Rear Naked Choke

bellatorBellator’s Season Six Featherweight Tournament concluded on Friday night with the finale matchup between Nova Uniao’s highly-regarded Marlon Sandro and the wrestling product of Cincinnati, Ohio,  Daniel Straus.  Straus used a mixture of powerful wrestling, aggressive pacing and exceptional conditioning to tactfully wear his opponent down and earn the unanimous decision.  At times, Sandro appeared exhausted and unprepared for the type of battle that Straus instigated early in the fight.  After the final bell, the more visibly-damaged Sandro hung his head, almost as if he accepted the defeat.  Straus raised his arms in victory and his teammates rushed to greet him with smiles, hugs and congratulatory hand-slaps.  Only the formality of the score announcement separated Straus from a six-figure paycheck and an official shot at a Bellator World Championship.  Judges Eric Colon and Sue Sanidad awarded Straus a clean sweep of 30-27 scores, while Judge Michelle Agustin saw the fight 29-28, still in favor of Straus.  Agustin, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu purple belt and instructor at Tong Dragon MMA in Bayville, New Jersey, felt that Sandro was the winner of the third round.  Cage side commentator Jimmy Smith, an accomplished grappler and veteran of six professional MMA fights, agreed with Agustin’s assessment.  While there is no debate regarding who won the overall contest, the third-round discrepancy remains curious.  The disagreement brings to light the potential illusion of a near-submission, and the uncertainty of how certain situations should be scored.  Let’s take an in-depth look at the bout’s grappling-heavy final frame to learn how an extended choke attempt may have been the primary influence in Agustin’s decision.

The first 90 seconds of the round saw some pawing and quick striking exchanges from both fighters.  Neither was able to land a multiple-hit combination or strike of significance.  Straus then ducked underneath for a body-lock/double-underhook attempt, but it was shrugged off by Sandro who pushed Straus against the cage for a short moment.  Straus continued to pummel through while managing to force a separation with 3:48 remaining.  Twenty seconds later, Straus threw a high kick that was at least partially blocked by Sandro.  Straus then attempted a double-leg takedown which Sandro quickly sprawled to defend.  At this stage, the round was closely-contested.  Neither fighter was able to make an obvious impression or gain a clearly advantageous position.

With 3:20 remaining, shortly after Sandro’s sprawl, the Brazilian decided to drop for a single-leg attempt of his own.  He would not earn the takedown, however, he turned to get behind Straus’ back and push his opponent’s chest to the cage while in a standing position.  With 2:42 left, Straus turned to face Sandro which ultimately created an opening for an arm-triangle choke.  Sandro attempted to lock on the choke resulting in a hold that was applied for almost one full minute of the round.  Depending on the observer’s outlook, one may have believed that Straus was in danger of losing the fight during this sequence.

Almost immediately, Straus tilted his neck to the right, stuck his palm on his forehead, and extended his elbow to create space and prevent his carotid arteries from being pinched.  His textbook defensive instincts never allowed Sandro to advance the position.  Straus then appeared to relax (to the point of giving the official a “thumb-up” signal) his body almost content with the situation at hand.  While watching the broadcast, it is clear that Sandro was never close to finishing the fight with this hold.  Sandro did not manage to gain a grip that would close the gap from the left side of Straus’ neck to his own shoulder.   All the while, the clock is running down and Sandro was no further along with his choke then he was when it was first attempted.  Sandro was on the offensive, but with both men on their feet, his positioning was not dominant or especially advantageous.  Sandro, left with no choice but to bail on the choke, conceded the hold as the fighters separated with only 1:05 remaining.  What followed is the most significant offensive maneuver of the round.

With 36 seconds left, Straus ducked under a punch from Sandro, spun behind, and elevated him in the air with an emphatic belly-to-back slam.  Wasting no time, Straus threw one hook in and managed to secure the second hook only a few seconds later.  With only 10 seconds left on the clock, Straus extended Sandro’s body while wrapping his arm around his opponent’s throat for a rear-naked choke attempt.    Time would expire, but Straus had scored the round’s only takedown, gained what is arguably the most dominant grappling position in the sport, and applied what could easily be recognized as the more threatening of the two chokes attempted during the round.  Was that enough to earn a 10-9?  Two judges felt so, but the third did not.  So how did Sandro manage to out-point Straus’ late barrage in the eyes of Judge #3?

