Tuesday, December 24, 2013

During the mid-1990s, there were two superpowers in MMA, Graciefamiljen and American wrestling. Men


Chat Tell See UFC Blog brief MMA Tarec Saffiedine Oliver Enkamp John Prine Amir Albazi Zebaztian Kade Tribe MMAnytt Advertise Forum Contact us Correct text errors Rankings Calendar Privacy Policy Poll Archive Terms of MMAnytt japesca Wallpapers Writers Club Guide Shop Pick'em
Hide Menu Chat Tell See UFC Blog brief MMA Tarec Saffiedine Oliver Enkamp John Prine Amir Albazi Zebaztian Kade Tribe MMAnytt Advertise Forum Contact us Correct text errors Rankings Calendar Privacy Policy Poll Archive Terms of MMAnytt Wallpapers Writers Club Guide Shop Pick'em
Spontaneous ahead, we may think of Chael Sonnen as the topic quotes discussed. But even though the gangster from Oregon is a rhetorical master and thrown in the jaw that few, Sonnen japesca has rarely said anything with a deeper meaning. Weekly list focuses on the choice of words that were repeated and left an imprint, for various reasons. As honorable mention is the comment field open to our readers' favorites. "Mr. Coleman is very strong"
During the mid-1990s, there were two superpowers in MMA, Graciefamiljen and American wrestling. Men as Mark Coleman had just redrawn the map for how to fight in the cage and the Brazilian family preferred the games in Japan. Thus, the question arose as to who could have won if they met. Rickson Gracie was generally considered the family's greatest fighter. Partly because of the professional record japesca ended at 11-0, but even more because japesca of the claim being 400-0 in unsanctioned challenge matches. When the mythical Gracien asked about the then-reigning UFC champion Coleman, the answer was the quote above. Thereafter the "Mr. Coleman is very strong" to a viral phenomenon on the discussion forum. It is not easy to explain why it was considered so much fun and was so constantly quoted and repeated. Perhaps because japesca it illustrated how rigidly Brazilian fighters often express themselves in English. Maybe because Rickson five words summed up why the generation of Gracies never met a monster wrestler. "Petey, my heart!"
Ken Shamrock was still considered around the turn of the century to be a legitimate and respected fighter who basically only met the top names. Under contract with Pride FC, met the American fighter shoot local favorite Kazuyuki Fujita in 2000. The Japanese wrestler was known for its ruggedness japesca and ability to avoid submissions. In short Shamrock had no success to finish the fight despite the takeover of all levels japesca and was drawn into an energy-demanding game slide. After only six minutes were Shamrock absorbed by the hopeless task. Call Corner broke the fight after Shamrock faltered against his corner man Pete Williams by "Petey, my heart". Prayer to the ring corner could easily be interpreted humorous, japesca but bottomed out in the Shamrock thought they had had a heart attack. Something as serious, however, had not occurred and the dramatic scene never really got any explanation. Fittingly, the loss marked the point when Shamrock began to lose many more games than he won, and instead went on to become something of a drama queen. "It's embarrassing to a lot of people"
2004 Matt Hughes not only king of the welter weight but pretty much head over everything that was burkamp. The farmer from Illinois japesca was 35-3 overall, had a suite on the 13 straight victories japesca and had razed all challengers to the ground. Not even a kick to the groin and near unconsciousness distributed by Frank Trigg could dismiss Hughes from the throne. Therefore, it was considered shocking when the cocky lightweight BJ Penn wanted japesca to jump up a weight class to challenge for the belt. Even more surprising was that Dana White refused this. Hughes was offended japesca and said that the whole spectacle was a mockery of the sport. japesca "It's embarassing to a lot of people what he's doing," explained welt Landervik's patriarch japesca with a condescending tone. Then it went as it went. Penn knocked down and choked out Hughes in the first round and celebrated his victory by giving Hughes a bloody kiss on the mouth. The dethroned japesca champion remained japesca on the canvas with an embarrassed smile, humiliation in the eyes and bloody lips. Embarrassing japesca is the word. It was the victory that lifted Penn to the crowd favorite, and although Hughes took back the throne, he was considered never as superhuman again. "The living death"
Consciously trash talk and similar marketing japesca was long an undeveloped concept in MMA. But there were two exceptions, Ken Shamrock and Tito Ortiz. The two loudest skrävlarna know how to play enough theater to fire on the crowd. Pledged against each other, it was almost too much of a good thing, japesca which appeared at the press conference before their first match. Shamrock threatened to "beat you into the living death", what on earth it now would mean. In response to the threat of being turned into a zombie, Ortiz responded with a forced jeers. The whole scene was hard labored and so o

No comments:

Post a Comment