try going to their official website. if you don't know it, use google.
Here's what I got from the website:
About Me
Member since: August 26, 2006
Total points: 1,750 (Level 3)
Points earned this week:
Total answers:
Best answers:
St. Pierre showed no respect to his hero in their rematch, scoring a one-sided second round TKO to win the UFC Welterweight Championship.
St. Pierre (13-1) pushed the pace early behind leg kicks and the occasional punch as Hughes (42-5) took his time looking for an opening. At the one minute mark of the round, it was St. Pierre picking the action up even more emphatically as he put Hughes on his heels with his impressive standup, which nonetheless brought a smile from the champion. Two low kicks from St. Pierre halted his momentum though as Hughes was forced to take a short break to recover. The Canadian kept his focus upon the restart and went right back to working his faster hands and feet on Hughes and tossing off the Illinois native’s first half-hearted takedown attempt. With under 1:20 to go, St. Pierre opted to take the fight to the canvas and landed some strikes before standing and scoring with a knee. Hughes looked to get back into the scoring column by committing to a takedown, but St. Pierre brushed him off and finished with a right hand that dropped the champion just before the bell intervened.
Hughes began the second round with a smirk, but this was no laughing matter, as St. Pierre was not only winning the standup game, he was showing the physical strength to keep the champion at bay. With 3:45 left, St. Pierre hit paydirt, landing a high left kick that put Hughes on the mat again, this time, the bell wouldn’t save the longtime champion, and with referee John McCarthy’s stoppage at 1:25 of the second, a new king was crowned.
In the co-feature, Tim Sylvia retained his UFC Heavyweight Championship with a gritty five round unanimous decision over Jeff Monson in a fight that was a lot closer than the 50-45 and 49-46 (twice) judges’ verdicts.
There was no question who the victor was though, as the 6-8 Sylvia’s takedown defense and surprising submission attempts, coupled with harder striking, proved to be too much for the game Monson, who at 5-9 was giving up almost a foot in height to the champion.
The first round played out according to prediction, with Sylvia looking to fight from long range while stuffing Monson’s takedown attempts. The champion was successful in this endeavor, but what fans didn’t expect was to see Monson land the more effective strikes of the round against Sylvia, though they were more of the points scoring nature, not causing any real damage.
The packed house started to get restless in the second round, and the fighters responded, with Sylvia picking up his work rate as Monson continued looking for the takedown unsuccessfully, with Sylvia either sprawling or tossing ‘The Snowman’ aside with relative ease. All the while, the strikes from Sylvia started to land with more and more frequency as Monson was seemingly stuck in neutral.
Early in the third round, just when it appeared Sylvia was pulling away, Monson finally got a takedown and the crowd roared. Monson started to open up with strikes from inside Sylvia’s guard, but whenever he tried to pass, Sylvia kept him stationary and began firing back with strikes of his own from the bottom. With two minutes left though, Monson moved to side control and briefly locked in a choke that Sylvia slipped out of. The challenger continued to work ferociously, knowing that this may be his only chance to keep the 6-8 Sylvia on the mat, and after escaping from another choke attempt, the champion stood and referee John McCarthy brought Monson to the ringside physician to check on his cut and almost closed right eye. The doctor allowed the bout to continue, but two big knees by Sylvia dropped Monson just before the bell rung, and the end appeared to be near.
His right eye almost shut, Monson gamely came out for the fourth round and the fans responded by chanting his name. Sylvia continued to work the distance calmly, and when the bout did hit the mat in the second minute, it was Sylvia on top and in control from the side. Monson reached for a leg, but Sylvia escaped and almost got full mount on the tired challenger. Then suddenly, it was Sylvia working for a submission briefly, but Monson survived and fought his way into Sylvia’s guard where again ‘The Maine-iac’ shocked all in attendance as he worked for a triangle choke just before the bell sounded.
The pace understandably slowed early in the fifth round, as both fighters circled and looked for an opening that just wasn’t presenting itself. Midway through the round, McCarthy halted the bout and ordered both fighters to pick up the pace, and it was Monson trying for a takedown and getting rebuffed by Sylvia, who proceeded to attack the prone Monson with points scoring leg kicks until McCarthy ordered a standup with 1:15 left. With under a minute left Monson would again get turned away, kicked, and stood up, and as the seconds ticked away on the fight, it was Sylvia pushing the action to the bell.
2006-11-19 03:31:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The Liddell v. Silva replaced into solid, Liddell took the first round, the second one replaced into type of even, then Liddell received the third besides the undeniable fact that it replaced into solid because they both purely stood up and pounded one yet another in many cases. you probably did'nt extremely bypass over a lot with the Hughes vs. Frenchie strive against, Hughes looks prehistoric.
2016-11-29 06:51:17
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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George St Pierre (2nd round TKO by Punches) and Tim Silva (Unanimous decision after 5 rounds). ww.ufc.com and www.sherdog.com are good sites to find the latest MMA news and videos.