It all boils down to perspective.  Sports judging is controversial in nature, and without a definitive set of criteria, fans are left to interpret the vaguely worded, “effective striking, grappling, aggression and cage control.”  I can’t speak for the specific reasons why both Agustin and Smith (who, in fairness, was not tasked with judging the contest) scored the third round for Sandro, but I ask – What good was Sandro’s submission attempt if it lasted one minute and he got nothing out of it?  I can expand on this to suggest that Straus’s defense could have been the catalyst for Sandro’s arm fatigue, the result of which led to the lazy punch attempt that created the opening for Straus’ final flurry.

So what side of the fence are you on, and how would you break down the final round? Join the chatter in the forum.

Leroy Brown
leroybee37@gmail.com

Fatal Femmes Fighting 2 Girls Night Out Review – Lisa Ward Retains Flyweight title against Taeko Nagamine.

Former Collegiate wrestler Lisa Ward defended her title with a submission against last minute opponent Taeko Nagamine. Her original fight would have featured a rematch with Smack Girl veteran Misaki Takimoto who was submitted by a Kimura in their previous encounter. In the Headlining match Ward wasted no time taking the over matched Nagamine to the mat with a crowd awing slam. Ward moved to mount forcing Nagamine to give up her back after landing a hard elbow. Ward showed poise as she softened up Nagamine with strikes and sunk in the rear naked choke getting that tap at 2:37 in the first.

In the Co main event Megumi Yabushita took on last minute opponent Ginelle Marquez. With Josh Barnett in her corner Marquez dominated every facet of the fight on her way to a lopsided unanimous decision (30-27, 30-24, 30-26). The always exciting Yabushita tried to keep the fight on its feet by throwing unorthodox punches and avoiding the clinch but Ginelle would get the best of these exchanges gaining the clinch and the takedown. Late in the third it looked as if Yabushita was done when Marquez had her back and was hammering down rights as the crowd and photographer’s row hoped for the stoppage. Yubushita showing grit and toughness remarkably rolled to her back and stood up as she was able to hang for the Judge’s decision. Marquez tacked on an impressive win to her resume taking the fight with only 10 days notice.

Brazilian Vanessa Porto displayed why she is a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Champion winning by armbar against former collegiate wrestling champion Tonya Evinger. Similar to her previous Fatal Femmes fight with Brittany Pullem Evinger landed a right that sent her opponent to the mat. Tonya pounced looking to finish but Porto swept her and moved to mount. With out throwing a single punch Porto methodically setup the armbar and subsequently secured it getting the tap at 2:14 in the first.
Angela Samaro dominated Fatal Femmes veteran Crystal Harris by armbar at 1:08 in second round.

Jessica Penne won her second Fatal Femmes match by defeating Sumie Sakai. Penne was taken down repeatedly by Sakai but was able to take advantage of Sakai’s scarf hold by taking her back each time the fight went to the mat. After several unsuccessful rear naked choke attempts from Sakai’s back in the first and second Penne was able to transition to armbar from Sakai’s back in the third and get the tap at O:33.
Sophie Bagerdai ran over Stephanie Palmer winning at 1:07 in the first. Palmer injured her foot early in the fight and was taken out of the ring in a stretcher.

Teammates collided when Yoko Takahashi tapped out Keiko Tomai by what looked to be a pro wrestling leg lock at 2:27 in the first.

Full Results

1 Yoko Takahashi over Keiko Tamai by Submission Rd 1 @ 2:27
2 Sophie Bagherdai over Stephanie Palmer by TKO 1 1:07
3 Jessica Pene over Sumi Sakai by Submission (Armbar) 3 @ 0:33
4 Angela Samaro over Crystal Harris by Submission (Armbar) 2 @ 1:08
5 Vanessa Porto over Tonya Evinger by Submission (Armbar) 1 @ 2:14
6 Ginelle Marquez over Megumi Yabushita by Decision (Unanimous) 3 @ 3:00
7 Lisa Ward over Taeko Nagamine by Submission (Rear Naked Choke) 1 @ 2:37

Brad Doerges
brad@mma-fighter.com

The increasingly colorful Shawn Bias took on Chance Ferrar at 145 in the Headline bout at Total Combat 15. Farrar scored first landing a punch then taking down bias with a textbook double. Bias unfazed calmly swept Ferrar and after a brief scuffle both fighters were on there feet. After another grappling exchange Ferrar was able to take down Bias again but once again Bias showed his superior Jiu Jitsu by armbarring Ferrar at 2:59 in the first. Bias Celebrated by hugging the after fight interviewer and running on the cage fence.

