Wednesday

BAMMA 13 Highlighted By Title Fight

BAMMA Badbeat 13 will take place October 10 from the Commerce Casino in Commerce, California and feature a bantamweight title fight between Terrion Ware and Jeff Martin. Ware (11-3) is making his first title defense after winning the belt over Eric Money in March via decision. ?The saying you?re never really the champ until you […]

The post BAMMA 13 Highlighted By Title Fight appeared first on MMA Convert.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/mmaconvert/~3/4BUdWAdVdNg/

Phil Cardella Roan Jucao Carneiro Shane The Engineer Carwin  Jason Hollywood Chambers

Tuesday

On Behalf Of Ronda Rousey, Manny Gamburyan Issues Challenge

Manny Gamburyan had a special guest Octagon-side with him Saturday night at UFC 178 in Ronda Rousey. The two are teammates, and after Gamburyan earned a second round submission victory over Cody Gibson, he issued a challenge based partly on Rousey. “Bryan Caraway, where you at?” Gamburyan asked. “Take the challenge. Win or lose your […]

The post On Behalf Of Ronda Rousey, Manny Gamburyan Issues Challenge appeared first on Five Ounces of Pain.

Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2014/09/28/on-behalf-of-ronda-rousey-manny-gamburyan-issues-challenge/

Andrew Gardner Tiki Ghosn Dennis George Kultar Gill

Sunday

Alexander Shlemenko: 'Losing to Tito Ortiz shook me'

Dealing with adversity, with loss, is often what defines a champion. Long streaks of dominance are fine and preferable, but they don't tell someone what kind of fighter they are.

Heading into his light heavyweight fight against UFC hall of famer Tito Ortiz, Bellator middleweight champion Alexander Shlemenko had won thirteen straight fights. So, it is little wonder that he felt so confident heading into the fight.�

After being dispatched via choke by Ortiz in under three minutes, however, the Russian admits to being "shaken up." Shlemenko's dominant streak of wins had just come crashing down, but he responded to the fall like a true champion - by getting back in the gym immediately.�

"I started training again the next day, after the fight [with Ortiz]," he tells Cagewriter through a translator, two days before returning to the cage in Phoenix against Brandon Halsey.

"I was so upset and not just because I lost, but because of the way I lost. I didn?t even get punched once. I didn?t get scratched in the fight...the loss really shook me up. It shook me to the point where, after the fight, I feel like a new fighter. So, that and because I had to help a student of mine get ready to fight, it was easy psychologically and physically for me to get back into training hard."

Shlemenko also says he made a great deal of changes in his training, from stand up striking to wrestling and submission work. However, the biggest change in his training was his attitude towards it.

"Yes, I made some significant changes," he reveals.

"First and foremost, however, I changed my attitude towards training. During my preparation for Tito, I felt way too relaxed. I have changed my mental approach to training, in addition to learning a lot of new techniques."

Shlemenko may need all that in order to win his next bout on Friday. According to the champion, his opponent Halsey brings a strong grappling game and a sharp mind into the fight.

"He's a strong, big guy with a lot of weight. Obvisouly he's a great wrestler and against Brett Cooper he showed that he's also a thinking fighter," he says.

"He thinks about strategy before his fights and he utilizes that strategy well in the fight."

In Halsey, Shlemenko will fight an undefeated contender who doubtless has the confidence of a professional who has never tasted defeat. "Storm" has the confidence of a champion recently wounded, however, and the lessons learned from recent defeat may make him all the more dangerous.

He doesn't know what will happen on fight night, but he has visualized one thing over and over, in the weeks leading up to Friday - Winning. "It is difficult to visualize what may happen in a fight," he admits.

"But the one thing I can visualize is that, at the end of the day, my hand will be raised again and I will keep my belt."

Follow Elias on Twitter�@EliasCepeda�&�@YahooCagewriter

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/alexander-shlemenko---losing-to-tito-ortiz-shook-me-200045236.html

Shinya Aoki  Andrei Arlovski  Ricardo Arona  Noboru Asahi

Brandon Halsey: 'I'm expecting the best Alexander Shlemenko'

Brandon Halsey (7-0) gets a shot at the Bellator middleweight title Friday in Phoenix, when he challenges champion Alexander Shlemenko (50-8). The undefeated American wrestler has motivation beyond the gold belt, however - he wants to keep the "0" on his record.

"Yeah it feels good to keep the momentum going and stay undefeated. I want to keep that going," he tells Cagewriter.

Up until he lost a non-title, light heavyweight fight with Tito Ortiz last May, Shlemenko had a great deal of momentum going himself. It had been years, and thirteen fights since the Russian had dropped a fight before getting submitted in the first round of his fight with the former UFC champ. �

Shlemenko recently told us that he's a new and more dangerous fighter since that loss. Halsey doesn't doubt it, and expects the champion to have all his confidence back come fight night.�

"I have no idea what his mindset is but I know he is capable of overcoming adversity," the challenger says.

"I?m expecting him to bring his best. I?m prepared for the best Alexander Shlemenko." �

One of the champion's main strengths is his almost ridiculous amount of fight experience. He estimates that he's competed in fight sports over a thousand times, and his professional MMA record lists nearly sixty fights.

With just seven pro fights in total, Halsey would seem to be at serious disadvantage when it comes to experience and the savvy that comes with it. The Californian says he's more than an MMA newcomer, however - he's a life long combat sports competitor.

"I've been wrestling a long time," he explains.

"I've been on this type of big stage before. Having seventy fights doesn?t mean that you have the experience advantage. I'm looking forward to the spotlight. I'm ready to go."

Halsey's goals don't just include staying undefeated and winning the Bellator title, either. The 28 year-old wants to become the best fighter in the world, pound for pound, by the time he's done.

"[Winning] is going to be a good feeling," he says.

"Everyone looks forward to holding a title. But I'll still have to move forward. I want to be the best fighter in the world, pound for pound, one day." ��

Follow Elias on Twitter�@EliasCepeda�&�@YahooCagewriter

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/brandon-halsey---i-m-expecting-the-best-alexander-shlemenko-205436540.html

Zelg Benkei Galesic Mauro Galvao Arman Gambaryan Manvel Gamburyan