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Thursday, October 28, 2010

What UFC-WEC merger means for fans


The best top-to-bottom cards in mixed martial arts on a consistent basis were, unquestionably, delivered by the World Extreme Cagefighting. Those fights will now take place on a significantly larger stage as Zuffa has folded the WEC into the Ultimate Fighting Championship, effective with UFC 125 on Jan. 1.

The UFC and the WEC each had its own lightweight divisions and their own champions, but those divisions will merge. WEC champion Benson Henderson will defend his title on Dec. 16 against Anthony Pettis. The winner will meet the winner of the UFC lightweight title fight at UFC 125 between Frankie Edgar and Gray Maynard later in 2011 for the undisputed belt

The UFC will simply fold the WEC’s bantamweight and featherweight divisions into its stable, giving it seven weight classes now, joining lightweight, welterweight (170 pounds), middleweight (185), light heavyweight (205) and heavyweight (265). WEC featherweight champion Jose Aldo will make his UFC debut at UFC 125 when he defends his title against an opponent to be named. The UFC will recognize the winner of the Dec. 16 fight between Dominick Cruz and Scott Jorgensen as its bantamweight champion.

The addition of the WEC fighters to the UFC roster should provide deeper pay-per-view cards and provide higher-quality fights

The downside for fight fans, at least in the short term, will be a reduction of free fights on television. In 2010, the UFC had two fights on Versus, which will expand to four under a new deal announced Thursday by UFC president Dana White. But the WEC has already had five fights on Versus and still will air cards on the cable network on Nov. 11 from Las Vegas and Dec. 16 from Glendale, Ariz. As a result, that was nine shows, which will be cut to four under the new deal.

Unless the UFC adds an additional television deal, those five shows won’t be replaced on free television, though White did not seem to mind.

“I’m not looking at this thing as a negative like, ‘Oh, we lost a couple of fights on Versus,’ ” White said. “It’s a positive. We’ve got the UFC on Versus. The last one we did pulled killer numbers. Now that we’ve added these other two weight classes to the UFC, everything is positive. I’m not looking at it like, ‘Oh, we lost two fights. We have to pick them up somewhere else.’ ”

White said the merger became necessary because of the UFC’s expansion and the growth of the business in general. Adding high-quality fights from the WEC to UFC pay-per-view shows will clearly strengthen the UFC cards and should at least lessen common fan complaints about the lack of championship fights and diluted pay-per-view cards.

White has become irate when fans complained about shows such as UFC 119 in September, which didn’t have a title fight or many of the company’s star attractions on it. But with the WEC fighters coming aboard, guys like Aldo and bantamweight Urijah Faber should instantly become household names and the complaints should decrease.

“It’s time,” White said of the long-sought merger. “As we continue to grow globally and we’re going into these new markets like China, India and Mexico, it’s time to do it. We’re doing enough fights, et cetera, et cetera, to fold this thing into the UFC. What’s always been in the cards is to continue to grow this sport and add every weight class, not just 135 and 145.

[Related: UFC’s ten biggest draws]

“The reality is, all of these weight classes should be in the UFC. There was a time early on, when we first bought this thing, that 155 didn’t even exist. Now, as we continue to grow and we’re doing more fights every year, and we’re going into these different markets, we can continue to add weight classes. That’s always been our goal. Our goal is to build this sport worldwide and continue to add weight divisions until we have every single weight division in the UFC.”

The two missing weight classes are flyweight, which has a limit of 125 pounds, and super heavyweight, which is everything above 266. White said the UFC will eventually add flyweight, though he’s not sure when, but will not add either super heavyweight or a women’s division. He’s long maintained that there are not enough super heavyweights or women to make a viable division and held that stance again Thursday

Monday, October 25, 2010

Heat set for Big 3 debut in Boston

Heat set for Big 3 debut in Boston

Favre has stress fracture in ankle

Favre has stress fracture in ankle

Jets' Revis says hamstring '100 percent'

Jets' Revis says hamstring '100 percent'

Saints RB Bush hopes to return Sunday

Saints RB Bush hopes to return Sunday

Romo breaks collarbone in loss to Giants

Romo breaks collarbone in loss to Giants

Octagon Observations: UFC 121 aftermath


ANAHIEM, Calif. – An Octagon’s worth of observations after a memorable UFC 121 at the Honda Center

1. Branching out: Cain Velasquez’s victory over Brock Lesnar could be a watershed moment in the UFC’s attempt to grow mixed martial arts fan base. The company heavily marketed Velasquez’s Mexican heritage in the run-up to the fight. The fruits of this push were evident in the Honda Center crowd’s vociferous reaction to Velasquez’s victory. For sheer volume, the intensity level was matched only by Georges St. Pierre’s 2008 title victory over Matt Serra in his hometown of Montreal. With Oscar De La Hoya retired from boxing, the Marquez brothers heading to the back end of their magnificent careers and no obvious successor on the horizon, there is an opportunity for the UFC to make Velasquez the marquee player among Latino combat sports figures. What Velasquez lacks in charisma he makes up for with his heart and his courage as a heavyweight who is smaller that most of his foes – a trait that cuts across all ethnicities and creeds.

2. Brock’s next step: Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of Lesnar’s career is how the MMA world has watched him develop under an intense spotlight. Each fight leads to a new set of questions about how the former champion, who only has seven fights under his belt, will respond. The question this time: What will be his reaction to getting his tail kicked for the first time? Lesnar marches to the beat of his own drummer and for all we know, he could end up deciding he’s made enough money and it is time to move on. But here’s guessing that a trilogy fight with Frank Mir, who Lesnar legitimately despises, is enough to get the former champ’s competitive juices flowing again.

3. Title worthy? So Jake Shields comes into the UFC, looks listless in claiming a split-decision victory over Martin Kampmann that many felt Kampmann won … and UFC president Dana White says he’s going ahead with his plan to give Shields a UFC welterweight title shot. Good luck selling that one, Dana.

4. Where does Diego go? Diego Sanchez appears to have made the right career move in returning to his roots with Greg Jackson’s camp, as his exciting win over Paulo Thiago at UFC 121 attests. Now, hopefully Jackson will get Sanchez to focus on committing to a single weight class. Sanchez has spoken of fighting at both 170 pounds and 155, but jumping between weight classes is more suited for a veteran who doesn’t figure into championship plans. Sanchez is still young enough to make another run at a championship, and the sooner he picks a path, the faster he’ll move forward.

5. The Tito show: Here’s the UFC’s dilemma with Tito Ortiz: Do you give the former UFC light heavyweight champion another fight or two to try to find his rhythm, or do you cut ties now, before his performance drops off a cliff? Ortiz has remained competitive in each of his past five fights, going to a decision in four of them. But he’s 0-4-1 in that stretch after his loss to Matt Hamill on Saturday, and his level of opposition has decreased with each successive fight. Ortiz has been valiant in battling through a series of injuries, but time is not on his side. The UFC may be better off releasing the former champ before his performances turn embarrassing.


6. Going, going, Gonzaga: Brendan Schaub notched the biggest win of his career Saturday night with his decision victory over Gabriel Gonzaga. But the match underscored how Gonzaga has become one of MMA’s biggest cases of squandered potential. Gonzaga possessed all the tools to become a great one, and he appeared well on his way after his legendary head-kick knockout of Mirko Cro Cop in 2007. But Gonzaga never left his small Western Massachusetts camp, never was pushed in the gym by elite heavyweights and never quite made it to the top. With three losses in his last four fights, Gonzaga is walking on thin ice.

7. Losing a step: Longtime fans consider it heresy to critique referee John McCarthy, ever, for any reason. But the icon of the sport had a bad night at UFC 121. In Tom Lawlor’s victory over Patrick Cote, McCarthy was the only person in the building who missed an egregious foul, as Cote blatantly grabbed the fence and used it to gain the leverage to get out of a Lawlor submission attempt. Then, in the Ortiz-Hamill fight, McCarthy was too slow in getting between Hamill and Ortiz at the end of Round 1. Hamill is deaf and can’t hear the horn to signal the end of the round; because McCarthy was late, Ortiz ate a punch to the head after the round ended. McCarthy’s place as a pivotal figure in MMA history is secure, but just like fighters, referees pass their peaks as well. Saturday night may have shown that McCarthy is losing a step.

8. Stout-hearted: If you buy a ticket to a UFC event and Sam Stout is on the card, it is a fair bet that you’ll get 15 minutes of good-to-great standup action. All seven of his UFC bouts in the past three years have gone the distance. Most of those fights have been back-and-forth standup slugfests, and he’s come away with Fight of the Night honors five times. His latest win came Saturday night, when was slightly better than Paul Taylor in a split-decision victory. The UFC seems content to keep Stout in an entertaining lower-card slot, but with three wins in his past four fights, it’s time to give the London, Ontario, native a crack at a high-level lightweight.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Pitt pulls out the stops to honor Rutgers' LeGrand


Among the widespread outpouring of support this week for paralyzed Rutgers lineman Eric LeGrand, Pittsburgh went the extra mile ahead of today's noon kickoff at Heinz Field, the Scarlet Knights' first game since LeGrand was paralyzed from the neck down on a kickoff in last week's overtime win over Army. The university set up a "Pitt is pulling for Eric LeGrand" banner on campus that collected thousands of signatures, and deployed Panther athletes in other sports to hand out stickers to fans of both sides with the same message. Rutgers players are wearing helmets with the word "Believe" written above the facemask

Is less symbolic gestures, the university has set up a trust fund in LeGrand's name, to which well-wishers can make donations here (as well as watch a fairly devastating video that was shot as a feel-good feature with LeGrand and his family earlier this year). A local business owned by a former Scarlet Knight mascot is also selling t-shirts to benefit LeGrand, available here.