In other exciting Total Combat action Dominik Cruz was able to eek a Descion over Dave Hisquierdo. After being taken down repeatedly in the first round Cruz proved he had the bigger tank of gas and the better hands. Hisquierdo won the fight in the third when he repeatedly engaged Cruz with punches but Cruz’s response was to hit the mat. Cruz (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)

Wade Shipp showed his submission skills in his win over Allen Sullivan. In the first Wade was surprisingly easily taken down by the much smaller Allen who barely made out of the round when Shipp was unable to finish a triangle before the bell sounded. In the second Shipp took his frustration out on Sullivan by easily throwing him to the mat taking his back and sinking the choke at 2:41 in the 2nd.

MMA-Fighters KO of the night goes to the 14 second KO of Josh Tampsen by Tony Velarde. Valerde only threw one punch in the fight.

Full Results

Tony Velarde over Tampsen :14 KO (Punch) Rd 1

Christian Vargas over Joey Rodanzzo 1:51 TKO Submission Rear Naked Choke

Juan Miranda over Aric Nelson Rear Naked Choke Rd 1

Ian Mc Call over Chris David with a unanimous decision Rd 3

Rameau T. Sokoudjo over Gary Padilla by split decision

Wade Shipp over Allen Sullivan by Rear Naked Choke Rd 1

Dominik Cruz over Dave Hisquierdo by Slit JD (29-28, 28-29, 30-27)

Shawn Bias over Chance Ferrar By Armbar 2:59 Rd 1

http://mma-fighter.com/forum/threads/14743-Total-Combat-15-Quick-Review-By-Brad-Doerges

1. Reggie Cardiel over Paul Karsky in RD 1 0:40 by elbows from the Guard/Ref Stoppage
Paul (from Chino) came down the ramp to the cage wearing what looked to be a tae kwon do mask and a white belt wearing some colorful fight shorts and was followed by a large group of his supporters. Reggie “the Wrecker” came down followed by his training partners at SD (San Diego) Fight Club. Reggie looked larger then his opponent when they starred at each other across the ring. The Wrecker quickly takes down Paul who takes guard. Reggie proceeds to throw some punches from the guard and has good success. Then Reggie drops some heavy elbow/forarm shots obvoulsy hurting Karsky. The Ref lets Paul take a few more of these then stops the fight. Karsky had to be helped off the mat by his corner men.

2. Manny Tapia over Ed Newalu Rd 2 JD
Manny Tapia walked down the ramp with his team from Millenia JJ. Ed Newalu from Hawaii walked down with his team from the 808 Fight Factory. There was a lot of trading on the feet and some take downs followed by a little GnP from both fighters with Tapia edging out Newalu for the Dec.

3. Matt Stansell over John DelaO Rd 1 2:40 elbows from half guard/Tap Out
Matt Stansell, from North County Fight Club, quickly rushed John forcing him into the fence where Matt took John down and landed in half guard position. From there Stensell took full advantage of the fence by throwing some heavy elbows onto Johns face forcing the tapout.

4. Joe Frainee over Jake Gomez Rd 1 2:28 Rear Naked Choke/Tap Out
5.Dave Hesquerdo over Matt Baraza Rd 1 3:14 Rear Naked Choke/Tap Out
Baraza Came down the ramp with a toy axe and executioner mask but he didn’t put up much of a fight as he was taken down repeatedly and eventually choked out by Hesquerdo.

6. James Wilks over Ray Lazama Rd 1 Knees Cut/Doctor Stop* Fixed Sorry James
James “Lighting” Wilks Came out throwin heavy leather against Lazama who would avoid Wilk’s hands by going into the clinch. Once in the clinch a knee battle would begin with each opponent trading knees off each others heads. Wilks got the best of the knee exchange by opening a large cut on Rays head (Lazama looked like Carrie when the ref broke the clinch) and Doctor 90210 stopped the fight with only 58 seconds gone in the first.

