but only wasted energy and never got Rashad off the ground. Rashad went down in the recessive position, but quickly reversed to the dominant and landed some blows to Mike’s ample head. None were clean and Mike defended well, but a tally went down on every judge’s card as Rashad finished the round without any doubters of the victor.

Round two saw Mike again try his low-kick set up, but it was parried by Rashad. Rashad defended all of Mike’s attempts at grounding the fight, keeping it standing and blasting Mike with punches. Mike threw some kicks, but that same control Rashad employed in his first fight was back, keeping his opponent away and unable to score.

Rashad Evans    Both looked tired, but the bell came anyway. Round 2 went soundly to Rashad. Hughes finally came through during the break, throwing his water bottle in frustration. I know what he felt. He wanted for damn sure to get in that ring and beat Rashad into a pulp. He wanted to staredown his oversized opponent and crush him anyway. He wanted to slam Rashad’s rubber neck into the canvas of the cage.

The truth? Yes. The rest of the truth? He couldn’t.

Round three was more of the same. Mike looked like a Cubs fan on 63rd and Western. He was lost. Dead. Beaten.

As the round clock hit 10 seconds, a man died in the ring. It was obvious he was dead, because he turned his back on a fight, and walked away. Rashad had defeated an opponent in mind, body, and spirit. He was gone.

Rashad had survived yet again. Congrats to him. The front-runner was gone, and the road was paved for him to travel.

Dana said later that he was “shocked” at Mike’s gameplan. Instead of coming out with agressive striking and imposing his will on his less skilled opponent, he came out scared. He paid the price.

The last line in my notes?

“Mike was gone.”
Robert Andersson
Robert@mma-fighter.com

Photos used with permission by the UFC®.
[Discuss this article in our Forum]

Jason Von Flue As I sat in my chair and thought about the episode of The Ultimate Fighter 2 I had just finished watching, a strong sense of wellbeing overcame me. Though I’ve had the occasion to experience such an emotion before, seldom have I felt it accompanied with such an overwhelming sense of relief. Was it the post-fight verbal abuse Matt Hughes laid on Rashad Evans that gave me such happiness? Was it the awe I felt as Joe Stevenson and Mike Whitehead performed possibly the most physically impressive feat the show has ever seen in the welterweight challenge? Or was it the energy draining slugfest between two gutsy fighters that concluded the night? Most likely it was a combination of the three, but whichever it was, I am grateful to have watched them. In fact, this week’s episode ended up being a brilliant contrast to last week’s disaster, reassuring the viewer’s of the show that this season isn’t “lost” or “less entertaining” than the first season, but a different show altogether; a show more than capable of reaching, and even surpassing the heights its predecessor came to know.

The show opened with act two of “The Rashad Dance” as viewers were treated to post-fight reactions from coaches and fighters alike. Predictably, Matt Hughes was more than a little angry at Rashad’s in-ring antics, and called him out in the locker room. Hughes stated that he was “glad you (Rashad) aren’t on my team” and that Rashad was acting like an “idiot” who had done “no damage” in the fight. Rashad took the words well as Hughes spoke to him, but reacted strongly later in an interview, beginning to curse loudly at the camera as he reminisced on some of his father’s advice. Where these strong words were when Hughes was speaking to him, I don’t know. Perhaps Rashad was smart enough to avoid confrontation with the UFC champ face-to-face, but he’s going to be hard pressed to find a way of avoiding the repercussions of his heated profanity later on.

Rashad’s antics had an even greater impact on the two teams, causing a split to occur between them where comradery had formerly been. Some members of Team Hughes shared Matt’s disgust with Rashad’s showboating, and subsequently avoided Rashad’s presence. Perhaps taking his anger at Rashad and Tom Murphy’s lack of execution to heart, Matt Hughes put his Team through a strenuous two-hour training session. Hughes is notoriously competitive, and for one of his Team members to perform so poorly must have been more than Hughes could take without punishing the rest of the fighters. Though Hughes’ team seems to be training in tougher conditions (Team Franklin was shown swimming during their parallel two-hour session), doubtless they will reap the benefits of such hard work. Every successful MMA team seems to have that one driving member, pushing its fighters to perform above their comfortable levels and reach new plateaus.  Whether it’s Pat Miletich, Mario Sperry, Bas Rutten or Rudimar Fedrigo, all great fighters have a great coach behind them, making them better than they’d be on their own.  Though the training’s indeed difficult, the benefits far outweigh the drawbacks. Fighters have to ask themselves, what are they training for; to remain stagnant, or become champions?