Coach Greg Schiano said there was no update on LeGrand's condition on Wednesday, after the crucial 72-hour window following the injury had closed.

Brock gets Rocked!


ANAHEIM, Calif. – Cain Velasquez weathered an early storm from Brock Lesnar and proved why he has long been regarded as one of the top prospects in the sport, pounding Lesnar in a stunningly brutal and one-sided fight to win the UFC heavyweight championship at the Honda Center in the main event of UFC 121.

Velasquez hurt Lesnar with nearly every punch he threw and knocked him down several times. After the final knockdown, Velasquez pounded him with elbows and punches before referee Herb Dean stopped it at 1:40 of the first.

“He was better than me tonight,” Lesnar said


By Kevin Iole

Lesnar roared out of his corner and threw a knee, but Velasquez answered with a hard combination that opened a small gash under Lesnar’s left eye. After they grappled briefly, Lesnar took Velasquez down hard.

Velasquez, though, was calm and worked back to his feet quickly. After one more Lesnar takedown, he bounced up and began letting his hands go. He battered the retreating Lesnar all over the ring, pummeling him with hard shots until Dean halted it.

Jake Shields won his UFC debut, but struggled to get it, pulling off a split decision over Martin Kampmann. Shields seemed to be completely gassed by the middle of the second round and struggled to do much in the final seven or eight minutes.

But judges had it 30-27 and 29-28 for Shields and 29-28 for Kampmann, apparently qualifying Shields for a shot at the winner of the welterweight title bout at UFC 124 on Dec. 11 between champion Georges St. Pierre and Josh Koscheck. Y! Sports’ Kevin Iole, Dave Doyle and Dave Meltzer all had it 29-28 Kampmann.

Kampmann never let his hands go and that may have hurt him with the judges. But Shields was breathing hard, looking at the clock and appearing to try to stall over the final few minutes of the match.

Diego Sanchez was coming off a pair of bad losses, to then-lightweight champion B.J. Penn and to John Hathaway, and he seemed to be written off as a contender. But after a slow start against Paulo Thiago, it was vintage Sanchez the rest of the way.

In a high-action fight, Sanchez won the last two rounds on all three cards in a high-energy match to take a unanimous decision. Sanchez was flipped by Thiago in the second, got up and slammed Thiago hard. He dominated the fight after that point and won by scores of 30-26, 29-28 and 29-28.

“I was very humbled by the last two losses,” said Sanchez, who returned to train with Greg Jackson in Albuquerque, N.M. “My motto for this camp was ‘Just earn it.’ “

And earn it he did with a high-energy performance that had the large crowd roaring its approval.

Matt Hamill got an emotional victory over his former coach on “The Ultimate Fighter,” Tito Ortiz, scoring a unanimous decision that puts the future of the former UFC light heavyweight champion in question.

Ortiz is now 0-4-1 in his last five fights and 5-6-1 in his last 12 and appeared to run out of gas midway through the bout.

Ortiz had a solid first round and seemed in control, but Hamill took Ortiz down in the second and did a lot of damage. The third round was spent mostly with the men trading blows, with Hamill landing far more often and with much more authority. But with about 1:20 left, Hamill took Ortiz down and then beat on him for the remainder of the fight.

Ortiz’ was cut on the side of the head and below his right eye. Both of his eyes were badly swollen.

“I’m happy that this fight is over because I had a lot of pressure heading into it,” Hamill said. “I feel like I controlled the wrestling. That’s something I wanted to prove because Tito is such a good wrestler. I was able to control him and I still have a lot of work to do but a win over Tito is huge.”

Brendan Schaub made a big statement in the heavyweight division, winning a unanimous decision over Gabriel Gonzaga. All three judges had it 30-27 for Schaub, whose punches wobbled the big Brazilian on several occasions.

Schaub backed Gonzaga up for much of the fight and avoiding the ground, where Gonzaga would have been able to work his jiu-jitsu.

Court McGee started slowly in his middleweight fight with Ryan Jensen, but roared down the stretch and pulled out an arm triangle submission victory in the third round.

Jensen’s strikes controlled the first round, but McGee picked up the pace in the second. In the third, he landed a big right that decked Jensen and put him in position to secure the triangle.

“I landed that big overhand right because I set it up well,” McGee said. “He kept hitting me and hitting me and I was able to get his timing. I got to mount and that was it.”

Tom Lawlor put on the performance of his career in scoring a unanimous decision victory over Patrick Cote in a middleweight bout.

Lawlor took Cote down repeatedly, got in the guard and pounded on Cote, who was a better than a 2-to-1 favorite. Lawlor also mixed in submission attempts in his best overall performance in the UFC.

“I’m very excited about the win,” Lawlor said. “I executed my game plan. This is the first time I ever started with a game plan. I know he has a big right hand and I did a good job staying away from it. I was happy that I was able to get the takedown when I needed it. I feel like I did a good job of controlling the fight.”

Still, Lawlor wasn’t about to call out the top dogs in the middleweight division.

“I’d like to fight an 0-15 fighter next so I can get an easy win,” he said, smiling.

Daniel Roberts went for a guillotine choke, didn’t like what he had and moved into an anaconda choke, which he applied beautifully to submit Mike Guymon at 1:13 of the first round of their welterweight bout.

“I was expecting a three-round war and I was surprised when I got the choke,” Roberts said. “First, I had a guillotine and then I went for the anaconda. I was surprised that I caught him because he’s a ground guy, but I’ll gladly take the win. I knew it was tight, so I just kept squeezing.”

A lot of media were predicting that the lightweight bout between Sam Stout and Paul Taylor would be Fight of the Night, and it turned out to be a high-energy standup battle.

Taylor landed a series of hard kicks, while Stout punished Taylor with big right-hand strikes. Stout pulled out a split decision. Cecil Peoples had it 30-27 and Mike Beltran scored it 29-28, each for Stout. Larry Landless had Taylor, 29-28.

“When the judges said his name first my heart dropped, because usually in a split decision they say the winner’s name first,” Stout said. “I knew he wanted a war and that’s not what the game plan called for. I’m not one to shy away from a war, but I knew he was going to come straight at me and I didn’t want to get caught in those exchanges. In fact, the only time he caught me was when he sucked me into an exchange.”

Chris Camozzi rallied in the second half of the fight to reverse the early momentum that Dongi Yang built and pulled out a split decision. Cecil Peoples had it 29-28 for Yang, but Landless and Nelson Hamilton each scored it 29-28 for Camozzi.

“I was a little nervous when the judges were announcing the decision,” Camozzi said. “I was a little nervous; I wasn’t landing the combos that I wanted to. His distance was throwing me off. I stunned him with that left and I feel like that was the determining factor. I felt like he was gassing in the first round.

“I feel pretty healthy so I’m going to go home and train. There are a lot of middleweight fights coming up and I’ll be ready if the UFC needs a late replacement and I’ll be ready for my own fight.”

In the opening fight, Jon Madsen took Gilbert Yvel down, got into Yvel’s guard and pounded him out, forcing McCarthy to stop the fight. Madsen had been criticized by many for being boring, but he put on a good show this time out.

“This win was huge,” Madsen said. “I needed to make a statement to Joe Silva and the UFC that I can finish fights

Lesnar done first round

Shields wins

Sanchez wins

Hamill wins

Schaub wins

UFC 121 - Lesnar vs. Velasquez

UFC Primetime: Brock Lesnar Vs Cain Velasquez

Week 7 Fantasy Football Matchups

Philadelphia Eagles at Tennessee Titans -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
I was really impressed with the Eagles offensive line last week, but they'll have their hands full again this week against the rotating, physical front that is the Titans D-line. That won't make life easy for Kevin Kolb, nor will not having DeSean Jackson on the field. The deep ball to Jeremy Maclin last week came on a play where Kolb had time to throw and let Maclin beat his cornerback, but this week the Titans' corners and safeties will be able to key in on Maclin, making it tougher for Kolb to connect. Expect a lot of passes to head his way though don't expect a lot of big plays. He could score, though. The Titans match up nicely against the rest of the Eagles' wide receivers and tight ends and should be able to corral LeSean McCoy the rusher better than LeSean McCoy the receiver out of the backfield. Philadelphia's run defense has been surprisingly strong, but I could tell you that they've only allowed one rushing touchdown over their last four games and no 100-yard rushers all year and you'd still start Chris Johnson. Don't worry, I would too, but those are the facts. With Johnson being such a huge threat, the Eagles could bail on having two safeties play deep, especially in running situations and do their best to halt Johnson. The rest of the Titans' offense shouldn't scare the Eagles much but Kenny Britt has continued to be a good target for Tennessee and there's no reason why he can't continue to be productive here


Buffalo Bills at Baltimore Ravens -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
Ryan Fitzpatrick hopefully rested his arm during the Bills' bye week, because he'll use it a ton on Sunday. He'll need his legs, too, as the Ravens should have no problems finding blitz lanes through the Bills' offensive line to try and take down Fitzpatrick. The guy has been money (seven touchdowns in his last three games) and the Ravens defense will look a lot like the Jets defense he threw against in Week 4, but trusting him to continue his streak of multi-touchdown games is a lot to ask for, especially with the Ravens' cornerbacks matching up very well with the Bills' receivers. It's hard to really like any Bills players this week. Alternatively, the Ravens' key offensive players all look fabulous. Ray Rice should carve up this Buffalo front seven that's been decimated by every rusher they've faced. And the last time the Ravens faced a weak pass defense they rebuilt the confidence in their passing game. They really have nothing to be upset about after how Joe Flacco threw against the Patriots last week, but they should still be able to get their "mojo" going against Buffalo for as long as need be without a problem


