Ariel Helwani, who is awesome, caught up with Ortiz afterward to get an explanation. He also talked a little bit about The Ultimate Fighter season 11.
Well, Tito, Thanks to Google, I found out what Coleman’s manager said that night. Here it is.
“The only thing Coleman is afraid of when it comes to Tito is contracting swine flu from that dirty ass d-bag. We all know where he lays his head down at night. Tito wants to get personal with a legend? OK, let’s get personal – we can all go to our porn collections and watch what Tito sleeps with night after night.”
Call me crazy, but if you married to the world’s most famous porn star, don’t you have to be ready for shit like this?
I’m actually beginning to like The Outlaw. He’s a little nuts, which I can respect because I’m a couple cans short of a six pack by nature. He’s got an absurd belief in himself, which I can appreciate because I am the Lex Luthor of my own little world. However, when you refer to yourself as “Georges St. Pierre’s Kryptonite” you’ve blown a gasket. Here’s the Q&A session from UFC 107 in Memphis, courtesy of AOL Fanhouse.
Sorry, Dan. Unless you are packing actual kryptonite in those gloves, you don’t stand a chance.
We are always looking for the next big thing here at 3SS. We think that we may have found the next great 170 fighter in Tyron Woodley. We’re not the first ones on the bandwagon, but I really think that T-Wood has the chance to be something special. Here is the video of his latest win against Rudy Bears from last Friday night:
Woodley does a nice job in a few areas here. After securing the takedown, he uses his legs very well to attempt to pass guard. He works for awhile, but is unable to secure anything in his first attempt. He throws some really impressive knees, and takes Bears down off of a kick. He immediately looks to an arm triangle and is able to pass guard, lock it in and get perpendicular to finish it. That’s important because in a previous fight, he found himself in a similar situation but didn’t know how to finish his submission.
Color commentator Pat Militech calls him the best athlete in the sport, but I think that Georges St.Pierre might have something say about that.
A few weeks ago on Third String Radio we had a discussion about how the WEC is getting screwed by Zuffa. They keep claiming that the best fighters in the WEC are only getting about 25,000 per fight because it’s a wholly different company than the UFC and needs to make money on it’s own and separately from it. That being said, the Brown v. Faber II card made a ton of cash in advertising and in live gate. That’s why Urijah starts talking about cash in this interview from RawVegas.tv.
Not former Giants safety Greg Jackson, but famed MMA trainer Greg Jackson. No one has trained as many top-tier fighters or been key in the development of guys like Rashad Evans. Here, he’ll tell you how he plans to help Georges St.Pierre defeat Thiago Alves at UFC 100.
I’ve posting this here because not nearly enough people watch this show. ESPN does a ton of things wrong, but one of the best things they do is an MMA highlights show with some great guests and great analysis. Normally, UFC Lightweight #1 cotender Kenny Florian is there as well, but he’s in training for B.J. Penn. Rich Franklin sits in and is pretty good himself.
Breaking Down Welterweight Prospect Tyron Woodley...
We are always looking for the next big thing here at 3SS. We think that we may have found the next great 170 fighter in Tyron Woodley. We’re not the first ones on the bandwagon, but I really think that T-Wood has the chance to be something special. Here is the video of his latest win against Rudy Bears from last Friday night:
Woodley does a nice job in a few areas here. After securing the takedown, he uses his legs very well to attempt to pass guard. He works for awhile, but is unable to secure anything in his first attempt. He throws some really impressive knees, and takes Bears down off of a kick. He immediately looks to an arm triangle and is able to pass guard, lock it in and get perpendicular to finish it. That’s important because in a previous fight, he found himself in a similar situation but didn’t know how to finish his submission.
Color commentator Pat Militech calls him the best athlete in the sport, but I think that Georges St.Pierre might have something say about that.
Categories: MMA
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