Following the training montages, Randy Couture introduced the next welterweight challenge. Welterweights were paired with a heavyweight from their team and made to rotate around the heavyweights body by hanging onto their torsos without touching their feet to the ground. Each complete revolution around the heavyweight counted as a point, and the duo with the most points was rewarded with naming rights for the next fight. It’s the equivalent of climbing a rubber tree and making revolutions around its trunk without setting your feet on the ground. Needless to say, it takes significant strength on both peoples parts, not to mention the coordination needed to support one another and make the task as simple as it can be. Joe Stevenson and Mike Whitehead from Team Hughes were the first, and surprisingly enough, the last duo to go.

Joe Stevenson    When Joe began, the difficulty of this exercise became very apparent. Not only did Joe have to revolve around Mike’s hefty upper body without missing a beat, but Mike had to support Joe as he did it, and as Dana White has made very clear, Joe isn’t exactly a natural welterweight. But, even with these difficulties, Joe and Mike continued on. After about twenty revolutions, Joe began a dialogue with Hughes, asking him how many he needed to get in order to win the challenge.  Hughes was quick to answer that he needed to reach over one hundred revolutions in order to beat Jorge Gurgel, the resident BJJ Black belt on Team Franklin.  At the time, it seemed that one hundred was perhaps too much to accomplish, seeing as Joe and Mike were already sweating and breathing heavily.  Joe showed no reaction to Hughes’ goal of a hundred points though, and continued to push and pull his way around Mike.  As time elapsed, I began to see that not only was I underestimating the athletic capability of Mike and Joe, but that I wasn’t even close to recognizing the drive these two possessed.

As the fifty-minute mark arrived, Joe and Mike had completed 127 revolutions.   At an hour and twenty fours minutes, 172.   Perhaps relaxed by the capability of his fighters and the assurance of a challenge victory, Matt Hughes began to relax his tongue.  He began by laughing and joking with Joe, only to follow by engaging in his favorite activity, belittling and bantering Jorge Gurgel.  Jorge was too busy to notice though, seeing as he was already in a verbal duel with an increasingly confident Joe.  Despite the trash talk, Joe and Mike continued to push themselves, and before long they reached the 200 revolutions plateau. Joe pushed with his last bit of strength, and collapsed to the ground with Mike at revolution 204.  To be quite honest, I was awed by this tenacious display of natural athleticism and mental capacity.  Joe and Mike gave everything they had for this challenge, and in doing so, revealed to the viewers a rare glimpse of a champions drive. Immediately following their feat, Rich Franklin forfeited the challenge, choosing instead to rest his fighters than try to top the incredible accomplishments of Joe and Mike. Jorge didn’t react well to this, throwing his bottle at Rich and storming off. Though Jorge was disappointed he wasn’t able to compete, he was later rewarded by being chosen to fight the only person he truly disliked in the house, the eccentric and unorthodox Jason Von Flue.

By watching the training clips and interviews, it’s hard to judge what type of fighter Jason Von Flue really is.  He seems awkward in style and personality, choosing his own techniques and adapting them to his personal fight game and demeanor.  Even the UFC website has no information on him, only stating that he joined the show in episode 3.  Whatever the case, someone fighting out of Chuck Liddell’s camp has to be taken as a serious threat, and I believe that’s indeed what Jorge Gurgel did.