Cleveland Browns at New Orleans Saints -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
Peyton Hillis' thigh is seemingly getting better, and that's good because the Browns are going to ride that thigh and the rest of that running back in this game. Hillis has a fairly favorable matchup against the Saints and can handle the big workload. He'll give the Browns a chance to be in the game through the first half if only because he can help keep the Saints' offense off the field. Colt McCoy was courageous in his debut at Pittsburgh last week, running to keep plays alive and completing 23 of 33 passes. The Saints defense is nowhere near as tough as the Steelers but defensive coordinator Gregg Williams will likely blitz McCoy out of his socks and force him into mistakes much like the Steelers did. He could find Benjamin Watson for another score like last week but otherwise it's impossible to expect him to play big. Not having Josh Cribbs hurts him. The Saints have a lot to like in this matchup, particularly their deep-ball game against the Browns' cornerbacks. Look for the Saints to come out running the ball like they did last week against the Bucs, then use play-action strikes deep to really move the chains. Robert Meachem should continue to play well -- since the Saints put him in their lineup five quarters ago their offense has caught fire. This also should -- repeat should -- be a week where Drew Brees hooks up with Marques Colston to end his dry spell in the end zone. The only Saint to stay away from is Jeremy Shockey as the Browns have done well over the course of the year against opposing tight ends


Pittsburgh Steelers at Miami Dolphins -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Steelers should be able to retain some of their offensive gameplan from last week against the Browns and apply it here. The Dolphins' defense is stronger but not by that much. The Dolphins' secondary is good but it can be beaten, as proven last week by the Packers, who attacked with the pass. Expect the Steelers to be more balanced; the Dolphins have been mostly lousy against the run but they're susceptible to the long ball. Mike Wallace could have a really good day while Heath Miller might be called upon to help block Dolphins pass rush specialist Cameron Wake. The Dolphins will be stubborn enough to run the ball here, or at least they won't be afraid to, and they could look to the left side of their offensive line for running room. That's where left tackle Jake Long is and where Steelers' starting end Brett Keisel isn't. But from there the going will be tough as the Steelers are expected to double-team Brandon Marshall and leave a safety back to deal with the rest. Pittsburgh has been really good at limiting the yards after the catch, so the Dolphins could be in ball-control mode for much of this one. Their best move could be moving to a three-receiver set and getting the Steelers in a nickel formation and then letting Chad Henne find the open man. With the attention being paid to Marshall, who's being force-fed the ball so much, we could see some decent gains from Davone Bess and maybe even Brian Hartline.


Cincinnati Bengals at Atlanta Falcons -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
Much has been made of Carson Palmer's arm recently, and we should get a clear understanding of where it's at this week against Atlanta. The Falcons will be without concussed cornerback Dunta Robinson, who has been playing well this year. That leaves them with an undersized, undermanned secondary that has already been struggling with opposing tight ends. Palmer should have a field day, and Terrell Owens should be a lock to put up big numbers against the Falcons' corners. No one has averaged a good number on the ground against Atlanta, and even though Cedric Benson is rested, chances are that he won't do great (even with Falcons linebacker Sean Weatherspoon sidelined). The story is different for Michael Turner, who plays better at the Georgia Dome and should score against a defense that's allowed a rushing touchdown to big backs in each of their last three games. This should be a standard gameplan for the Falcons: Lean a little bit on Turner and take timely mid-range and deep shots with the receiving corps. Cincinnati's secondary is good but their pass rush took a big hit when they lost Antwan Odom coming off the edge for four weeks, starting in this game. That should result in Matt Ryan having all day to throw, and with him playing his best ball at home like Turner, he should shine



Washington Redskins at Chicago Bears -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Bears defense got exposed last week by the Seahawks' contemporary play-calling: Several runs in spots where the Bears expected passes, several passes in spots where the Bears expected runs, and plenty of downfield connections against cornerback Charles Tillman. The Redskins should follow the blueprint as they have burners in Santana Moss and Anthony Armstrong to reel in Donovan McNabb's deep passes. Between them, Chris Cooley (who is expected to play) and Ryan Torain (the Bears' run defense is different without linebacker Lance Briggs), the Redskins should be successful. The lone catch is whether or not McNabb can be protected well: If the Redskins can't contain Julius Peppers and Israel Idonije or attack the Bears' blitz, then all bets are off. McNabb's been sacked 14 times through six weeks, which isn't bad, and his O-line is getting better. Expect the Redskins' defense to be just as chipper in an effort to make Jay Cutler pay for taking seven-step drops in front of a weak offensive line. That will hurt the Bears' passing game more than anything, but if Mike Martz can deliver a healthy dose of Matt Forte both on the ground and as a receiver, that could help Chicago's plight. Cutler has the arm to beat the Redskins' blitz and take advantage of their gambling cornerbacks, but he could have a rough day with Brian Orakpo chasing him all over the field. Remember everyone, Mike Shanahan drafted Jay Cutler a few years ago. He knows his strengths and his weaknesses and he's sure to have a hand in the defensive gameplan this week


St. Louis Rams at Tampa Bay Buccaneers -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Rams will take one look at how Chris Ivory was able to trample the Bucs defense and call for handoffs left and right to Steven Jackson. He should set the pace for the Rams and give them the basis to run a smooth, ball-control offense in an important road win. Don't expect a ton from Sam Bradford here, and even though Danario Alexander was wonderful in his NFL debut, he's expected to get plenty of attention from the Bucs. On paper, the matchup looks bad for Tampa Bay because the Rams defense has played fairly well. But they could be down as many as three cornerbacks this week, including starter Ron Bartell, and that could open the floodgates for the Bucs. With their run game stagnant (and continuing to be stagnant until LeGarrette Blount gets involved), look for Josh Freeman to throw and test the Rams defensive backfield depth. Mike Williams is an obvious target, but Sammie Stroughter perked up a bit last week and could continue to see more time. Freeman is a turnover machine and tough to trust in Fantasy, but if you're in a pinch this week and he's on waivers, he should be good enough just for Week 7


San Francisco 49ers at Carolina Panthers -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The 49ers have been utilizing Frank Gore very well for three straight weeks and the Panthers have struggled with running backs all year. That's where San Francisco is expected to start on Sunday -- on the ground. The big "if" for the Niners is whether or not Vernon Davis can run on his banged up knee. Carolina's been solid against tight ends this year but they haven't played one like Davis yet. He should be a nightmare for them. Michael Crabtree could take a step back; even though Alex Smith won't feel a massive pass rush here, he's still fairly inconsistent and the Panthers' corners match up well with Crabtree. The Panthers are getting a healthy Steve Smith back, which helps their offense considerably. Also helping (compared to hurting) their offense is the return of Matt Moore, who is by no means a great passer but he's surely more capable than Jimmy Clausen. Moore has chemistry with Smith and the two have hooked up for two scores already this year. The Niners will undoubtedly blanket Smith and keep him from being a game breaker but he could still come up with some nice catches. He'll also soften the run defense enough to give DeAngelo Williams and Jonathan Stewart a chance to have some good runs, but the matchup is difficult for both of them


Jacksonville Jaguars at Kansas City Chiefs -- Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
Jacksonville is expected to turn to Todd Bouman at quarterback after David Garrard (concussion) and Trent Edwards (right thumb) got hurt last week. Bouman hasn't played in a regular-season game since 2005, owns a career completion percentage of 56 percent and save for three starts in 2001 where he had the luxury of throwing to Randy Moss and Cris Carter has two touchdowns and seven interceptions (he had eight TDs and four INTs in three games with the Vikings). Kansas City is going to stuff at least one safety in the box on every play and beg for Bouman to put the ball into the air against a pretty good secondary. Between all that and pass rusher Tamba Hali coming off the edge to attack poor Bouman, Jacksonville's offense is going to be in big trouble. That includes Maurice Jones-Drew, who the Chiefs will be all over (safety in the box included). The Chiefs must see a banged-up team coming to town on a short week as an opportunity to send a message to the rest of the league that they are for real. You should have supreme confidence in Dwayne Bowe this week to keep up what he did last week even with Chris Chambers expected to return because of the absolutely awful play of the Jaguars' secondary. Throw in Bouman and the Jags giving up the ball and letting the Chiefs have good field position and owners can figure that everyone on Kansas City is fair game as at least a one-week replacement. The running backs for the Chiefs have caused some frustration, but the feeling here is that both Thomas Jones and Jamaal Charles will do well, with Jones getting the slight nod if only because he'll churn the tough inside yardage late in the game to kill the clock. Both could score, Matt Cassel could throw two touchdowns and the Chiefs can get their swagger back against a beleaguered opponent.


Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks -- Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Difficult matchup for the Cardinals here. The loud environment Seattle boasts will be new to rookie quarterback Max Hall, as will the Seahawks' pass rush. Don't be shocked to see the Cardinals' offensive line falter here, hindering this offense. What helps the offense is the possible return of Steve Breaston and Early Doucet, both of whom practiced for the first time in a while this week. If they're back, the threat of the Cardinals' passing game is legitimized and could be enough to spark some room for the run game to improve. Big "ifs" though -- the Seahawks see Hall back there and are probably thinking about getting him turned around with a forceful pass rush. Again, it's not a great week for the Cardinals, though Larry Fitzgerald seems to thrive playing at Seattle and could come away with some better numbers if Breaston and Doucet are back and warranting coverage. The Seahawks should see the Cardinals run defense as a matchup to their liking, and they've got something going with Marshawn Lynch working the run downs and Justin Forsett the pass downs. Seattle's passing game also erupted last week with the big-bodied Mike Williams and the speedy Deon Butler taking charge. Butler is likely to be covered by Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, who is the best corner the Cardinals have. That leaves Mike Williams assigned to Greg Toler for much of the game, and that's a nice size advantage that Matt Hasselbeck could lean on. There's even room for Brandon Stokley to capitalize on the Cardinals secondary and help play a role. The Seahawks should continue to roll here and prove that they've got enough talent to make a run at winning the wide-open NFC West


Oakland Raiders at Denver Broncos -- Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
Remember when the Raiders had a semblance of a dynamic offense? When Louis Murphy was making plays and Darrius Heyward-Bey was getting close to being on the brink of possibly maybe being a breakout player? Yeah, those days are history, partially because a hobbled Jason Campbell will be under center for them in a rough matchup at Denver. The Broncos secondary had some ticky-tack penalties called on them last week but otherwise held their own against another quasi-struggling offense in the Jets. Expect the Raiders to do the best they can controlling the clock with the run. Now that Darren McFadden is back, Oakland has the horses to run it well over 20 times per game, though that doesn't necessarily warrant a victory. With McFadden cutting into Bush's workload and Bush taking over McFadden's starting duties, any Raider is a risky start this week. The only safe option is Zach Miller against the Broncos' backup safeties and linebackers, and you know Campbell will lean on him. The Broncos have been a pass-happy team all year but this matchup is screaming at them to run. Knowshon Moreno should be a darling here as far as carries and yardage goes, but if they inch up to the goal line then expect to see more of Tim Tebow. His presence hurts Fantasy owners because when he's in, he's probably getting the ball and it takes opportunities away from Orton, Moreno and the Broncos' receivers. Don't worry, those receivers will still have chances to make plays, but it's another step toward the Broncos utilizing mutliple players just as Josh McDaniels did in New England, and the end result is inconsistent production for Fantasy owners. If there's a deep sleeper it's Daniel Graham, as the Raiders have been atrocious against opposing tight ends this year. Big risk, potential big reward


New England Patriots at San Diego Chargers -- Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
The Patriots' keep-away dink-and-dunk offense is perfect for this matchup, though I suspect they might run a bit more than they did in nearly five 15-minute periods against the Ravens a week ago. The Chargers defense all the way around is solid but they've been trampled on the ground the last two weeks and the Patriots should use BenJarvus Green-Ellis and Danny Woodhead to their advantage. Tom Brady will throw, that's for sure, and the matchup he might like the best is Aaron Hernandez's big body against Chargers cornerback Antoine Cason. Surprisingly, the Chargers have done a nice job against slot receivers (Danny Amendola was really limited last week) and so there's the possibility that Wes Welker disappoints again. Also, if Deion Branch is hounded by Quentin Jammer, we might see him put up similar numbers to what he had earlier this year when he played the Chargers with the Seahawks (five catches, 60 yards, no touchdowns). As murky as the matchup looks for the Patriots, it's just as bad for the Chargers. Philip Rivers is great, and even with a solid matchup against the Patriots secondary there are still questions about the effectiveness of his receiving corps. Antonio Gates, if he plays, will play hurt. Same with Malcom Floyd. Legedu Naanee is banged up. Who's left? Patrick Crayton and Buster Davis, both of whom are equal to the task against the Patriots' corners but are in no way in a good situation there. Crayton is older and doesn't have good speed or quickness and Davis is inconsistent. If Gates is out Rivers will have to lean on Randy McMichael and Kris Wilson at tight end, both of whom are past their prime. Poor Rivers has a receiving corps that's the equivalent of a Fantasy owner who has several starters on bye, which is why the run game for the Chargers will have to pick up some slack. Ryan Mathews seems to be OK but he's repeatedly on the injury report, and Mike Tolbert's role is continuing to shrink. If the Chargers use Darren Sproles, he could make a difference, but that's no lock as he has a total of 34 touches through six weeks. Is Rivers capable of being a solid stat producer without his top weapons? Sure, but it will have to take some creativity from Norv Turner's playbook along with a much better performance from the offensive line (seven sacks allowed last week) to make it happen


Minnesota Vikings at Green Bay Packers -- Sunday, 8:20 p.m.
The Vikings have been doing a good job limiting Brett Favre's pass attempts, and they should continue that trend here with a big dose of Adrian Peterson. He'll keep the chains moving, the clock ticking and the Packers' pass rush from getting all over Favre (Clay Matthews is expected back). How the Vikings handle the Packers' blitz will be key here; they did a good job with Dallas' schemes last week, though the Cowboys have given up more points per week on average. The game is big for the Vikings for obvious reasons, and a plan to attack the deep middle of the Packers' secondary could work out for Minnesota. The Packers might end up passing 45 times in this one; their run game has been ugly and the Vikings' run defense has been good. That simply means plenty of opportunities for all of the Packers' receivers, making them reliable Fantasy options. The Vikings' secondary is still far from 100 percent and can be exploited, so Aaron Rodgers should be able to do his thing. One more name to watch: Jordy Nelson. The speedster was more involved in the offense last week and might have taken on a role to help offset the loss of Jermichael Finley. Keep an eye on him


N.Y. Giants at Dallas Cowboys -- Monday, 8:30 p.m.
Not only has the Cowboys' run defense allowed three touchdowns in two games to elite backs Chris Johnson and Adrian Peterson, but they could be without top run-stopping linebacker Bradie James for this week. The Giants will run the ball and preach balance all the way, but Ahmad Bradshaw, who has been excellent this year, has a chance to make some headway. And if he gets going, Brandon Jacobs could find the end zone for the third week in a row. The Dallas pass defense is still playing an old-school style of the 3-4 scheme and their cornerbacks have been a little hamstrung in the process. But the fact remains that since Jay Cutler threw three touchdowns on them in Week 2 they've given up four passing touchdowns in three games including two total against the Texans and the Vikings (both road games). This Giants offense is a different animal, though, and they could take advantage of a secondary that's been disappointing for much of the season. The Cowboys might not even try to run on a Giants defense that feasted on Matt Forte, Arian Foster and Jahvid Best over the last three weeks and held those backs to 107 yards total. As in all three combined. Believe in this run defense, which means Tony Romo might be asked to throw upwards of 45 times. With the Giants' pass rush playing beyond expectations and the Dallas offensive line back to being a question mark, this could be a tough week for the Cowboys. Tony Romo will continue to turn the ball over, especially if he's getting pressured, but he's built a nice comfortable relationship with Roy E. Williams and the two should be good together, as should Romo and Miles Austin. Those two might have to carry the Cowboys given that Jason Witten has continued to underperform and Dez Bryant's rib injury could limit him

Brock Lesnar leads mysterious private life


ANAHEIM, Calif. – Brock Lesnar doesn’t read any of the millions of words that have been written about him. He doesn’t have “The Ultimate Fighter” set to record automatically on his DVR. On Thursday during a television interview with Jim Rome, Lesnar claimed not to know Chael Sonnen, who only two months ago came within seconds of defeating Anderson Silva for the Ultimate Fighting Championship middleweight title.

The UFC heavyweight champion is an outsider in the sport he dominates. Few of the other fighters know him well and those who do don’t have anything to say about him. There are more leaks about President Obama’s plans for the war in Afghanistan than there are from Lesnar’s camp about any aspect of his life, in the cage or out of it

Lesnar does his share of interviews and public appearances in order to build interest in his fights, as all UFC fighters are required to do. But Lesnar controls his appearances in a manner that others are unable to do. Many of the fighters are exceptionally open and reveal the most intimate details of their private lives with the public. Court McGee has been extraordinarily open about his battles with heroin addiction. Aaron Simpson was forthcoming about his mother-in-law serving as his child’s surrogate mother.

They provide a look into their souls and what makes them tick as men and as fighters.

But there is no such look inside Lesnar’s world. There are no photos of Lesnar with his wife and family on a weekend outing, since Lesnar declared them off-limits.

He’s by far the biggest star in mixed martial arts, as evidenced by the fact that each of his last three bouts has sold more than a million pay-per-views and generated about $14 million in ticket sales.

He’ll fight in front of another sellout crowd on Saturday at the Honda Center when he defends his UFC heavyweight title against unbeaten Cain Velasquez in the main event of UFC 121.

But ask his training partners what kind of camp he had and how he’ll cope with Velasquez and they’re suddenly very late for an appointment.

The truth is, there isn’t a lot to know. He’s a simple guy with simple tastes who prefers a night at home in Alexandria, Minn., to a night in a club packed with people.

“It’s very basic for me,” Lesnar said. “When I go home, I don’t buy into any of the b.s. Like I said, it’s pretty basic: Train, sleep, family, fight. It’s my life. I like it.”

Lesnar is an extraordinarily competitive man – “I’ll tell you, I’m a sore frickin’ loser,” he said – and in an amazingly short time, has become one of the world’s finest fighters

For as much success as he’s had, though, he still doesn’t get the kind of recognition he deserves. This is a man who in four of his five UFC fights has faced a current or former heavyweight champion.

In his last three fights, Lesnar has defeated Randy Couture, a Hall of Famer and the best strategist in the sport; Frank Mir, the best ground fighter in the heavyweight division; and Shane Carwin, the most powerful heavyweight in the world.

The scary part is, he’s still improving rapidly. He’s only been a professional for a little more than three years and he’s still picking up the finer points of MMA that Couture had down solid years ago.