2006-11-19 08:19:38
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answer #3
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answered by Mariposa 7
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Give bigtime the 10 points, i'll settle with the 2.
2006-11-19 04:57:54
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answer #4
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answered by WWE Insider! 3
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GSP owned Hughes with a kick to the head, knocking him down and unleashing a flurry of punishing blows to his over-inflated ego...I mean, head.
2006-11-19 10:49:12
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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hey st. pierre won and maniac sylvia is still heavyweight champ.
2006-11-19 07:10:49
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answer #6
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answered by {New☣regime}™ 6
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St. Pierre showed no respect to his hero in their rematch, scoring a one-sided second round TKO to win the UFC Welterweight Championship.
St. Pierre (13-1) pushed the pace early behind leg kicks and the occasional punch as Hughes (42-5) took his time looking for an opening. At the one minute mark of the round, it was St. Pierre picking the action up even more emphatically as he put Hughes on his heels with his impressive standup, which nonetheless brought a smile from the champion. Two low kicks from St. Pierre halted his momentum though as Hughes was forced to take a short break to recover. The Canadian kept his focus upon the restart and went right back to working his faster hands and feet on Hughes and tossing off the Illinois native’s first half-hearted takedown attempt. With under 1:20 to go, St. Pierre opted to take the fight to the canvas and landed some strikes before standing and scoring with a knee. Hughes looked to get back into the scoring column by committing to a takedown, but St. Pierre brushed him off and finished with a right hand that dropped the champion just before the bell intervened.
Hughes began the second round with a smirk, but this was no laughing matter, as St. Pierre was not only winning the standup game, he was showing the physical strength to keep the champion at bay. With 3:45 left, St. Pierre hit paydirt, landing a high left kick that put Hughes on the mat again, this time, the bell wouldn’t save the longtime champion, and with referee John McCarthy’s stoppage at 1:25 of the second, a new king was crowned.
In the co-feature, Tim Sylvia retained his UFC Heavyweight Championship with a gritty five round unanimous decision over Jeff Monson in a fight that was a lot closer than the 50-45 and 49-46 (twice) judges’ verdicts.
There was no question who the victor was though, as the 6-8 Sylvia’s takedown defense and surprising submission attempts, coupled with harder striking, proved to be too much for the game Monson, who at 5-9 was giving up almost a foot in height to the champion.
The first round played out according to prediction, with Sylvia looking to fight from long range while stuffing Monson’s takedown attempts. The champion was successful in this endeavor, but what fans didn’t expect was to see Monson land the more effective strikes of the round against Sylvia, though they were more of the points scoring nature, not causing any real damage.
The packed house started to get restless in the second round, and the fighters responded, with Sylvia picking up his work rate as Monson continued looking for the takedown unsuccessfully, with Sylvia either sprawling or tossing ‘The Snowman’ aside with relative ease. All the while, the strikes from Sylvia started to land with more and more frequency as Monson was seemingly stuck in neutral.
Early in the third round, just when it appeared Sylvia was pulling away, Monson finally got a takedown and the crowd roared. Monson started to open up with strikes from inside Sylvia’s guard, but whenever he tried to pass, Sylvia kept him stationary and began firing back with strikes of his own from the bottom. With two minutes left though, Monson moved to side control and briefly locked in a choke that Sylvia slipped out of. The challenger continued to work ferociously, knowing that this may be his only chance to keep the 6-8 Sylvia on the mat, and after escaping from another choke attempt, the champion stood and referee John McCarthy brought Monson to the ringside physician to check on his cut and almost closed right eye. The doctor allowed the bout to continue, but two big knees by Sylvia dropped Monson just before the bell rung, and the end appeared to be near.
His right eye almost shut, Monson gamely came out for the fourth round and the fans responded by chanting his name. Sylvia continued to work the distance calmly, and when the bout did hit the mat in the second minute, it was Sylvia on top and in control from the side. Monson reached for a leg, but Sylvia escaped and almost got full mount on the tired challenger. Then suddenly, it was Sylvia working for a submission briefly, but Monson survived and fought his way into Sylvia’s guard where again ‘The Maine-iac’ shocked all in attendance as he worked for a triangle choke just before the bell sounded.
The pace understandably slowed early in the fifth round, as both fighters circled and looked for an opening that just wasn’t presenting itself. Midway through the round, McCarthy halted the bout and ordered both fighters to pick up the pace, and it was Monson trying for a takedown and getting rebuffed by Sylvia, who proceeded to attack the prone Monson with points scoring leg kicks until McCarthy ordered a standup with 1:15 left. With under a minute left Monson would again get turned away, kicked, and stood up, and as the seconds ticked away on the fight, it was Sylvia pushing the action to the bell.
2006-11-19 04:31:59
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answer #7
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answered by bigtime 4
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JOHN CENA come out
2006-11-19 11:37:09
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answer #8
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answered by Hieu L 2
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ufc sucks watch wwe u oldy
2006-11-19 03:25:04
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answer #9
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answered by parth 121 2
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3⤋