Jorge Gurgel    Jorge in turn began his career as pure BJJ practitioner, only to move onto Muay Thai and striking later on. He is quick to admit that he prefers to entertain the fans and strike in his matches, though he’s finished all of his matches by submissions of one sort or another.  Jorge was an obvious favorite coming into the match, seeing as he’d been training for such a long period of time, along with the fact that he and Rich have been stable mates for many years. The only advantage Von Flue seemed to have coming into the fight was a reach advantage, and despite the fact that this stat is often overlooked in MMA fights, it would play a pivotal role in the events that followed.

Jason and Jorge began the fight slowly, choosing to feel each other out with low-kicks and jabs instead of aggressively pushing the pace.  As Jorge began to feel the range that Jason possessed, he shot in and took Jason down.  To Jason’s credit, he quickly reversed position and put Jorge on his back in closed guard.  Jason put Jorge against the cage and landed a few good shots before Jorge reversed him in turn and eventually got the north/south position. Jorge switched between n/s and side-mount occasionally, never doing any real damage to Jason. Jason was quick to get off his back whenever Jorge took him down, perhaps fearing the submission more than any combination Jorge could throw on his feet. As they stood again, a small cut appeared over Jason’s right eye, but it remained only a trickle, nothing significant enough to affect the fight. On the feet, Jason immediately asserted himself with the advantage, landing stiff jabs and clean two punch combinations to Jorge’s face.  Perhaps with the surprising pressure Jorge felt on his feet, he took the fight back to the ground, working himself behind Jason and sinking in the hooks.  It looked as if Jason was helpless as Jorge tried to smother him with his forearm, but the only adverse outcome of this attempted choke was an excess amount of blood being forced through Jason’s minute cut.  Jason avoided the choke and tried to reverse, but ended up being mounted as time began to run out on the first round.  Jason neutralized Jorge’s attacks as the seconds wound down, and survived without much damage being done.

Though he had lost the first round, Jason had survived a near submission by a BJJ black belt, not to mention the confidence his multiple reversals of Jorge’s position on the ground had created.  Both men looked tired after the first ended, expending much of their energy on attacks and defense on the ground.   Both fighters came out sluggishly in the 2nd  with Jorge throwing lazy punches and Jason reacting with counters of his own.   Because of his fatigue, Jorge quickly took Jason down with Jorge ending up on his back and Jason attempting an offensive from the top. At one point, Jorge attempted a good-looking triangle, only to have Jason shrug it off and escape. Jason stood up and began to engage Jorge more effectively on the feet, throwing strong punches that at one point knocked Jorge’s mouth guard clean out. Jason also began to utilize the muay thai clinch, throwing good knees to the body while controlling Jorge’s neck. As they continued to strike, Jorge began to look more and more pressured by Jason’s straight combinations. In perhaps an answer to this aggression, Jorge threw a leg-kick at Jason that buckled his own injured knee and fell to the ground. Jason took advantage of the unfortunate mistake and threw a few good punches at Jorge while he was on his back. Jorge remained versatile and continued to attempt submissions, but it seemed the explosive power he needed to sink them in had left him. The fight again found itself on its feet with Jason again pushing the action and landing the clean shots. The round wound down with Jason taking the momentum, and the points from Jorge.

The third round was more of the same as Jason continued to have his way on the feet. He again utilized the clinch to control and fatigue his opponent, using openings in Jorge’s defense to throw good knees to the abdomen and the head. Jorge answered by getting a successful takedown early in the round, but only received more damage than he dealt in the position. As the two continued to exchange on the feet, Jorge got his second wind and starting throwing his punches with a strength he hadn’t had since the first round. Though he won the exchanges near the end, Jason continued his relaxed dominance of the standup game, neutralizing the blows and landing good elbows on the ground near the end of the fight. As the bell rang, there was no doubt in my mind, and apparently in the judges’ minds either, that Jason Von Flue had won the decision. And with that unanimous upset, one of the favorites of the show was eliminated. Jorge fought with great heart, but was unable to finish Jason when he had the opportunity. His knee mixed with Jason’s obvious advantage on the feet lead to his losing the fight, and what a fight it was.

