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Monday, August 31, 2009

Thiago Silva Needs a Good Nickname, Preferably One With Some Punch To It

Thiago Silva Needs a Good Nickname, Preferably One With Some Punch To It

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 31, 2009

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Thiago Silva just finished dispatching Keith Jardine and has proven himself against a top rated opponent. It took him one minute and 35 seconds to do so. In typical Thiago Silva fashion, it took less than one round. All tallied, Thiago Silva averages 229 seconds (3.8 minutes) per match. He's seen round two only once in the UFC.

With a record that is marred only by the loss to the Champion, Lyoto Machida, Thiago Silva has proven that he does one thing very well: He destroys his opponents. Be it punches, kicks, ground and pound or submissions, Thiago Silva finishes fights. Sure he wasn't a match for Lyoto Machida.

MMA fans are going to learn soon enough, nobody in the division today is a match for The Dragon. Losing to Lyoto Machida should be no great embarrassment, as Rich Franklin, BJ Penn, Tito Ortiz, Sokoudjou, Vernon White and Stephan Bonnar can all attest to.

The trouble with Thiago Silva's name is simple: There's way too many Silvas and quite a few Thiagos besides. Thiago Silva needs catchy nickname that can be used to reference him in the same fashion as Rampage Jackson.

Something that is memorable and fits his fighting spirit. His first and last name are about as common in Brazil as names like John Smith, Peter Jackson, Robert Simpson, etc. He needs a nickname that helps people remember him specifically.

Things like "Assassin," "Ninja," and "Samurai" are already taken and over-used. I'm inclined to call him "The Wrecking Machine" for his tendency of overwhelming and devastating opponents. His signature victory mimic of cutting the throat might offer some leads, but what? "The Executioner" or "Head Hunter" or "Guillotine" perhaps?

Maybe something particular to where he hails from like "Sao Paulo Assassin." I've learned that he likes to be referred to as "Killa" which is quaint but certainly anything but memorable, and is already drastically overused by the rap music industry.

It would be nice to have something else to call him by. If I say Thiago, people are initially thinking Alves. If I say Silva, they're thinking Wanderlei or Anderson or one of a long list of others before they're thinking of Thiago Silva.

Make a good suggestion and I'll add it to the poll. If you see another commentor with a good suggestion, please second it to make it official. From the looks of it, I'll have to repost this article with the best suggestions included in the new poll.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

“Every Heavyweight Sucks!” MMA's Big Guys and Their Fans

“Every Heavyweight Sucks!” MMA's Big Guys and Their Fans

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 15, 2009

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In every combat sport, it is always the Heavyweights that capture our greatest attention. Weight classes exist to allow smaller fighters to compete. These big guys don't need a weight class.

But in the world of MMA, the Heavyweight division is a convoluted mess, more often than not. A lot of the best big men in the world scatter to the four winds, and are divvied up by all the MMA promotions out there.

So where are the best Heavyweight MMA fighters in the world, and who are they? Virtually every discussion about ANY current promotions Heavyweight fighter and Heavyweight division out there draws the same reactions from your more Hardcore MMA fans.

“They have a shallow talent pool!”

“No good Heavyweight fighters in that promotion!”

“Their Heavyweight talent pool sucks!”

“They need to do something drastic to build up their Heavyweight Division!”

We could be talking about DREAM, Strikeforce, the UFC, K-1, the recently deceased Affliction or any other MMA promotion. No matter which fighters and which promotions we’re talking about, there is always some self-proclaimed MMA expert saying that their Heavyweight division sucks.

In the humble opinion of some MMA “experts,” the missing ingredient is for any promotion to say they’re the best is Fedor Emelianenko. But there’s just as many “experts” who say that Fedor is washed up, over-rated and that he hasn’t fought anyone good since he left PRIDE.

So even at the very top of the heap, we see the same thing. The same broken record:

“Every Heavyweight sucks!!”

I wholeheartedly disagree with that assessment, but that’s where the hardcore MMA fans seem to be at. That’s what they think of the big guys of MMA.

Personally, I think there are a lot of good Heavyweights out there. And yes, most assuredly, there is more than one good Heavyweight in MMA. So why is it so hard to give a few of them the credit they are due?