“I consider Brock one of the best of all-time and he’s just getting started,” UFC president Dana White said.

When it’s all finally second nature to him, he may be virtually unbeatable. And so if there is a good time to get him, it must be now. In Velasquez, he meets a guy who has essentially the perfect style to beat him. Velasquez is a better pure boxer, has good movement and unlimited cardiovascular endurance.

The conventional wisdom is that if Velasquez can survive the first three rounds, the pendulum will tilt enormously in his favor.

Lesnar’s legendary competitive nature won’t allow him to concede even the smallest point to an opponent, and he’s unwilling to concede he won’t be able to keep pace if the pace is fast and the fight moves into the later rounds.

He loves what he is doing and fighting, unlike professional wrestling, gives him a vehicle to channel his competitiveness. Fighting is a job, and a means of supporting his family, but it’s also a way of life for him.

As he’s talking about the UFC’s growth potential, White often says that “fighting is in our DNA; we get it and we like it.” Lesnar’s DNA is clearly loaded with the love-for-fighting genes.

Because he loves it so much, he’s eager to go to work and, as any human resources director will tell you, a happy worker is a more productive worker.

“At the end of the day, we all sit up here and we just love this,” Lesnar said of the fight game. “I don’t have to prod myself to get out of bed in the morning. I try to be the first one to the gym. I’m so thankful and glad there is an Ultimate Fighting Championship, because if there wasn’t, I don’t know what I’d be doing with myself.

“I just want to be better and I want to be the best I can be. Everybody who fights and gets into the cage, that’s the whole purpose of this: Proving that I’m better than the guy I’ve stepped into the ring with.”

Since being submitted by Mir in his UFC debut, which was only his second pro bout, Lesnar has won four in a row and has gotten better each time out. But when it’s over, he retreats into the anonymity of his home in Alexandria, Minn., where he keeps a small circle of friends and a very low profile.

During his appearance on Rome’s show on Thursday, Lesnar was as revealing as he ever has been about his desire for privacy in his personal life.

“I’ve been in front of the cameras for 10, 12 years,” the 33-year-old Lesnar told Rome. “I was a star at the University of Minnesota. I went on to World Wrestling Entertainment. Wannabe NFL player. And here I am, the UFC heavyweight champion.

“I just don’t put myself out there to the fans and prostitute my private life to everybody. In today’s day and age, with the Internet and cameras and cell phones, I just like being old school and living in the woods and living my life. I came from nothing and at any moment, you can go back to having nothing.”

So, his private life will remain private. But he’s leaving us a heck of a lot to talk about in his public life, and that’s plenty good enough

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Cowboys sign winner of Michael Irvin's reality TV show


Jesse Holley(notes) is going from reality TV to the NFL after getting promoted from the Dallas Cowboys' practice squad to the team's active roster.

In the summer of 2009, Holley was the winner of the Michael Irvin-hosted reality show "4th and Long." His reward for outlasting 11 other competitors on the Spike TV program? An invitation to Dallas Cowboys training camps. Once there, Holley made the most of the opportunity; scoring a touchdown in a 2009 preseason game and playing well enough to make the practice squad, where he remained until getting promoted this week.

He's expected to be active in Sunday's game against the Minnesota Vikings and contribute on special teams

"He's a hard working guy. Even doing the show, we had guys who did well, but when I was trying to find the right guy, [who] fit the situation, not physically gifted, but fit a situation. The way he practices is always good. That's how he's earned coach [Wade] Phillips' respect. It's not anything I did on the show. I gave him an opportunity, he had to go earn that."

Though the "Cowboys sign reality show star" sounds like a situation ripe for a punchline, Holley's rise to the NFL isn't exactly a rags-to-riches story. It's not Vince Papale in "Invincible" or Rudy getting a sack for Notre Dame.

Holley has a solid, if unspectacular football pedigree. He played college ball at North Carolina, earning honorable mention All-ACC honors as a sophomore. After going undrafted, he played on the Cincinnati Bengals practice squad for three months in 2007 and then was on the roster of the CFL's BC Lions for a short time. After getting released there, he signed up to be on Irvin's reality show.

Though he's a rookie who's never played a down in a real NFL game, Holley might be able to give Tony Romo(notes) and Wade Phillips some advice on how to win a championship. In 2005, Holley was a walk-on on the the North Carolina basketball team that won the national title.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Week 6 Fantasy Football Matchups

To prepare you as best we can for your week of Fantasy Football, we've devised this series of previews for each NFL game. We'll give you a taste of what to expect, then rank each significant Fantasy contributor on a scale from 0-5 logos (with five logos suggesting can't-miss; a player or unit without any logos suggests you probably shouldn't start him under any circumstances). The rankings take the matchup into account, but injuries and other significant factors also contribute. You should be able to compare the ratings for the players on your team and make an educated pick on who should start -- and sit -- in your lineup .

San Diego Chargers at St. Louis Rams - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Chargers have been the most explosive team in the league, and that won't change here. St. Louis has been fine against opposing tight ends but Antonio Gates is a completely different story. Look for the Chargers to force the Rams to pick their poison between Gates and Malcom Floyd, and for Rivers to make them pay for their decision over and over again. St. Louis' run defense has actually been pretty good so far this season, and with Ryan Mathews still nursing an ankle injury and Mike Tolbert no longer trustworthy to handle the football regularly, Rivers won't have a problem putting the ball up a lot. The Rams got exposed a little bit last week when the Raiders were able to churn for yardage with Michael Bush and then take downfield shots. The Rams will likely lean on Steven Jackson to get the offense moving, then you could see Sam Bradford utilize his tight ends a little bit more. If the Rams operate out of a two-tight end set, they'll be able to keep the passing attack simple and effective, win the time-of-possession battle and set up longer throws. Remember, they can also be just as effective in three-receiver sets with Danny Amendola in the slot. The Rams will aim for the deep middle behind the Chargers' linebackers and in front of their safeties. It might not work every time, especially with Mark Clayton no longer providing a deep threat, but it could help them get some points on the board


Baltimore Ravens at New England Patriots - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Ravens might start the game leaning on Ray Rice to try and three-peat his performance over the Patriots from his big games last year (262 yards on 33 carries with two touchdowns), but they don't have to finish that way. New England's secondary has been under the microscope all season, exploited by all of their opponents (even the Bills) to the tune of at least two passing touchdowns and 220 passing yards. Joe Flacco has been working his way out of his early-season funk, and with no big Pats pass rush to handle and a young secondary still finding its way, there could be some really good connections with both Anquan Boldin and Derrick Mason. Both starting cornerbacks, Devin McCourty and Kyle Arrington, will be in Flacco's crosshairs. The Patriots offense is an enigma post-Randy Moss, but here's a stab at what they'll do: They'll be balanced and run a decent amount. Sounds crazy, but when you realize just how well the Browns and Steelers ran against these Ravens earlier this season, the Patriots could try to do the same thing. With Fred Taylor unlikely, BenJarvus Green-Ellis isn't all bad (the Patriots have handed off to running backs 63 times and landed two rushing touchdowns in their last three against the Ravens, so they're not afraid to run). If they succeed on the ground, Tom Brady could actually lose opportunities to throw but could still attack and put up some stats. I do not think he'll deliver a huge game for Fantasy owners and others in the league will do much better. Wes Welker will obviously draw attention, and the Ravens have done a good job with him in the past, but we'll see how their cornerbacks do against versatile tight end Aaron Hernandez. He could score. The Patriots will have to make it work with him, and the Ravens might even sway their coverage toward him and take their chances with Deion Branch. The wild-card here is Brandon Tate, who might be used as a deep-ball receiver to help stretch defenses, though if he's in on special teams he won't play as often as someone like Moss did. Ultimately, expect the Patriots to throw a decent amount but not always deep. Ball control and balance will be the name of the game.


Atlanta Falcons at Philadelphia Eagles - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Falcons will attack the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball in an attempt at payback from last season, a blowout loss in Philly. The Eagles gave up a slew of yards last week to Frank Gore, particularly because defensive tackle Brodrick Bunkley went down and the Niners' O-line was able to push around replacements Trevor Laws and Antonio Dixon. The Falcons' nasty O-line will do the same thing and give Michael Turner a springboard to put up good numbers. Matt Ryan can then do what he does best and use the run game to set up passes to Roddy White and Tony Gonzalez. Having Michael Jenkins back doesn't hurt things either for Ryan. The Eagles' offensive line is in just as bad of shape as their D-line as starting left tackle Jason Peters will miss the game with a knee injury. That's awful news for Kevin Kolb, who struggles enough as it is behind that line. The Falcons might opt to play back their safeties and send blitzes from their front seven in an effort to put the clamps on Kolb. Philadelphia should be able to make use of LeSean McCoy and tight end Brent Celek has a favorable matchup, but it will be harder for them to keep Kolb upright, and the Atlanta pass rush could force a number of turnovers.


Cleveland Browns at Pittsburgh Steelers - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
Expect the Browns offense to be varied: Some simple stuff for rookie quarterback Colt McCoy to be able to grasp, some Wildcat formation with Josh Cribbs and a big dose of the run game, perhaps with new running back Mike Bell. But don't expect miracles; the Steelers not only view this as a winnable game but as one they want to win for their returning quarterback, Ben Roethlisberger. The Browns' run defense might give an inspired effort in limiting Rashard Mendenhall -- he's still a good candidate to score -- but Roethlisberger should be able to air it out to Hines Ward and Mike Wallace, both of whom will have a field day against a very bad group of Browns cornerbacks. Ward especially has been a Browns beater over his career, but we can't deny Wallace's matchup, particularly if he ends up in single coverage against either Eric Wright or rookie Joe Haden.