With the departure of a welterweight front-runner comes the arrival of a dark horse. Who is this Jason Von Flue? Can he recover from this fight and continue with the show? Was this ring savvy a fluke, or is there more to this character than we’ve seen? I, for one, am actually excited for next week’s episode; not because it has to make up for this week’s failures, but because it has the difficult challenge of competing with its mastery.
Robert Andersson
robert@mma-fighter.com

Photos used with permission by the UFC®.
[Discuss this article in our Forum]

Karo Parisyan InterviewI caught up with Karo Parisyan last week shortly after he finished a private lesson, a double cheeseburger, and a coke. He is fresh off a decisive win against Matt Serra and waiting in line for the biggest fight of his life; a chance at the UFC Welter Weight belt and at MMA’s most dominate champion: Matt Hughes.

Brad Doerges: So your next fight is with Matt Hughes?

Karo Parisyan: Uh Yes…

Brad: Is that confirmed?

Karo: No, not yet. Not against Hughes. A 3 fight contract… but not against Hughes. (The next week it was confirmed on another MMA news site.)

Brad: So you have 2 more fights left on that?

Karo: I need more money though… To sign the contract I need more money to fight Hughes. Hughes is a fighter… he is a champion. If I’m gonna fight for the title I need more money.

Brad: I’m with you… How much does he make a fight? 50 to fight 50 to win?

Karo: No naw man… He just signed a contract for 3 fights for 45O thousand

Brad: Wow…

Karo: He made like 60 to fight 60 to win like 3 years ago… Now it’s more. He’s got a reality show now. I told Dana how about you put me and Matt on the reality show to promote the fight like Chuck and Randy.

Brad: That’s a good idea. I thought it was weird that they put coaches from 2 different weight classes.

Matt HughesKaro: They wanted to put me against him (Hughes) in the reality show that’s coming up in August. They wanted to give me a month to train for a title fight. Are you fucking nuts? I need like 2 ½ – 3 months to train… God forbid I lose at least I know that I trained for the fight.

Brad: The first fight I ever saw u fight was against Fernando Vasconcelos. I actually thought that guy was gonna beat you.

Karo: You did? A lot of people thought that.

Brad: Well he was Jiu Jitsu world champion… Mundials winner.

Karo: A lot of people were like Karo he’s bullet proof he’s amazing…

Brad: Hah! He couldn’t even take you down.

Karo: The hardcore guys like my friends.. Chris Brennan… they are calling me telling me “oh Karo you’ll beat him… trust me you’ll beat him… he can’t beat you…” When Terry (Trebilcock) called me he was like he’s just a Jiu Jitsu black belt. Then I find out this guy schools Trigg…. He was killing Shonie… World Champion Jiu Jitsu guy I was like what are you nuts dude? I fought 3 fights. I fought Jason Miller, Antonio McKee, and Fernando Vasconcelos in 3 ½ months. It was ridiculous. I dunno for some reason those were all really tough guys but I never really felt that much pressure on me for those fights. Now with the UFC it’s much harder. I mean my opponents are not that much better but the training and stuff is a lot harder. I don’t like it.

Brad: So you don’t like the pressure?

Karo: Well the pressure is always there. One of the major things I hate is cutting that much weight. I hate cutting to 170.

Brad: What do you weigh right now?

Karo: I’m still going up. I’m about 184. The most I have ever been was before the Serra fight. Two months before the Serra fight I was 194. Never been that big in my life.

Brad: Cheeseburger diet?

Karo: No actually I wasn’t eating that unhealthy. I was eating normal but I wasn’t training as much…

Brad: Did you know that if you beat Fernando you would be going to the UFC?

Karo: Well Gokor has been telling Joe Silva for a while get Karo in there and he was always like “We’ll see”. Honestly I was never like “Oh I wanna go to the UFC”, I’m just a Judo guy and I fight when ever I want. It was just one day I got a call at like 8 in the morning and Gokor is like congratulations you got in the UFC. Then I was like oh shit! I’m in the UFC. I was excited and like 2 months later oh I’m fighting Strasser? I was like I don’t care I’m fighting in the UFC!

Brad: What do you think the key to beating Matt Hughes is?