We can go to the MMA ranking systems. This one is Fight Matrix, but yes there are plenty of others.

http://www.fightmatrix.com/mma-ranks/heavyweight-265-lbs/

1 Fedor Emelianenko (Strikeforce)

2 Brock Lesnar (UFC)

3 Frank Mir (UFC)

4 Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (UFC)

5 Josh Barnett (TEAM STEROIDS)

6 Randy Couture (UFC)

7 Gegard Mousasi (Strikeforce - but currently fighting at Light Heavyweight)

8 Junior dos Santos (UFC)

9 Brett Rogers (Strikeforce)

10 Shane Carwin (UFC)

11 Andrei Arlovski (Strikeforce)

12 Fabricio Werdum (Strikeforce)

13 Cain Velasquez (UFC)

14 Mirko Filipovic (UFC)

15 Jeff Monson (DREAM/independent)

16 Alistair Overeem (Strikeforce)

17 Ray Mercer (Adrenaline)

18 Heath Herring (UFC)

19 Gabriel Gonzaga (UFC)

20 Cheick Kongo (UFC)

Now throwing out Mousasi, who will be fighting for the Strikeforce Light Heavyweight belt this Saturday, the best represented promotion in the top 20 is obviously the UFC with 11 of the top 20 fighters.

This shouldn’t be too surprising, since most other promotions are just too new to have had a chance to build up a strong catalogue of Heavyweight fighters.

After the UFC, we have Strikeforce with 5 of the top 20 fighters, as well as having the No. 1 Heavyweight, and all the bragging rights that go with it.

Here’s the sad part. Just about every single one of the 20 people on that list has no shortage of people saying that they suck.

Some are called “Unproven.”

Others are called “Over-Rated.”

And others are “Washed up” and “Need to Retire.”

But if everyone on that list sucks, then will somebody please point me in the direction of MMA Heavyweights that don’t suck? Perhaps they’re hiding somewhere? We don’t see the same phenomenon in other divisions.

In the end, I’d love to know this much: Why do the big guys get no respect?

Monday, August 10, 2009

Diego Sanchez Might Be BJ Penn's Worst Nightmare

Diego Sanchez Might Be BJ Penn's Worst Nightmare

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 10, 2009

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Okay, next up for BJ Penn is Diego "The Nightmare" Sanchez. I'll be the first to admit that Diego didn’t do nearly enough to earn this title shot. Two wins by decision at Lightweight? Certainly not enough. Look at what Florian had to go through to get there! There are other Lightweight fighters that are more deserving right now. But what's done is done, and it can't be changed. Diego has the next Lightweight title shot.

Now that we've pointed out the obvious, let's discuss something much more important:

Diego Sanchez is the one UFC Lightweight with the best chance of beating BJ Penn.

Diego Sanchez provides a different kind of challenge for BJ Penn than Florian. Kenny Florian was the guy who was extremely technical and well versed in every aspect of the game. Diego Sanchez is also good everywhere the fight can go, but he’s a different kind of fighter altogether. What does Diego Sanchez have that Florian did not have?

1.) Incredible ferocity, intensity, and relentlessness that Florian and others simply do not have. Sanchez tends to overwhelm and wear out his opponents, as opposed to Florian, who outmaneuvers/outsmarts his opponents. This is where BJ is the most vulnerable.

2.) Diego is a much more powerful striker than Florian—he has proven knockout power. One punch from Diego can change the course of the entire fight.

3.) Diego has a lot more experience as an MMA fighter than Florian did—25 fights to Florian's 15. He’s also a former champion (King of the Cage Welterweight Champ).

4.) Unreal cardio. The guy just never quits, and I've never seen him tire.

5.) In 25 MMA fights, Diego Sanchez has never submitted, and he's never been knocked out. His only two losses are by decision. He's been out-pointed, but never broken.

Consider for a moment, how did Georges St-Pierre beat Penn? He beat him with relentless attack, pushing an obscenely rigorous pace, and never letting up for a moment. GSP overpowered and overwhelmed BJ Penn for four rounds straight.

Diego has the cardio to do that.

Diego has the relentlessness to do that.

He isn't as strong as GSP, but I think he's certainly stronger than Penn.

Sure, he's not GSP, but then again, who is? Yet, Diego certainly can push an unreal pace in a fight. Only folks like Clay Guida and Jon Fitch have had the cardio to keep pace with him.

Endurance has always been BJ Penn's Achilles heel. If you can wear him out, he quits. Penn showed us that his stamina is improving in the Florian fight, but Florian doesn’t have Sanchez’s relentless pace. Diego is called "Nightmare" for a very good reason.