New Orleans Saints at Tampa Bay Buccaneers - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The game is a meaningful one to the Buccaneers; they're having a hard time selling out games but would send a strong message to their fans in Florida that they're legit if they can knock off the champs and keep pace in the division. What helps them is that the Saints struggled with the Bucs in their most recent meeting, losing to them at home last year. Not having safety Tanard Jackson will hurt, especially since Drew Brees has been utilizing Jeremy Shockey recently. Look for the Saints to attack the middle of the field and exploit replacement Cody Grimm, who picked off a pass for a touchdown last week but was picked on otherwise. Robert Meachem was more involved in the second half last week and could be a candidate to deliver again. Hard to trust anyone from either team's run game even though both defenses give up over 115 rush yards per game on average. The Bucs could give a bulk of the workload to their backs and attack the Saints' front seven, but which back will get the most work? Cadillac Williams is a candidate, and he had a big game in the Bucs' win over the Saints last year, but the team might try to spread the wealth around to backs like Earnest Graham and LeGarrette Blount. Williams would have to break a long one for a touchdown as he'll get pulled deep in the red zone. New Orleans' pass defense has been good, but so has Mike Williams. You can tell that Josh Freeman has the ultimate confidence in his young receiver, and teams might have to start game planning for him like they do other top-tier wideouts. Expect Freeman to shoulder much of the offensive load for the Bucs, particularly in the second half.


Seattle Seahawks at Chicago Bears - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
The Seahawks shouldn't waste much time getting Marshawn Lynch involved, giving them the run game they've been missing all year. Seattle running backs have totaled exactly zero offensive touchdowns this year and none have had more than 70 rushing yards in a game. Lynch has the potential to break both of those marks on Sunday; the Bears have been good against the run but there's no doubt that Pete Carroll will test his new running back several times. Lynch sets up the Seattle offense much better than Justin Forsett ever did -- with Lynch, Matt Hasselbeck can use play-action and maybe even catch the Bears' safeties off guard for long gains. With Deion Branch gone, look for Deon Butler to pick up his slack opposite Mike Williams and Brandon Stokley to land a decent amount of short-area catches from the slot. This rejuvenated offense could give the Bears' secondary some fits, though Julius Peppers may have something to say about that. Peppers could change the whole dynamic of the game if the Seahawks don't give rookie left tackle Russell Okung some help blocking him. The Bears will get Jay Cutler back and he should torment the Seahawks secondary. No one there is good enough to scare off the Bears in single coverage, and the team will probably test rookie safety Earl Thomas, who has played well in spurts and poorly in others. Greg Olsen could score again, and we're still waiting for Johnny Knox to find the end zone. If he can draw single coverage, perhaps against Marcus Trufant, he could land a big catch. Matt Forte was huge last week for the Bears, and he might have earned himself a little more run than normal this week if he can get a push from his offensive line. Seattle's been real good against the run so far this season, thanks in part to a good D-line rotation and their linebackers staying healthy. It's a tough challenge for Forte, but his opportunities shouldn't get "Martzed" as they were in previous matchups


Detroit Lions at N.Y. Giants - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
Shaun Hill will be hard-pressed to have another big game against a Giants squad with a great pass rush. Then again, he had good numbers against the Packers two weeks ago and faced a defense with a similar scheme as the Giants last week. Still, you have to expect multiple turnovers for the quarterback, and he'll go into the game with Calvin Johnson at less than 100 percent. If he was healthier then Hill would have a better chance to produce. The Lions will lean on Jahvid Best as much as they can as both a rusher and a receiver -- at least until the game gets out of hand and forces Hill to drop back, and that's when the Giants' blitz could really make an impact. For the G-Men, this should be a repeat of last week's success as the Lions' pass defense is easy to exploit. Eli Manning and Hakeem Nicks might connect twice more for touchdowns and you have to consider any receiver for the Giants as appealing given the matchup. Even though Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh is making strides as a defender, the Giants should still be able to find 25 total carries for Ahmad Bradshaw and Brandon Jacobs, giving both a shot to score and have some good yardage with it


Miami Dolphins at Green Bay Packers - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
This could be a field day for all the Dolphins. The Packers are thin at strong safety, and there's no doubt the Dolphins will test third-stringer Charlie Peprah if he drops into the box or if he plays in coverage. There's also the issue of the Packers' linebacking corps -- Clay Matthews isn't expected to play, Nick Barnett is sidelined -- they're both quality starters that rush the passer and stuff the run. If the pass rush fails to get to Chad Henne -- a very likely possibility without Matthews suiting up -- then look for a big day from the quarterback. He's developed his chemistry with Davone Bess further and will not take long to find Brandon Marshall. It's even a good week for Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams to do what Ryan Torain couldn't last week: Move the chains and keep drives alive. I think the Packers will have a shot to react and move the chains themselves if Aaron Rodgers ends up playing. Obviously Rodgers presents a lot of problems for the Dolphins, and even though Jermichael Finley will be out for a while it looks like Donald Lee will have a chance to play. That really helps since Rodgers is comfortable with him, he knows the offense and the passing game will be as close to full strength as possible. That means it won't be limited to short- and mid-range stuff and it gives a chance to Donald Driver, who likely won't see improving cornerback Vontae Davis on him for most of the game, to be productive


Kansas City Chiefs at Houston Texans - Sunday, 1:00 p.m.
In what's become your typical statistical anomaly, the Texans are ranked fifth against the run but have allowed six total touchdowns (five rushing) to running backs in their last four games and have been eaten up by rushing tandems in Oakland and the N.Y. Giants over the last two weeks. Here comes another tandem in Jamaal Charles and Thomas Jones, and you can expect both to have plenty of opportunities to run on Sunday. In fact, the Chiefs should be able to repeat most of their offensive game plan for this matchup, complete with Matt Cassel taking shots downfield. Here's where things get tricky: How long will Cassel trust Dwayne Bowe? Last week's drops could change the philosophy of the offense and open up more chances for Tony Moeaki, Chris Chambers and Dexter McCluster to make plays. Even with the Texans' pass defense playing horribly, the Chiefs don't have the makeup to be a pass-dominant team, not with a liability in Bowe playing. The Texans didn't have their act together last week on offense, got behind early against the Giants and couldn't catch up. Kansas City will try to do the same thing here, leaning on their run defense to slow down Arian Foster and using their deep zone coverage to contain Andre Johnson. If they were able to limit Peyton Manning last week they'll be able to limit Matt Schaub this week. The lone difference is that the Chiefs can't "dare" the Texans to run like they did the Colts because they have shown this year that they will handoff if that's what it takes to win a game. All that said, the Texans should be on point this week and should be able to take shots downfield with Johnson and find gaps in coverage with Kevin Walter to make their passing game click again. After all, Kansas City's pass rush is nowhere near as dangerous as the Giants'


Oakland Raiders at San Francisco 49ers - Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Jason Campbell is expected to be under center for the Raiders. That means good things for Michael Bush and Darren McFadden since the Raiders will lean on their run game to limit Campbell's propensity for turnovers. The 49ers took a drastic step back last week in run defense against LeSean McCoy and are ultimately a disappointment defensively. The 49ers' linebackers are getting wiped out of running plays and can't shed blocks, making it easy for running backs to get big yards, and the Raiders shouldn't be an exception. San Francisco has also struggled against tight ends near the goal line over its last four games, and that plays into the hands of Campbell. For the 49ers, it's all about Alex Smith not making any mistakes. Frank Gore should turn in a very productive day as the Niners will lean on him against this awful Raiders defense (speaking of linebackers who can't slow down the run, they're almost as bad as Buffalo). Smith shouldn't have much fear gunning for Vernon Davis or Michael Crabtree either, though Crabtree will see a lot of Nnamdi Asomugha, but he's been drawing flags and getting scored on this year, so maybe he's not playing at his best. The matchup for Vernon Davis is especially juicy after Antonio Gates followed up a good effort by Joel Dreessen in scorching the Raiders' safeties in back-to-back weeks


N.Y. Jets at Denver Broncos - Sunday, 4:05 p.m.
Out for the Broncos are starting safety Brian Dawkins, his backup Darcel McBath, starting cornerback Andre Goodman and upstart pass rusher Robert Ayers. Awful timing for them as the Jets are coming to Denver on a short week but full of confidence and wide-eyed considering the state of the Broncos defense. There should be some really good opportunities for Santonio Holmes and Dustin Keller to be playmakers as they take on backups at their respective positions, and the Jets would be cuckoo not to try and capitalize. Their run game should be equally solid; LaDainian Tomlinson is probably familiar with a couple members of the Broncos' front seven, including ex-teammate defensive tackle Jamal Williams, who struggled last week. The Jets could run the ball up the gut quite a bit. Denver will end up passing once more in this matchup, particularly since the Jets' secondary will be missing a piece of their own in cornerback Darrelle Revis. After Percy Harvin scored twice and caught five passes last week against these Jets, expect Kyle Orton to look for Eddie Royal quite a bit. And obviously Brandon Lloyd will be sent deep to help stretch the defense. We could see several passing touchdowns from both teams in this one