Karo: Well with Matt Hughes against me I’m pretty sure he is gonna have one game. His game is gonna be a ground and pound. Take me down muscle me and ground and pound me. He’s not gonna have anything like a left hook to right upper cut to a drop fireman’s to an armbar. It’s not gonna happen. God forbid it doesn’t happen. Anything can happen in a fight and Matt Hughes is the champion… he is unbelievable… I’m not underestimating him at all.

Brad: Should be a great fight.

Karo: I just know what he’s gonna try and do. He’s gonna try to out muscle me. If he tries to out grapple me that won’t be that smart for him. He shouldn’t try to grapple a grappler it’s like me trying to box a boxer. He will throw punches and kicks with me for sure but its all going to come down to him muscling me towards the cage and trying to take me down to set up his ground and pound. I’m going to try to circle away and try to take him down myself.

Brad: So do you think you will be able to throw him?

Frank Trigg V Matt HughesKaro: I have thrown a lot of guys before. I’ve foot swept Randy (Couture) before. I’ve thrown Dan Henderson before. It’s practice but I have fought great wrestlers before. In a fight it’s different because you have punches but when we clinch up… It’s like Judo guys have the footwork Randy and Hughes are more steady. I think Trigg is a better wrestler but Hughes is just stronger and pushes like a truck. If you have seen the first fight between Hughes and Trigg, Trigg was just killing him. Boom boom boom he was all over him because he had so much confidence in himself. If he had fought the same fight that he fought the first time in their last fight he would have beaten Hughes. But once you lose to somebody… they are in your head…

Brad: Hughes has won his last 2 fights by submission, are you afraid of his submission skills?

Karo: No. Big NO. But I mean anything can happen. I’m not underestimating him. He definatetly has the power to submit people… Skill to some point… If he gets somebody’s neck he will submit anybody because of his strength…

Brad: Have you ever trained with him or wrestled with him?

Karo: I never have even talked to him before, then at the last UFC he came into my dressing room before the Serra fight and said “Good luck Buddy”. I was like Hmmm That’s interesting

Brad: What about his stand up?

Karo: Well he’s not Pete Spratt… What I mean is he’s not a kickboxer… He can still hit hard but like I said the only thing I’m gonna look for is… well not saying that I’m not gonna look out for his hands since last time when I fought Serra I almost got paid for it big time. Like I said before my biggest concern is him taking me down.

Brad: Have you been working on your standup for this fight?

Karo: Yeah, I’m starting to work with a professional boxing trainer. I have a seminar then I’m coming back to work with him. He’s supposed to be the hottest trainer right now. Start training some boxing and hit a lot of weights. Maybe train with Randy or something.

Brad: So how many times have you trained with Randy before?

Karo: I trained with him a few times. I called him before the last UFC and I told him Gene and Gokor aren’t gone be there (for the Serra fight) will you corner for me? He said “yeah for sure of course anything at all”. So after I told him any time you are down here call me up and we can train. So I knew he would be down here last Thursday so I called him up and he was like I can’t I’m booked in meetings. So was like fine call me whenever you can. Then he called me back and told me that his meetings were cancelled and that he would meet me at my dojo later.

Randy CoutureBrad: So what was it like having Randy in your corner?

Karo: It was good… He was giving good advice like “Posture up.”, “Make your shots count.”, “Keep him there”… Great confidence booster… He’s a great guy… Honestly bro he’s an ace… A class act… I’m telling you that you can’t find too many guys like Randy… If he likes you, you’re set… He had to wear a KTFO hat and a Full Contact shirt so I could get paid because of my contract… He said no problem I’ll do anything to help you out. He’s like the best. In the UFC he’s the best as a fighter as a person as a coach. At the last UFC me and him walked into the training room with like 10 cameras after us Beyond the Glory… They were like “hey Randy can we take some photos?” and he says “Well it’s Karo’s show you’re gonna have to ask him.” I’m like “Uh Yeah! Most definitely.” Insane. I couldn’t even walk outside. People trying to get my autograph on napkins… Crazy.