It should also be noted, Diego is also a lot harder to beat than people give him credit for. The only people to ever beat Diego Sanchez are extremely strong elite wrestlers: Josh Koscheck* and Jon Fitch have beaten Diego. Clay Guida almost beat him. All of three of them are incredibly strong wrestlers.

An elite and powerful wrestler, BJ isn't. Where BJ Penn is most dangerous to Diego is quite simple: He's more skilled and more technically sound at every aspect of MMA than anyone Diego has ever fought before.

*Note: Shortly before the fight with Koscheck, they were pretty sure that Diego was sick. They thought it might be Hepatitis C, but tests were inconclusive. The day after the fight, Sanchez had a hole in his thigh the "size of a coffee cup" and was finally diagnosed with a staph infection.

So while Josh Koscheck did beat "The Nightmare," he beat a Diego Sanchez that was sick. If you look at the fight video, you'd almost think that it was a slow lethargic identical twin, and not the REAL Diego Sanchez at all. Rogan and Goldberg repeatedly said Diego didn't seem like himself, and they were just waiting for "The Nightmare" to wake up and unleash his trademark furious attack.

Still, a win is a win, and all excuses suck. But BJ Penn should pencil in an asterisk next to that loss because watching that video will not offer any reliable information on how to beat Diego Sanchez. And that's the only time Diego has ever been beaten in convincing fashion.

Don't expect Diego to use the staff infection as an excuse: He won't. But he wasn't 100 percent for that fight because of it.

The training for this fight begins now. Gameplanning begins now.

Keys to Victory:

Diego “The Nightmare” Sanchez: You will have to bring it like never before. You're going to want to do a lot of fine tuning on every aspect of your game and leave nothing for BJ to exploit.

Most critical area: Submission defense. BJ Penn keeps submitting guys that just don’t get submitted by anyone. If you can train with somebody with insane Brazillian Jiu-Jitsu skills, do it. Your Brazillian Jiu-Jitsuis very good. To beat BJ Penn, it needs to be much, much better.

By the way, work on your takedown defense, it's terrible. Since Penn will be pushing his cardio-training, you need to push your own cardio and pace to a whole new level if possible. If Diego comes with a five round non-stop furious assault and doesn’t make any critical mistakes that BJ can exploit, he stands a very good chance of wearing out the Champion. If he can do that, he wins.

"The Prodigy" BJ Penn: Time to push your cardio training to a whole new level BJ. Keep up all the training you had going into the Florian fight. If possible, get several training partners who can offer the same pace and relentless attack as Diego, and challenge them to wear you out.

Every other aspect of BJ Penn’s game is excellent, so this is where Diego Sanchez will try to break you. Your challenge is simple. Don’t let yourself be broken and simply outfight Diego. Watch for the chance to finish the fight early, but don’t count on it. Be ready for a five round war of attrition.

If BJ can outfight Sanchez with his superior skill set, and keep it up for all five rounds without gassing, he'll win. If he can exploit Diego's mistakes at any point in the fight, he might win that way too.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Is BJ Penn the Greatest Lightweight Champion in UFC History?

Is BJ Penn the Greatest Lightweight Champion in UFC History?

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 09, 2009

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BJ Penn has beaten Kenny Florian in convincing fashion, and successfully defended his title. The fact that he pulled off the submission in the 4th round should silence a lot of doubts about BJ habitually fading in late rounds and have lousy cardio.

Has BJ Penn erased the doubts about his greatness? Since his return from K-1 to the UFC, BJ has never lost a Lightweight match, and he's finished everyone he's fought in that division since returning.

Unfortunately, he's also never WON a welterweight match since he returned—not a good thing considering that he left the UFC as the Welterweight Champion.

Many will remember, BJ is the guy who broke the longest string of title defenses in UFC Welterweigh history by Matt Hughes. That was BJ's first title and the beginning of his legacy as UFC Champion. The welterweight division of today is proving to be the one thing that is the most damaging to BJ's reputation as a fighter.

So the answer to the question: Has BJ Penn erased the doubts about his greatness? At welterweight, absolutely not! At lightweight, absolutely yes! A good sign to BJ to stay at 155 perhaps?

