English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Anyone see the fights who won what???

2006-11-18 14:06:11 · 3 answers · asked by K C 2 in Sports Martial Arts

3 answers

They have not fought yet, but sherdog.com or mmaweekly.com are good sites for resullts

2006-11-18 14:09:44 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's not over (or even started)yet. www.ufc.com and www.sherdog.com are good sites to keep up on the info.

2006-11-18 14:15:09 · answer #2 · answered by Mariposa 7 · 0 0

Fight #1:
-Jake O'Brien vs. Josh Shockman

Round 1: First round was all O'Brien. He got a couple takedowns and controlled most of the action in the round - using effective ground and pound to probably win the round 10-9.

Round 2: Similar round, with O'Brien controlling where the action goes with his takedown ability. Most of the round was slow-paced, which the crowd **** on. Lots of restarts by the referee for stalling, but the action would ultimately end up in the same place all the time. 2-0 O'Brien going into the third and final round, most likely.

Round 3: Another round very similar as the previous two. O'Brien getting takedowns, not doing much with them, referee restarting them standing - and then it winds up right back where it started. Looking like a shut out, albeit a boring one, for O'Brien.

Jake O'Brien def. Josh Shockman via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) after 3 Rounds.

Fight #2:
-James Irvin vs. Hector Ramirez

Round 1: Round opens with Ramirez pushing the action on the feet, and Irvin trying to slow it down with leg kicks. Ramirez early on takes Irvin down and gets his back. Irvin gets out of it and on the feet misses a wild spinning back fist. The two trade, nothing big landing, and Ramirez gets a takedown to end the round.

Round 2: Irvin begins round two working the leg kicks again, and lands a superman punch. Those are always cool to see. Ramirez lands a decent punch but it's immediately followed by a bomb from Irvin that rocks Ramirez. Irvin follows up with a nice body kick and ground and pound until the referee stops the bout.

James Irvin def. Hector Ramirez via TKO (strikes) at 2:36 of Round 2.

Fight #3:
-Antoni Hardonk vs. Sherman Pendergarst

Round 1: Round begins with a quick Pendergarst takedown. Pendergarst is working furiously with ground and pound, having decent effect. After a lull in the action, the fight is restarted on the feet where Pendergarst seems winded. Eventually, Hardonk lands a great punch followed by a solid leg kick and it's all over.

Antoni Hardonk def. Sherman Pendergarst via KO (strikes) at 3:15 of Round 1.

Fight #4:
-Nick Diaz vs. Gleison Tibau

Round 1: Tibau avoided a takedown from Diaz early and got Diaz on the ground. Diaz has guard, but Tibau is staying busy on top with ground and pound. Diaz curls up and Tibau goes for his back, but Diaz reverses and gains dominate position. Tibau goes for an oma plata, and then goes for a kimura. Diaz eventually sweeps Tibau and gets on top, working ground and pound of his own. Round ends like that, so it's a close round. Tough round to score, maybe Diaz.

Round 2: Tibau pushed Diaz against the cage and tried desperately for a takedown. He didn't get it. He looked visably tired and pulled guard. Diaz eventually got the mount and finished the fight with ground and pound.

Nick Diaz def. Gleison Tibau via TKO (strikes) at 2:27 of Round 2.

LIVE PPV COVERAGE (more detailed):

Fight #5:
-Joe Stevenson vs. Dokonjonosuke Mishima

Round 1: Round opens with Stevenson trying a clinch, Mishima uses his judo skills to throw Stevenson down and gain top position. He's in Stevenson's half guard and he's now caught in a deep guillotine choke. Looked to be done and lasted seemingly forever, but Mishima got out. He gets side mount. In a scramble, Stevenson gains guard. We got a stupid patrotic U-S-A chant. Stevenson secures a guillotine again and this time had it too tight, Mishima taps.

Joe Stevenson def. Dokonjonosuke Mishima via Submission (guillotine choke) at 2:07 of Round 1.

Fight #6:
-Brandon Vera vs. Frank Mir

Round 1: Very quick and completely one-sided fight. On the feet, Mir looked to be better than usual, but honestly so did Vera. He was utilizing almost only boxing skills, hurting Mir with simple stiff-jabs, until he really caught him with a punch and almost knocked him unconscious with knees in the thai-clinch. On the ground, Vera followed in with pin-point strikes and Mir was bleeding down onto himself. Vera changed position a bit, pounded some more and Mir just covered up and layed there being hit until the referee stopped it.