Be Sure to look for part 2 where Karo talks about his fights with Sean Sherk, training with Vitor Belfort, and his thoughts on a rematch with Georges St Pierre.
Brad Doerges
brad@mma-fighter.com

http://mma-fighter.com/forum/threads/10566-Karo-Parisyan-Interview-Part-1-By-Brad-Doerges
Part 2

UFC 52 Weigh In Photos by Dave Mandel – Mike Van Arsdale, John Marsh, Joe Doerksen, Patrick Cote, Ivan Salaverry, Joe Riggs, Georges St. Pierre, Jason Miller, Matt Lindland, Travis Lutter, Matt Hughes, Frank Trigg, Renato Sobral, Travis Wiuff, Chuck Liddell, Randy Couture

UFC 52 – Couture vs Liddell 2
Ultimate Fighting Championship
April 16, 2005
MGM Grand Garden Arena,
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States

UFC 46 – Supernatural

January 31, 2004
Mandalay Bay Events Center,
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States

UFC 46 RESULTS

Match 1st Fighter VS 2nd Fighter Method Round Time
1 Matt Serra
Winner
Jeff Curran
Loser
Decision (Unanimous) 3 5:00
2 Josh Thomson
Winner
Hermes Franca
Loser
Decision (Unanimous) 3 5:00
3 Georges St. Pierre
Winner
Karo Parisyan
Loser
Decision (Unanimous) 3 5:00
4 Lee Murray
Winner
Jorge Rivera
Loser
Submission (Triangle Armbar) 1 1:45
5 Frank Mir
Winner
Wes Sims
Loser
KO (Punches) 2 4:21
6 Renato Verissimo
Winner
Carlos Newton
Loser
Decision (Unanimous) 3 5:00
7 B.J. Penn
Winner
Matt Hughes
Loser
Submission (Rear-Naked Choke) 1 4:39
8 Vitor Belfort
Winner
Randy Couture
Loser
TKO (Cut) 1 0:49

LastCall: Dennis, few people know that you were a Washington State High School wrestling champion in 1994. What weight was that at, and how did you get involved in MMA?

Dennis Hallman: I won the 135lb title my senior year. I was more of a scrambling wrestler than a ‘fundamentals’ wrestler so the transition to MMA wasn’t that hard. I had a local reputation for being a tough guy and got a call from a fella that said, “Hey, my friend wants to fight you to make a video.” That friend was Bobby Jacobsen…and I beat him. After that I started training with Bobby and a few of his guys, then Jeff Monson and I hooked up about a year later.

LastCall: When was your first fight?

Dennis Hallman: It was early in 1996. After about three weeks of training, mainly in submission wrestling, I fought on a Matt Hume card and choked out some Japanese kid in like 20 seconds. He said he wanted to go again and I ended up winning a decision the second time around.

LastCall: Since leaving AMC you’ve not had too many high profile fights. What gives?

Dennis Hallman: I’ve actually been scheduled to fight in the UFC twice since then. Once was against Romie Aram, then again against Jeremy Jackson. I’ve been keeping busy training and fighting as regularly as possible since then.

LastCall: Many fans credit Lady Luck for the two 1st round submissions of former UFC welterweight champion, Matt Hughes (winning twice in a total of 37 seconds) calling them ‘flukish’. Other fans maintain the argument, “Hughes was not the same back then” and “He’s much better now”…how do you respond?

Dennis Hallman: Hughes still does the same things he did when I fought him in Japan. The deal is that you either catch him when he makes a mistake or he pounds you to death. There’s no such thing as a lucky submission…just a prepared fighter that notices a mistake and the other fighter that doesn’t properly defend the submission. Hughes still makes mistakes, but BJ and I are the only ones that were able to capitalize on them. It’s impossible to say what would happen in a rematch…but if he made a mistake, I’d catch him again.

LastCall: Most in the MMA community last saw you against Ray Cooper at ROTR. What have you been up to since then?