Here's a closer look at BJ's record since his return:
Welterweight:
vs St Pierre: lost by split decision.
vs Hughes: lost by TKO
vs St Pierre: lost by TKO (doctor stoppage)

Lightweight:
vs Jens Pulver: won by Submission
vs Joe Stevenson: won by Submission
vs Sean Sherk: won by Knockout
vs Kenny Florian: won by Submission

BJ Penn might be able to contend with the Welterweight elite, but all he's fought since his return have been champions and soon-to-be champions at 170. But when he's fighting where he belongs—the lightweight division—BJ Penn has finished everyone he's fought since his return.

So we can all agree that BJ Penn is not the greatest welterweight champion of all-time? Far, far from it. Fair enough.

But now that he's just finished dismantling Kenny Florian, can the case for "most dominant lightweight in UFC history" begin? He's got a solid beginning. He's only lost one fight at lightweight ever: In January of 2002, he fought Jens Pulver for the title and lost by split decision. He has since avenged that loss and did it in convincing fashion.

If we're looking for anyone else deserving of "Best UFC Lightweight ever":
1.) We have steroid-boy Sean Sherk. He tested possitive for steroids after his one and only title defense, and was stripped of the title.

2.) We have Jens Pulver with two title defenses. This would be the strongest alternative. I don't think that Jens beat the same quality of opponents in his run, but based purely on numbers, you gotta call it a tie for now.

If BJ Penn can successfully defend against Diego Sanchez, I think we have a lock for calling BJ Penn "The greatest lightweight champion in UFC History"...history so far of course.

As it stands, he's technically tied with Jens Pulver, at least in terms of record. I think Diego Sanchez will be the sternest test BJ Penn has ever faced, so locking himself in as "Greatest Lightweight Ever" ain't gonna be easy!

Oh yeah and how bout a "Hell yeah" for seeing Anderson "The Spider" Silva get back to his terrifying and stunning winning ways again! Now if only there were a way to match him up with Machida and see if he can take two titles at once.

Alas, the most recent word on that matchup was that Silva and Machida wouldn't fight because they train together. But things like that may change, you never know.

Monday, August 3, 2009

History Will Forget About Fedor Emelianenko

History Will Forget About Fedor Emelianenko

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 03, 2009

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75 years from now, when Mixed Martial Arts has solidified its place as a mainstream sport, what will the sport look like?

I recently had a conversation with a friend at work. I told him my favorite sport was Mixed Martial Arts. He’d never heard of that. So I said “Ultimate Fighting” and suddenly he knew exactly what I was talking about.

The UFC is the future of the sport, and the biggest reason for that is name recognition. Not many people have ever heard of Pride, Affliction, K-1, Pancrase, or Strikeforce. Most people only know Mixed Martial Arts by one name: Ultimate Fighting.

There’s a lot to be said for name recognition and familiarity.

AMD has been making a higher quality and less expensive computer processor than Intel for over a decade now, but the market is still dominated by Intel. Any number of fast food restaurants make a much tastier burger than McDonalds, but McDonalds remains the most popular fast food chain by a huge margin. The list of comparisons can go on and on.

Now when it comes to any mainstream sport, the fans are much happier if there is one “best promotion” to showcase the best athletes of that sport. It’s neater and tidier that way. Most importantly, it’s less confusing.

In the world of Mixed Martial Arts, the Ultimate Fighting Championship has locked itself in as the unquestioned leader of the sport. A lot of things would have to go terribly wrong for that future to change.

Okay, so now let’s consider Fedor Emelianenko, the oft-touted “best Heavyweight in MMA” by so many experts. How would the world remember a professional football franchise that refused to join the NFL?

Consider the Cleveland Browns for a moment. The Cleveland Browns began their existence as a member of the AAFC (All-American Football Conference) in 1946. They were so dominant in the AAFC (only lost one game in five years) that they effectively doomed the sports promotion to collapse.

By comparison, this would be where Fedor was right after the collapse of Pride. What did the Cleveland Browns do next? They joined the AAFC’s hated rival, the NFL, and won three NFL Championships in the next six years—proving that they really were as good as everyone said they were.

Okay, so what has Fedor done? Fedor has gone off slumming it in one minor league promotion after another, searching for anyone who will take him and his M-1 Global friends too. But under no circumstances is Fedor signing with the UFC.

Fedor Emelianenko might very well be the best fighter MMA has ever known, but his refusal to fight in the UFC (no matter how noble his reasons might be in his own mind) doom him to join the AAFC’s other teams in history: The New York Yankees, the Brooklyn Dodgers, the Chicago Rockets, the Miami Seahawks, and the Los Angeles Dons.