Dallas Cowboys at Minnesota Vikings - Sunday, 4:15 p.m.
This is essentially a playoff game -- the loser will be 1-4 and have dim hopes of catching up in the NFC. Expect both teams to pull out all the stops. The Cowboys might have found a solution to their run woes with Felix Jones, but don't expect him to see a ton of work here. Dallas will take some shots with him and Marion Barber on the ground, but the Vikings' secondary missing several key cornerbacks will be too appealing for Tony Romo to pass up. In fact, expect Romo to throw to the side opposite cornerback Antoine Winfield in an attempt to exploit the weak backups in Minnesota -- Cedric Griffin is out for the year and Chris Cook is out for this game, so the idea of Roy E. Williams lining up against Asher Allen or Lito Sheppard with a safety playing deep zone coverage will be very appealing. Jason Witten will also be a good option to eat up the deep middle of the Vikings defense. Minnesota's going to have a hard time here and might have to take some chances in sending a defender back into zone coverage and hope not to get burned by Jones on the ground. The Cowboys won't need to take quite as many risks, but they must take several precautions against this Vikings offense. Randy Moss has never had a bad game in his career against the Cowboys, and last year when the Vikings hosted the Cowboys in a playoff game Brett Favre threw four touchdown passes including three to deep-ball wideout Sidney Rice. Moss could land two touchdowns here. Adrian Peterson is also going to be invigorated seeing a Cowboys run defense that stood tall for over a year but has given up back-to-back 100-yard rushing games to Arian Foster and Chris Johnson. With Dallas unable to play a safety close to the line of scrimmage, there's going to be room for Peterson to gain ground. It all comes down to Favre and whether or not his elbow will keep him from completing throws he says he can make in his sleep. If he can, the Vikings should put up nice numbers. If he can't, then Fantasy owners will have a lot to worry about going forward


Indianapolis Colts at Washington Redskins - Sunday, 8:20 p.m.
The Redskins have given out a blueprint for how they defend against strong passing attacks: Play in zone coverage. Look for them to vary between Cover-2 and Cover-3 schemes depending on how many receivers the Colts put on the field on a given play. That's going to force Peyton Manning to keep his passes short and precise, and he can live with that. The difference is that he's got the options to break defenses like this and there could be a couple of big plays for Indianapolis to cash in on. They'll also run more than normal because of the defense daring them to, so Joseph Addai will be useful if he's active. The Colts play just about every opponent the same way defensively, so there could be a lot of targets for Chris Cooley and a lot of carries for Ryan Torain. Torain had a shot last week to cement his starting status but didn't play up to snuff and could lose work if he doesn't perform from the jump here. What the Redskins can do is have Donovan McNabb roll out of the pocket and complete passes downfield to Santana Moss and perhaps Anthony Armstrong. Look, if the Redskins are going to play catch-up, which is likely, this is something they'll have to prepare for, and their receivers should be able to at least get a step on the Colts' corners and safeties. McNabb could turn the ball over a couple of times, and that might make the difference in this game


Tennessee Titans at Jacksonville Jaguars - Monday, 8:30 p.m.
Expect plenty of running in this one on both sides of the ball. Chris Johnson has a great history against the Jaguars, and Maurice Jones-Drew has gotten it done against the Titans. Each should score, but it's the Titans who could branch out their passing game and attack Jacksonville's terrible secondary. Vince Young did it last week to Dallas, and we've seen Kenny Britt go from the dog house to the penthouse over the last few weeks as a go-to receiver for the Titans. Expect him to keep it going and for Young to put up some good stats. David Garrard has a chance to do the same -- the Tennessee secondary has begun to deteriorate over the last couple of weeks and has been burned by the big play. Not that the Jaguars have that big-play receiver (Mike Sims-Walker is struggling to separate from press coverage), but between Jones-Drew and Mike Thomas, they could be in position to make some red-zone strikes with Marcedes Lewis too hot to pass on if you're needy at tight end

Browne gasses; Kongo loses point and fights himself into a draw at UFC 120


At 6-foot-7 and 251 pounds, Travis Browne is a heck of an athlete but he's also a relative pup when it comes to applying that explosiveness to his fight game. Cheick Kongo, a veteran of 22 fights, let Browne tire himself out, then chopped down the tree in the second only to make a stupid mistake in the third to cost himself the win. Kongo, rolling to a victory over the exhausted Browne, got a point deducted for constantly grabbing the big man's shorts. The result was a frustrating draw, 28-28 on all cards, between the two big heavyweights in the second fight of the televised card at UFC 120 in London.

The grabbing of the trunks was inexplicable on the part of Kongo. He was warned by referee Marc Goddard early in the final round. Less than thirty seconds later, Kongo did it again and lost a point. Kongo (15-6-2, 8-4-1 UFC) played with fire when he again grabbed the shorts on several occasions down the stretch.

Browne (10-0-1, 1-0-1 UFC) hurt his chances for a win by not managing his stamina in the opening round. He came out bouncing all over the ring and awkwardly charging Kongo. Browne landed a few good punches and leg kicks to win the stanza but by the end of the round, he was breathing with his mouth wide open.

Kongo took advantage in the second by clinching with the more stationary Browne and moving the action to the cage. The tired Browne was more than happy to rest along the cage but took a ton of Kongo knees to the inside of his right knee. In the final round, he could hardly put weight on his right leg. But Kongo refused to go in for the kill. It cost him a win.

Browne was fortunate to come out of the fight with a draw but he's clearly a guy worth watching down the road. At 28-years old, he's only been fighting since Feb. of 2009. He's training with a good camp, Alliance Training Center in San Diego. With better gameplanning and more composure, he could be a very dangerous down the road.

Bisping saves the day at UFC 120


LONDON – It was a night that began in turmoil for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, but in the end, the company was glad to have preserved the contender status enjoyed by their most marketable U.K. fighter.

The group’s problems began on Saturday afternoon, when management, media, and competitors alike were left stranded in England’s capital city, when the drivers chauffeuring them to the O2 Arena failed to account for the closure of the Blackwall Tunnel. Ultimately, none of the scheduled fights had to be canceled as first feared.

In the end, though, hometown hero Michael Bisping triumphed over Yoshihiro Akiyama by unanimous decision (all three judges scored the bout 30-27) in the main event, the worst-case scenario had been avoided, meaning he remains in the mix for a shot at UFC welterweight champion Anderson Silva.

The first round of the main event was largely Bisping’s, his boxing sharper and quicker off the mark, although he was caught with a left hand at the beginning of the round that he later admitted had him seeing double.

Despite being out-pointed, Akiyama, to his credit, didn’t appear to be in any danger, and in the proceeding five minutes he retaliated aggressively, catching Bisping consistently with short right hooks, rocking him again in the final 30 seconds before the bell.

The final round threatened to be marred by a brutal Bisping kick which caught the Japanese in the groin, but after several minutes of recovery, Akiyama built on his second-round performance, throwing wild hooks that his opponent evaded and countered with jabs, but it still wasn’t enough to keep Bisping from winning on all cards.

“Ultimately it’s up to the UFC, but I feel like I’m really maturing, and everything is coming together,” said Bisping of his career and future fights. “I’m ready. I feel now is my time. I want to fight the best out there, and I think with one more win against a credible opponent, I should get a title shot.”

Prior to the co-main event, to say that the ovation for Nottingham’s Dan Hardy was rapturous would be an understatement, and remarkably, the reaction remained the same even after he was knocked out in devastating fashion by Carlos Condit.

Hardy had initially done a good job of countering Condit’s strikes as he entered into range, even if a spinning backfist on the part of the former WEC welterweight champion hit the Briton’s chin hard. After 4:27 of the first round, though, both men went for simultaneous left hooks, with Condit planting his perfectly on Hardy’s chin at the very moment that “The Outlaw” over-shot by three or four inches. Hardy was knocked down and out, although Condit did sneak in a couple of punches on the ground to officially claim the victory.

“I feel comfortable on my feet,” said Condit after being asked if it was his gameplan to stand with Hardy. “But if it had gone to the ground, I would’ve done well, too.

“We (at Greg Jackson’s training camp) were worried about his left hand,” he added. “We trained for that quite a bit.”

When Hardy, who had just returned from hospital and remained quiet throughout the post-fight press conference, was asked what was next for him, he jokingly replied: “A headache.”

Mike Pyle found the element of surprise to be irresistible as he went for takedowns at the start of the first and second rounds in his match-up with the undefeated John Hathaway, whose own wrestling had dominated Diego Sanchez back in May. The benefit of the surprise really came in the second round, when Pyle had the Englishman trapped in a quasi-triangle from a side position, using the manoeuvre more for control as he rained down punches and elbows. Up until that point, Pyle’s stand-up had been sweeter, too, but in repeating in the third round the grappling dominance that he had in rounds one and two, he had Hathaway beaten on all counts, with each judging agreeing a 30-27 verdict.

Travis Browne’s good defensive footwork, by comparison at least, seemed to befuddle Cheick Kongo in the opening round of their bout, so much so that the Frenchman was tentative in spite of his usual strike-heavy style. Browne’s own punching, however, was a little wild, throwing down with so much intent that his agility was all but absent in the second round, a large portion of which saw both men battling for position against the cage. Kongo was docked a point for holding his opponent’s shorts in the third round, but even that didn’t seem to stir the Wolfslair fighter, and he was extremely lucky to escape from the fight with a rare draw.

Claude Patrick clearly had a huge strength advantage, muscling Ultimate Fighter 9 champion James Wilks to the canvas in three copycat rounds, but there was more damage done to Wilks’ ego in this unanimous decision (a 30-27 loss across the board) loss, than there was to him physically.

Cyrille Diabate and Alexander Gustafsson clearly came in with the intention of ending their bout decisively. Knocking Diabate down with a big shot in the first round, he immediately jumped on his opponent to attempt to finish, but was unable to strike there with anything like the same type of ferocity. Diabate survived that onslaught, but Gustafsson finally one via tapout at 2:41 of round two.