7. Harris Sarmiento over John Olivas Rd 1 1:44 Ref Stop
8. Robert Emerson over Joe Camacho Rd 2 JD
After a short break I came back to watch arguably the best fight of the night featuring Joe Camacho a popular local fighter who has fought some of the best the KOTC has to offer versus Robert Emerson from Colin Oyamas new gym No Limits (formally from RVT) who has taken both Javi and Pulver to JD’s. The bell started and assumed that Camacho with a brown belt in JJ would try to take Emerson down but to my surprise Camacho was content to exchange with Emerson who had Ruas’s Brutal leg kicks. After about 3 mins into the first round Camacho was limping and looking tired from taking a combination of good knees, kicks and punches from a relentless Emerson. Emerson seemed to look very fresh starting the 2nd round and even took Camacho down following with some heavy leg kicks before the ref restarted the fight. Emerson continued his standup dominance by landing several more knees and punches till the bell rang giving him the unanimous decision.

9. Brian Sesma over Ron Short Rd 1 2:12 TKO/Ref Stop
Ron Short looked to be the large under dog with Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Colin Oyama in Sesmas corner but he tried to prove everybody wrong by quickly taking down Sesma and delivering some heavy blows from the half guard. With some instruction from Jackson and Oyama Sesma was able to use the fence and stand up. There was a trading of punches over where I couldn’t see and then suddenly Shorts back hit the mat. He was still conscience but that was soon ended by a huge right from Sesma who quickly pounced on his downed opponent ending the fight with a few more punches.

10. Urijah Faber over Rami Boukai Rd 2 JD
Urijah came down the ramp with his sponsors (Arrogant Male?) followed by his Gladiator Challenge Bantamweight belt. Although I have never seen Rami fight before he seemed very game and very comfortable on the ground. Urijah looked a lot stronger than Boukai but it didn’t seem to matter as he worked well from the guard in round 1. Rami showed his submission skills when Faber brought him up for a big slam but Rami was able to transition to a triangle in mid air. Faber showed why he is the champ by escaping the triangle the omo plata attempt and the leg bar attempt that followed. For most of the second round Urijah struggled as Rami took his back and was able to triangle his legs. Although the ref let Rami go for the choke for an unusually long stretch of time Rami was unable to secure the choke and seemed to be slightly cut after taking some over the shoulder punches from Faber. After the fight was stood up Faber turned to his corner and started complaining to his corner about his glove but the fight had been restarted and Rami was rushing towards him. At the last second it looked as though Herb Dean(the ref
) tapped Faber on the shoulder to tell him the fight is on and Faber ducked a huge Mike Kyle like punch. After that point it was all Faber, with Faber taking down Rami and Pounding on him for the remainder of the round to take the split decision JD. (check out the pics of that fight they are good)

11. Frankie Bollinger over Richard Goodwin Rd 1 Keylock/Tapout
The fight for the KOTC Bantamweight belt was up for grabs and it seemed either man could take it. After a small standup battle Goodwin ended up on the ground with Bollinger in his open guard. Bollinger dived back into Goodwin’s guard carelessly leaving himself open for an arm bar. Goodwin took it and seemed to be getting it but Bollinger countered back with a huge left knee to Goodwins face that left Frankie visibly dazed and Richard free of the arm bar. After the knee it was all Bollinger as he secured sidemount and cranked Goodwins arm for a keylock submission to win the Belt. Congrats to Frank on his new belt.

12. Joey Villasenor over Brian Foster RD 1 Rear Naked Choke/Tap Out
As soon as the bell rung Villasenor ran over to Foster and threw a huge left hook right to Fosters face that I thought would put him on his back although Foster looked dazed he stood his ground. From that point on it seemed as though Foster was a shell of the fighter I have seen before getting dominated in the clinch and getting takendown at Villasenors will. After one of the beautiful trip takedowns from Joey he was able to take Fosters back securing the rear naked Choke despite all the yelling from corner man Dan Henderson. Congrat to Joey on his new MW KOTC Belt.

13. Fernando Gonzalez over Travis Goodman RD 1 KO 0:25
14. Jerry Davis over Dan Jones RD 1 TKO 0:34
15. Tom Roden over Mark McClelland RD 1 Submission 3:04
16. Mike Ancheta over Lee Petacue RD 1 Submission 1:26

http://mma-fighter.com/forum/threads/5027-King-of-the-Cage-39-Full-Results-and-Review-By-Brad-*updated