Anybody ever heard of those football teams? Anybody care about them today? No and No! Nobody knows about them and nobody cares!

And nobody will remember Fedor Emelianenko, the “eternal minor-league fighter.” You’re sports experts might remember him as a minor footnote in Mixed Martial Arts earliest history:

Sports Trivia Junkie 1: “Yeah there was this Russian heavyweight who was pretty-much unbeatable. His name was Fedor something-or-another. He’s the unremembered greatest heavyweight ever.”
Sports Trivia Junkie 2: “Wow! Never heard of the guy. Let’s hear about the man! How long was he UFC champion for anyways?”
Sports Trivia Junkie 1: “Oh, he never fought in the UFC.”
Sport Trivia Junkie 2: “What? How do you know he was a good fighter then? Where did he fight if it wasn’t in the UFC?”
Sports Trivia Junkie 1: “Rings, Pride, Bodogfight, Affliction and Strikeforce.”
Sports Trivia Junkie 2: “Hmmm, never heard of any of them either. So you’re telling me that this Fedor guy was greatest, yet he fought for a bunch of companies that sound like they might turn up at the Circus. And how on earth does this make him, ‘The Greatest Heavyweight Ever.’ Didn’t the UFC exist back then??”
Sports Trivia Junkie 1: “Yes the UFC existed, but Fedor repeatedly refused to sign with them.”
Sports Trivia Junkie 2: “So he wouldn’t fight in the UFC? Why not?”
Sports Trivia Junkie 1: Um … nobody knows. He just never did.”
Sports Trivia Junkie 2: “Well that pretty much answers everything! They guy might have been a wonderful carnival freak-show, but he was never a serious MMA fighter! You're saying that he could have signed with the UFC and refused? That’s crazy! He must not have ever been a good enough fighter to compete in the UFC! What kind of fighter refuses to fight in the UFC?? ‘Unremembered greatest Heavyweight of ever’ my butt!! Sounds like the most over-hyped coward of all time.“
Sports Trivia Junkie 1: “Nevermind.

When the UFC is the last-man-standing atop professional MMA promotions, they will most certainly not put any effort into promoting the legacy of Fedor Emelianenko. Fedor has tried and succeeded in making them look stupid at every opportunity, yet this most recent refusal to sign throws everything back into Fedor’s face.

He could have been in the UFC, but chose not to. They even offered him an unprecedentedly generous contract. Not only will history look very dis-favorably upon Fedor Emelianenko for that. History will eventually forget all about him.

Strikeforce: An Analysis

Strikeforce: An Analysis

Kevin Sampson by Correspondent Written on August 03, 2009

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Ever since I first heard of Strikeforce, I’ve liked them have been quietly rooting for them. They’ve got a very cool name and a lot of potential broadcast support behind them. They’ve also got something of a truce with the UFC—something that can save your backside as an MMA organization. They have some very exciting fighters like Cung Le, Renato “Babalu” Sobral, and Brett Rogers.

The biggest problem they’re facing is "Champion Lethargy". All totaled, their current champions have defended a total of zero times! For their Heavyweight champ Alistair Overeem, the problem seems to be a need to compete outside of Strikeforce, which may be due to boredom within Strikeforce. Sobral has racked up one fight since winning the title, but that fight was for Affliction and unrelated to the Strikeforce belt. Cung Le is a phenomenal fighter who seems to have lost interest in fighting, and would rather pursue a Hollywood acting career. As for their Welterweight Champion…well, they don’t have one of those yet. The Lightweight Champion Josh Thompson hasn’t defended since he got the belt a little over a year ago, which led to the creation of an Interim champion.

If the UFC has taught us anything about successfully building an MMA promotion, it is this: If you want to survive, you have to keep busy. That means your champions need to stay active and defend their Championship Belt frequently. One solution would be to get your champions to stop running off to fight in other promotions. But Strikeforce is still a small name promotion. Do they have the clout to insist that Overeem must (at long last) defend his Heavyweight Title? Can they even hope to insist that their fighters stay inside Strikeforce without triggering a mass coup and seeing them leave Strikeforce in droves? For example, it’s quite possible that if Strikeforce tries to push Overeem, he’ll just drop out of the promotion. Prior to signing Fedor, the outlook for Strikeforce’s leverage over Overeem was pretty bleak.