Known on the UK scene for his brawling brand of boxing, Rob “The Bear” Broughton did nothing to dismiss that opinion in the early going of his bout with Vinicius Queiroz. Ultimately, though, Broughton got the best of the jiu-jitsu specialist at his own game, as Broughton almost got an armbar submission, before getting the hooks for a rear naked choke, 1:46 into the third round.

Paul Sass’ first-round submission victory over Mark Holst was notable for the busy ground work of both fighters. Sass consistently looked for the triangle choke, which has become his forte on the UK scene. He eventually locked the move on, and reminiscent of Fabricio Werdum’s victory over Fedor Emelianenko in June, no amount of struggling by Holst could free him, with Sass getting the tapout with just 15 seconds remaining in the first round.

Low kicks were the order of the day for Spencer Fisher and Kurt Warburton at the beginning of their encounter, though Warburton was clearly using those to throw his opponent off-guard before attempting the takedown, which he duly got, almost finishing Fisher with a guillotine choke with two minutes remaining in the round. After some trading of knees in the second-round clinches, Fisher looked for the rear naked choke on two occasions in the third, perhaps concerned about the outcome of any judges’ decision. He needn’t have worried however, as he emerged with 29-28 scores across the board.

In the evening’s opening contest, London-born James McSweeney made his intentions for Fabio Maldonado clear in the first round, swinging wildly with punches and spinning back-fists, in addition to throwing a series of leg kicks. Unsuccessful in his attempt to grab a highlight reel finish, however, he was clearly drained come the second round, allowing Maldonado to take control, in particular using his superior grappling to good effect. Sensing his opponent’s fading cardio, Maldonado took the fight to McSweeney in at the beginning of the third round, after just a further 48 seconds, referee Marc Goddard was compelled to stop the contest after a series of hard punches against the cage

Mike Tyson plans to be a boxing ambassador in China


LAS VEGAS (AP)—Just call him Ambassador Iron Mike.

Mike Tyson was once the baddest man on the planet. Now he’ll be circling that planet as a self-titled ambassador to spread the gospel of boxing to the Chinese.

“I didn’t even know what an ambassador really was,” he said Thursday. “When I think of ambassadors I think of living off government money and jet-setting with girlfriends.”

No government money just yet, though a Chinese company is paying Tyson to visit in December. No girlfriends, either, especially since his wife is due with a baby boy early next year.

And no real formal agenda just yet for his trip to China in December, either.

“I know he wants to see Chairman Mao’s body,” said Gary Yang, an executive with Tianjin International Sports Development in China.

The Chinese want to see Tyson, too, if Yang and his partner, Qing Yu, are correct. They held a news conference Thursday to announce a deal for Tyson to visit the country and scout boxers for a series of matches in the city of Tianjin.

The news seemed to be news to Tyson, too.

“Mike hasn’t been brought up to speed really,” promoter Sterling McPherson said. “But if Mike likes what he sees there can be many, many more trips to China.”

Apparently Tyson hadn’t brought the Chinese up to speed, either, because he already saw Mao’s tomb on a visit to China in 2006. Tyson has spoken fondly of Mao in the past, and has a tattoo of the former Chinese leader on his right arm.

As appearances go, it was a far cry from the days when a glowering Tyson used to show up an hour late and then sneer at anyone who dared ask a question. Reborn over the last few years as an actor, dancer and pitchman, he got a chance to show off his new comedic side.

“Can we talk about what will take place on the trip?” someone asked.

“Yeah, tell me,” Tyson replied. “I’m pretty interested.”

Just what Tyson will be doing in China other than visiting Mao’s tomb in Tiananmen Square wasn’t quite clear, though what was clear was that he was being paid good money to do it.

“I’m just as clueless as you,” Tyson said. “But I’m an ambassador so I should have some say.”

Yang talked vaguely about having Tyson looking for talent for boxing shows in China, where amateur boxing is thriving, and perhaps helping to sell tickets to shows the company plans to put on.

“Chinese people just love Mr. Tyson,” he said. “He’s above (Muhammad) Ali there, though I shouldn’t say that.”

Tyson probably shouldn’t have said so much either, but the news conference was faltering and in need of rescue. In answer to a question, he said he liked Thai food better than Chinese, but remembered from his earlier trip how to say hello in Chinese.

When it came to the state of boxing in China, he had some ways to make it better, too.

“Didn’t you guys have an altercation with the Japanese people at one time?” he asked Yang. “Here’s what you do: You go looking for a Chinese fighter who will beat the evil Japanese guy and get revenge. That will sell.”

With K Tynes injured, Giants sign Graham

With K Tynes injured, Giants sign Graham

QB Stafford back at Lions practice

QB Stafford back at Lions practice

Kolb to start for Vick vs. Falcons

Kolb to start for Vick vs. Falcons

Hardy wants Condit to bring it


Ultimate Fighting Championship fighters are always trying to balance the sporting end, that is – winning the fight the best way possible – and the entertainment end, which is delivering a great fight.

At times the two goals are contradictory.

Dan Hardy (23-7, 1 no contest), who faces Carlos Condit (25-5) on tape delay Saturday night on Spike TV as part of UFC 120 from London, U.K., opened up that can of worms a few weeks back. In a column in This is Nottingham, a home town publication, he was critical of fighters who were trying to win without, in his mind, trying to actually fight

Some immediately branded his article as sour grapes, given Hardy’s last fight, on March 27, saw Georges St. Pierre take him down and render him useless for almost all of the five-round fight for the UFC welterweight title. But Hardy was quick to say that while he wasn’t happy about how his fight went, that was not what he was writing about, and had nothing bad to say about St. Pierre, who was constantly trying to finish him. Hardy’s complaint was about fights like the Aug. 28 match in Boston on Spike TV, where teammate Andre Winner lost a decision to Nik Lentz, who mainly pushed Winner into the cage and tried, and failed, to take him down for three rounds. The match kept spectators fighting to stay awake and television sets clicking off to other programming.

Hardy blames such fights on judges who overrate takedowns and fighters then working for a takedown, not to lead to trying to finish, but to trying to avoid fighting.

“Lentz didn’t come to fight Andre, he actually came to avoid one at all costs, like he’d be short listed for the Nobel Peace Prize and didn’t want to mess up his chances of winning it,” wrote Hardy, who compared Lentz’s aggression in the fight to Ghandi. “He couldn’t take Dre (Winner) down or get anything going on the ground. He didn’t want to strike and he didn’t go for any submissions, he just clung to Dre’s thigh like a sailor to a mast during a storm.”

Hardy, who noted he’s a fan of the sport, said that unless he’s in training for a fight, watches all the UFC events live in the U.K., which isn’t as convenient as it sounds given they air from 3-6 a.m. on Sunday mornings, and fears that too many boring fights will cause an erosion of the fan base.

“These guys who have boring fights, if they happen too frequently, they will run off fans, that means less people will want to pay to see us on pay-per-view in the future, and that affects how much we earn,” he noted.

So Hardy wants to put on a good fight, particularly since he and Michael Bisping are the two draws on Saturday’s show, which sold tickets at a faster rate then any UFC event ever held in Europe. But his other goal, to get back into the cage with St. Pierre, is dependent upon beating Condit in a battle of two fighters who are both generally considered top ten in the world at their weight.

Since the St. Pierre fight, Hardy has had almost seven months to work on the weaknesses showed in the loss.

“I think, to be honest, I think anybody watching the fight, it’s pretty obvious,” Hardy said. “I mean, my wrestling wasn’t up to scratch and my offensive jiu-jitsu wasn’t there. I couldn’t threaten him on the ground at all, and I could hardly get back to my feet. So they are the things I’ve been working mainly on. Just working solid on my jiu-jitsu and traveling around working with different wrestling coaches and just getting some good input on that.”

“I’ve just spent three months on my wrestling in the U.S.A., and I can tell you we all work very hard on all aspects of our game,” Hardy said. We are all improving all the time and the reality is me and Paul (Daley) lost to the two best wrestlers in the sport in GSP and (Josh) Koscheck.”

Condit was the architect of Saturday’s fight. He did an interview where he specifically asked for Hardy, figuring Hardy as a fighter with notoriety coming off the St. Pierre fight, and UFC matchmaker Joe Silva heard the interview and followed up on it.

“Joe Silva came to me and asked me if I wanted the fight,” said Hardy. “I liked it. I thought it was a good idea. Condit always brings it. He doesn’t mind standing there and trading punches.”

“A fight of the night bonus would be a nice addition to my bank account,” he said. “I mean, if it’s up to me, I’d just stand on the Bud Lite logo right in the middle of the Octagon and throw punches. I’m confident with my power and with my chin. So if that’s the way this fight goes, then I’m all for it. But like I’ve been saying, I’ve been working out on my wrestling, my jiu-jitsu and don’t be surprised if I take him down and put him to sleep.”

“Guys like Condit that bring it in every fight are going to have a job a lot longer than guys who don’t come to fight,” he said. “Look at Jorge Gurgel, he lost several times before he was cut.”

But Hardy was wary if Condit’s style will change to a more conservative game plan now that he’s under the tutelage of Greg Jackson, whose speciality as a coach is in devising winning game plans, that aren’t necessarily entertaining game plans.

Even though Hardy got no effective offense in on St. Pierre, being on the wrong side of a dominant performance, his personality in building the fight made him a far bigger star even with the loss. But no matter how well he promotes fights, without a win on Saturday he may become a mid-card novelty act.

And he was certainly not lacking in providing promotional material in recent days, saying that Condit fights wild and that he could close his eyes and throw a punch in any direction and it would hit Condit in the face.

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