Dennis Hallman: I’m a ‘stay-at-home-dad’ for my three sons during the day and I train with Benji Radach and the team (Victory Athletics) a few nights a week. There’s quite a few good up-an-comers training with us right now. I’ve also been dealing with all the bureaucratic crap over MMA here in Washington State recently. There’s a moratorium on amateur competition until the athletic commission writes it’s new rules…and they’re taking their sweet time. That’s why I haven‘t been promoting any events since early March. So I changed gears to focus on fighting for a while. Now I have great business partner running USA Mixed Martial Arts with me and we’ll be back in the swing of things before too long, but it’s given me the opportunity to look into bigger fights and still be able to maintain an active presence locally.

LastCall: So what are your immediate goals?

Dennis Hallman: My immediate goal is to choke that bitch, Trigg, out. The near future will bring, God willing, some fights against the best fighters in the world at my weight class because I believe I can compete against any one of them.

LastCall: Like?

Dennis Hallman: Like…BJ Penn if he stays at WW; Matt Hughes; Charuto, Sean Sherk, Carlos Newton and anyone else the UFC would sign me to fight.
LastCall: Okay…well you’re scheduled to rematch Frank Trigg. In your first fight (for the WFA welterweight Title) you took a low blow during an exchange on your feet and eventually lost the match. Considering his wrestling background, and the fact that he initiated a shot right out of the gate against Hughes, what do you expect from him?

Dennis Hallman: Honestly? I just expect him to tap out. He won’t want to take the fight to the ground with me because he knows he’d be too busy defending submissions to even think about any kind of offensive maneuver. He’s not stronger than me, he’s not quicker than me…he’s just bald and talks a lot more. I saw his video clip on the Internet where he talked about me crying in the corner like an 8-year-old girl after our last fight. He said that like 3 times. Now, it doesn’t surprise me in the slightest that he knows what a sad little 8-year-old girl sounds like…but did you notice that he doesn’t dispute that he kicked me in the nuts…he just says that he won. No shit – and the NSAC changed the rule after that fight. I’m not worried about that ‘loss’. I know the real deal and so do the fans. It’ll be made clear here in a few weeks UFC 48.

LastCall: What are your thoughts on the current state of the UFC welterweight division and where do you stand among them? Specifically, I’m curious about your thoughts on Trigg’s loss to Hughes, Hughes’ subsequent loss to Penn, and Diaz’ recent knockout of Robbie Lawler.

Dennis Hallman: Well, BJ really blew the division wide open by moving up and taking the title in his first fight in the weight class. I had no doubt whatsoever that Hughes would beat Trigg, that was a given. I really thought Matt would pound the shit out of him though…not choke him out. Nick Diaz is a tough young kid with a huge amount of potential. I, too, thought he’d either submit Lawler, or Robbie would KO him. I never saw a Diaz KO coming. That was cool for him though. As far as the welterweight division goes…on any given day any of the top 15 guys could probably take one another. Shit happens.

LastCall: Okay…how about some word association to take us out. Let loose with whatever comes to mind.

Dennis Hallman: Sure…

LastCall: Frank Trigg

Dennis Hallman: tap tap tap…weak and unskilled, too

LastCall: BJ Penn

Dennis Hallman: Exciting, energetic…

LastCall: Matt Hughes

Dennis Hallman: Epitome of champion

LastCall: Nick Diaz

Dennis Hallman: the future…definitely

LastCall: Karo Parysian

Dennis Hallman: uh…Judo?

LastCall: Charuto

Dennis Hallman: skillful…I could probably tell you more after the Hughes fight.

LastCall: Robbie Lawler

Dennis Hallman: Reckless, tough, he’ll be back.

LastCall: Anything you want to leave the fans with?

Dennis Hallman: I just hope everyone tunes in June 19th and that my fight makes the PPV because I’m ready to show everyone what ‘Superman’ is all about.

LastCall: Thanks for taking the time to chat, Dennis. Good luck with the rest of your preparation.

Dennis Hallman: No problem, man. See you in Vegas.

Christopher “Last Call” Cope
djlastcall@yahoo.com

http://mma-fighter.com/forum/threads/2701-Dennis-Hallman-Interview-May-11th-2003-By-Last-Call