The best thing that could happen to Strikeforce just landed in the person of Fedor Emelianenko (and right in the middle of putting the finishing touches on this article, I might add.) Gergard Mousasi was just the gravy on top. It will be interesting to see what Emelianenko does for Strikeforce. Every other promotion he’s ever signed with is dead—and one could make a good argument that he’s a massive jinx—but he brings a lot of legitimacy to Strikeforce, even if it is only at the heavyweight level of competition. On the other hand, this could open a feud with the UFC, something that might destroy Strikeforce as a promotion. Time will tell if Strikeforce survives their greatest signing ever.

Here’s what the champions at Strikeforce look like right now:

HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION = Alistair Overeem

Title Defenses = 0.

Last fight for Strikeforce = 11/16/07 (when he won the title.) Overeem has fought 4 times since, all for non-Strikeforce promotions.

Fight record Strength (on a scale of 1 to 5) = 4-Excellent. Losses to Chuck Liddell, Fabricio Werdum, Sergei Kharitonov, two losses to “Little Nog” Antônio Rogério Nogueira, two losses to Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. Getting pummeled by the Light Heavyweights doesn’t look that good for a Heavyweight Champion. Most significant victory: Vitor Belfort twice. Has a lot of wins under his belt, but you’ve never heard of most of the fighters he’s beaten.

LIGHT-HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION = Renato “Babalu” Sobral

Title Defenses = 0

Last Fight for Strikeforce = 2008-11-21 (when Babalu won the title). One fight since winning the title, for non-Strikeforce promotion.

Fight Record Strength (scale of 1 to 5) = 5-Elite. Sobral has quite handily beaten some of the best of the best Light Heavyweights in the world. Easily ranks in the top 10 Light Heavyweights in the world on any sane person’s rankings.

Additional Notes: Babalu still has the end of the David Heath fight hanging over his head. Renato refused to let go of a choke hold well after his opponent tapped. During his post-fight interview, Sobral told UFC analyst Joe Rogan that he was aware that Heath had tapped, but "he (Heath) has to learn respect. He deserved that. He called me 'motherfucker'." So any speculation of it not being intentional was forever shattered. The fallout from that fight makes Babalu a potential PR nightmare to whatever promotion he fights for, especially to those who are critical of MMA for being “too brutal.”

MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPION = Cung Le

Title Defenses = 0

Last Fight for Strikeforce = 3/29/2008 (when he won the title.) He also hasn’t fought for a year and a half, raising concerns over how committed his is to his fighting career.

Fight Record Strength (scale of 1 to 5) = 4-Excellent. Cung Le has an undefeated career MMA record of 6-0, with all wins by KO or TKO. It is only the scant number of MMA fights that keeps him from ranking amongst MMA’s elite fighters. His most impressive win over Frank Shamrock was particularly interesting: Repeated kicks that Shamrock blocked left Frank Shamrock with a broken arm by the end of the fight. Cung Le is also undefeated in kickboxing.

WELTERWEIGHT CHAMPION = VACANT

LIGHTWEIGHT CHAMPION = Josh Thompson (Champion), Gilbert Melendez (Interim Champion)

Title Defenses for Josh Thompson = 0

Title Defenses for Gilbert Melendez = *1 (Melendez is a former Lightweight Champion, and successfully defended the title once. He lost to Josh Thompson in his second title defense.)

Last fight for Strikeforce for Josh Thompson = 9/20/2008.

Last fight for Strikeforce for Gilbert Melendez = 04/11/2009.

Josh Thompson Fight Record Strength (scale of 1 to 5) = 4-Excellent. Josh has a lot of wins, but most have come over mediocre MMA competition. Still, credit must be given for his 16-2-1 record. Most significant win: beating Gilbert Melendez for the belt. Most significant loss: losing to Clay Guida.

Gilbert Melendez Fight Record Strength (scale of 1 to 5) = 4-Excellent. Gilbert also has a lot of wins, the most significant of which was beating Clay Guida for the Lightweight belt. Most significant loss: losing title to Josh Thompson.

Additional Notes: The Lightweight Division is the busiest of Strikeforce’s weight divisions. Both the champion and interim champion seem to be sticking around and fighting for Strikeforce exclusively, a feat that none of their other champions seem to be able to do.

WOMEN’S CHAMPION = VACANT

The fact that Strikeforce sports a Women’s MMA division at all makes them a rarity amongst all MMA organizations. This certainly might help them become a more significant force in the sport.