Brandon Vera def. Frank Mir via TKO (strikes) at 1:09 of Round 1.

Fight #7:
-Alessio Sakara vs. Drew McFedries

Round 1: Coming up next (change in live fight order, this was supposed to be the bridge match and the "swing bout" for the PPV. If the two title fights don't go the distance, we'll get some prelims tonight.)

Round one opens with the two exchanging on the feet. Most of this round was on the feet, with early on McFedries actually doing better. As I told my friends, McFedries was out-striking him but had so much respect for Sakara's boxing ability that in the live fight itself, he didn't realize he was doing better early on. Sakara would come in blazing, and to his credit did hurt McFedries a couple of different times. Slowly during the fight you could see McFedries realizing that in the exchanges - when he actually really tried hard and commited to his offense, as opposed to being worried about what Sakara would bring to him, McFedries was really not only getting the better but he too hurt Sakara more than once. In the end, it was an uppercut that caught Sakara flush and landed so quickly that the announce team didn't see it, my friends didn't either. I yelled out as soon as it landed, they were dead silent (they pop when any big strike lands, so they missed it too) and when Sakara dropped for seemingly no reason, I knew it was the uppercut/they-and announcing team didn't. I missed the replays of the finish from typing this up, so I'm not sure if everyone ever saw what really went on.

Drew McFedries def. Alessio Sakara via TKO (strikes) at 4:07 of Round 1.

Fight #8:
-Tim Sylvia (c) vs. Jeff Monson (UFC HW Title)

Round 1: Sylvia starts out trying to establish his jab. Monson tries for a takedown early, and nearly gets it. Sylvia ultimately shucks him off. Not long after that, Monson tries again for a takedown. He's got a leg secured and continues fighting to get him down for a lengthy period of time. He scrambles around, trying to get Sylvia on the bottom in the process - but fails. We're in a lull now, with both flat on the ground, Monson holding onto a leg and Sylvia in a flat-sprawling position. "Big" John restarts them on the feet. Now on the feet, the action stays pretty slow with Sylvia only throwing the occassional jab. Monson trying to get his stand up going. Monson goes for another takedown, again - no dice. Back on the feet, Sylvia continues to avoid takedowns and lands the occassional jab, but no clear cut dominance. Just dominance in the form of one guy not allowing the other to do what he wants. Monson lands a good jab that seems to wake up a bit. He tries another takedown, Sylvia again avoids it with ease. Sylvia being overly caution, and Monson is playing the same game now after trying hard for takedowns earlier on. Monson brushes Sylvia's face with a not-so-powerful hook that doesn't fully land. Lots of circling and posing. Monson lands a decent punch later in the round. Sylvia finishes the round with a kick. Sylvia wins the round based on controlling where and how the action goes, but Monson was more aggressive - pushing forward more and more on the offense in terms of the round as a whole. Despite that, probably 10-9 Sylvia, although personally I would probably go 10-9 Monson - even if not clear-cut.

Round 2: Most of the same earlier on in the second. Sylvia trying to keep the pace slow and keep his established distance. Monson fails at a takedown. Monson's eye is swelling a bit from the jabs of Sylvia. Crowd is boo'ing and "Big" John has repeated his warning to pick up the action several times. Sylvia lands a decent shot, nothing really major and the fight resumes the same pace. Monson fails a takedown again and Sylvia gets back up with Monson going to his back taking leg kicks from a standing Sylvia until he backs up to let him back on his feet. Nothing happening for lengthy periods again, crowd again boo'ing heavily, referee again demanding more action again. Monson loads up for a home run overhand right, but only connects with Sylvia's shoulder. More of a lot of nothing. Really nothing else happens for the next minute-plus, and the horn sounds as a round of boo's from the crowd punctuates the round. From body language and facial expression, towards the end of the round it seemed that both Monson was losing hope and Sylvia was gaining more courage. Could get exciting, but really depends on Sylvia based on the first two.

Round 3: In progress, keep refreshing for updates...

Round 4:
Round 5:

Fight #9:
-Matt Hughes (c) vs. Georges St. Pierre (UFC WW Title)

Round 1:
Round 2:
Round 3:
Round 4:
Round 5:

Your Welcome

:)

2006-11-18 15:56:36 · answer #3 · answered by C02 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers