Michael Bisping Makes TUF 14 Finale Weigh-Ins a Memorable Affair

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LAS VEGAS — UFC middleweight Michael Bisping showed up to the TUF 14 Finale weigh-ins looking like a man in a foul mood, and his disposition only got worse from there. The crowd at the Palms casino erupted in boos every time the Brit’s name was mentioned, and it didn’t help matters when he came in 1/4-pound over the middleweight limit for his bout with Jason “Mayhem” Miller on Saturday night.

Even after stripping down behind a towel, Bisping was still over the mark, leaving him with an hour to cut the weight. After putting his clothes back on he stormed out of the room, though Nevada State Athletic Commission executive director Keith Kizer said it was his understanding that Bisping would be coming back soon to weigh in again.

Before Bisping left, however, Miller jabbed him one last time in his post-fight remarks, telling fans that the time for talking was over and adding, “Now boo this man!” The fans, not surprisingly, obliged. When UFC color commentator Joe Rogan asked the crowd to show a little love for Bisping, the fighter remarked that he “couldn’t give a [expletive] about getting [expletive] love. All I care about is smashing this [expletive]’s head in.”

Then he turned his attention on the still jeering crowd, telling them “[Expletive] you all,” before extending his middle finger to the fans on his way off the stage. And with that, Bisping was gone.

Full weigh-in results are below.

Main card (Spike TV)

Michael Bisping (186.25)* vs. Jason “Mayhem” Miller (185.5)
Diego Brandao (145) vs. Dennis Bermudez (146)
John Dodson (134) vs. T.J. Dillashaw (135.5)
Yves Edwards (155) vs. Tony Ferguson (155.5)
Johnny Bedford (136) vs. Louis Gaudinot (136)

Preliminary card (Facebook)

Marcus Brimage (143) vs. Stephen Bass (145)
John Albert (136) vs. Dustin Pague (136)
Josh Ferguson (134) vs. Roland Delorme (136)
Josh Clopton (144) vs. Steven Siler (146)
Dustin Neace (145.5) vs. Bryan Caraway (145)

* Upon his return to the scale, Bisping made the 186-pound limit.

 

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LAS VEGAS — UFC middleweight Michael Bisping showed up to the TUF 14 Finale weigh-ins looking like a man in a foul mood, and his disposition only got worse from there. The crowd at the Palms casino erupted in boos every time the Brit’s name was mentioned, and it didn’t help matters when he came in 1/4-pound over the middleweight limit for his bout with Jason “Mayhem” Miller on Saturday night.

Even after stripping down behind a towel, Bisping was still over the mark, leaving him with an hour to cut the weight. After putting his clothes back on he stormed out of the room, though Nevada State Athletic Commission executive director Keith Kizer said it was his understanding that Bisping would be coming back soon to weigh in again.

Before Bisping left, however, Miller jabbed him one last time in his post-fight remarks, telling fans that the time for talking was over and adding, “Now boo this man!” The fans, not surprisingly, obliged. When UFC color commentator Joe Rogan asked the crowd to show a little love for Bisping, the fighter remarked that he “couldn’t give a [expletive] about getting [expletive] love. All I care about is smashing this [expletive]’s head in.”

Then he turned his attention on the still jeering crowd, telling them “[Expletive] you all,” before extending his middle finger to the fans on his way off the stage. And with that, Bisping was gone.

Full weigh-in results are below.

Main card (Spike TV)

Michael Bisping (186.25)* vs. Jason “Mayhem” Miller (185.5)
Diego Brandao (145) vs. Dennis Bermudez (146)
John Dodson (134) vs. T.J. Dillashaw (135.5)
Yves Edwards (155) vs. Tony Ferguson (155.5)
Johnny Bedford (136) vs. Louis Gaudinot (136)

Preliminary card (Facebook)

Marcus Brimage (143) vs. Stephen Bass (145)
John Albert (136) vs. Dustin Pague (136)
Josh Ferguson (134) vs. Roland Delorme (136)
Josh Clopton (144) vs. Steven Siler (146)
Dustin Neace (145.5) vs. Bryan Caraway (145)

* Upon his return to the scale, Bisping made the 186-pound limit.

 

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Diego Brandao Gets Friendly Advice From Longtime Idol Wanderlei Silva

Filed under: UFC, NewsLAS VEGAS — In case you couldn’t tell by watching him fight, TUF 14 featherweight finalist Diego Brandao is something of a Wanderlei Silva fan. Actually, maybe fan is the wrong word. Brandao’s more like a disciple, which is why h…

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Diego BrandaoLAS VEGAS — In case you couldn’t tell by watching him fight, TUF 14 featherweight finalist Diego Brandao is something of a Wanderlei Silva fan. Actually, maybe fan is the wrong word. Brandao’s more like a disciple, which is why he was thrilled to hear that his fellow Brazilian and MMA inspiration has been following his run on the UFC’s reality show.

“I want to fight like Wanderlei Silva,” Brandao said earlier this week. “That’s why I’m in MMA now, is Wanderlei Silva. The way he fights, he makes everybody in Brazil put their hearts in their mouths.”

Brandao was understandably ecstatic when he finally got to meet Silva in Vegas this week, and even more excited when he got a word of encouragement from “The Axe Murderer.”

“He told me to go kill the guy. I was so happy.”

But ‘happy’ isn’t a word most of his TUF 14 castmates would likely use to describe Brandao, who at times seemed almost dangerously intense. Some of his colleagues didn’t know how to take that, he said, but to Brandao it seemed like the only sensible approach to a sport that involves fighting other men in a cage.

“When I first get in the house, people think I’m crazy,” he said. “But I’m not crazy, bro. This is MMA. For me, it’s very serious. You can get hurt if you don’t train hard, aren’t focused. You can get [your] jaw broken, knee broken, armbar. I’m ready for that. I’m not crazy, I’m just focused on every fight.”

So far it’s yielded memorable results for the 24-year-old Brazilian. He ran through his competition on TUF, and is among the heaviest favorites on Saturday night’s finale fight card, where he’ll take on fellow finalist Dennis Bermudez, with Silva watching in the crowd.

The best part, Brandao said, is all the good he’ll be able to do for his family back home in Brazil with the money he’ll make for this fight, win or lose. They might not have gotten to watch his reality show stint along with the American audience, but they’ll reap the rewards along with him, he said.

“I feel very proud of myself. I’m going to be able to help my mom. She doesn’t know what’s going on now, but pretty soon she’s going to find out.”

 

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MMA Link Parade

– Ryan Jimmo Discusses the Sequel to the Worst Movie Ever Made. [Middle Easy]

– Viewer’s Guide to TUF 14 Finale. [Sports Illustrated]

– Slated for Strikeforce’s Jan. 7 Event, ‘King Mo’ Not UFC-Bound Yet. [Cage Potato]

– Step Up for Dan Miller and h…

– Ryan Jimmo Discusses the Sequel to the Worst Movie Ever Made. [Middle Easy]

– Viewer’s Guide to TUF 14 Finale. [Sports Illustrated]

– Slated for Strikeforce’s Jan. 7 Event, ‘King Mo’ Not UFC-Bound Yet. [Cage Potato]

– Step Up for Dan Miller and his Family. [Five Ounces of Pain]

– Ellenberger and Sanchez to headline February 15th UFC on Fuel fight card. [LowKick]

– 2011 World Mixed Martial Arts Awards Winners. [MMA Convert]

– Junior Dos Santos Breaks Down Brock Lesnar and Alistair Overeem. [5th Round]

– Why BJJ Is a Dying Art in MMA. [Bleacher Report]

– TUF Origins, Part I. [Sports Illustrated]

– Book Review of “Marcelo Garcia: Advanced BJJ Techniques”. [The Fight Nerd]

– UFC 140 videos: Lyoto Machida going to get his belt back from Jon Jones. [MMA Mania]

– Leben Suspended One Year for Failed Drug Test. [MMAPayout]

– Bobby Voelker Signs Extension With Strikeforce. [Fightline]

 

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Stepping Into the Spotlight Makes for Whirlwind Week for TUF 14 Finalists

Filed under: UFCLAS VEGAS — On Thursday morning at 9 a.m. the UFC PR staff spread this season’s Ultimate Fighter finalists out across two conference rooms at the Palms hotel and casino and introduced them to one of the less glamorous aspects of life i…

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LAS VEGAS — On Thursday morning at 9 a.m. the UFC PR staff spread this season’s Ultimate Fighter finalists out across two conference rooms at the Palms hotel and casino and introduced them to one of the less glamorous aspects of life in a big time fight promotion: the dreaded pre-fight interviews.

“It’s going to be about an hour of talking,” UFC director of media relations Ant Evans explained as he sat TUF 14 bantamweight finalist T.J. Dillashaw down to begin a series of rapid-fire phone interviews. One look at Dillashaw’s face, and you could see he wasn’t exactly enthusiastic about the idea.

It could be worse, Evans explained. He could be like Michael Bisping and “Mayhem” Miller, who had two or three hours of interviews scheduled. Somehow, this failed to raise Dillashaw’s spirits.

“It’s just so fast,” he told me later, once it was my turn to monopolize his time. “You’re used to not very much media attention at all, and suddenly it’s a lot.”

That’s the case for all four of this year’s finalists. In general, bantamweights and featherweights don’t get as much love as the bigger fighters on the MMA scene, and the spotlight is even dimmer outside the UFC. After fighting their way onto the reality show and then earning a spot in the finals, they’re all finding out for the first time what it’s like to stand in the spotlight. Each has his own way of adjusting to this new life on fight week.

“The first time, I cried when I saw [myself] on TV,” said featherweight Diego Brandao. “It was crazy.”

Brandao’s opponent for Saturday night’s finale — Dennis Bermudez — played it a little cooler. In the next room over, sitting with his coach, Bermudez shrugged off the media pressure.

“I did a lot of high school newspaper articles for wrestling, stuff like that,” he said. “For me, it’s like a bunch of those, I guess.”

What he was happiest about was simply being out of the TUF house and free to move about, he said. People keep telling him that his career is about to be defined by how he performs against Brandao, who seems to have instilled a deep terror into most of his previous opponents, but Bermudez isn’t sweating it just yet.

“My mindset is, it’s another fight. People are like, it’s the biggest fight of your career. Well, it’s the biggest fight of my career right now. I’m sure I’ll have bigger fights later on.”

Bantamweight John Dodson — the only fighter who was all smiles even early in the morning, practically bouncing out of his chair with enthusiasm — is taking a similar approach. It’s not a must-win, he said. Especially not for a guy who’s really a natural flyweight, just waiting for the UFC to open the division up. The way he sees it, if he puts on an exciting fight, people will remember him regardless of whether he wins or loses.

“You’re telling me you don’t remember Stephan Bonnar?” he said. “You don’t remember Kenny Florian?”

For Dodson, the show was a bit of a mixed bag. He was painted as a traitor at times for sharing fight pairing news with the opposing team, and drew the ire of his coach, “Mayhem” Miller, who Dodson did a spot-on impression of as he mimicked Miller’s cry of, “Dodson, whyyyy!?!

“I’m not going to lie, it’s still cool to have him talking about me,” Dodson grinned.

In fact, that’s his take on all the buzz surrounding his reality show stint. That’s why he thanked those who hated him most during the show’s run.

“People were asking me, why are you thanking the haters? It’s because, if I don’t have any haters, then it means I wasn’t doing anything right. There’s a reason people were talking about me.”

And while it’s nice to be talked about, both Dodson and Dillashaw are hoping that theirs is the fight that becomes the focus of the good kind of post-event talk rather than the bad. You can be a hero or a villain, but one thing these up-and-comers have learned is that you just can’t be boring.

“I don’t want to put this pressure on myself like I have to win this fight, because I really don’t,” said Dillashaw. “This sport’s for entertainment. I just need to go out there and put on a show. I’m going to win, but I’m going to put on an awesome show and go a hundred miles an hour.”

Just don’t tell him that reward for success is more interviews. You don’t want to send the poor guy in there with mixed emotions.

 

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A Miserable Day in Vegas With Michael Bisping

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LAS VEGAS — The important thing to know is that the cyclist brought this on himself. You better believe he did. It’s the cyclist who picked the exact wrong time to occupy the righthand lane of a busy Vegas street, veering out in front of the exact wrong driver on the exact wrong day.

You see him doing it, and you know he’s got no clue what he’s in for. When he looks back over his shoulder before deciding to swerve his bike into the very center of the lane, thus locking the traffic behind him into his own agonizingly slow pace, how could he possibly know that the pristine black Range Rover that is now bearing down on him is being driven by UFC middleweight Michael Bisping? And how could he know that Bisping is in the midst of an unpleasant weight cut, that he’s been teetering on the verge of pissed off all day, that of all the things the British fighter’s been called over the years, a patient driver is definitely not one of them?

The poor, dumb cyclist. You’d almost feel bad for him if he wasn’t acting like such a jerk right now.

“What is he doing?” Bisping says, slowing the car down to a crawl. Even for a bicyclist, and even in the strong desert wind, this guy is slow.

It’s not as if he can’t feel us right behind him, either. It’s not as if he couldn’t easily move over to the side of the road to let us pass. Bisping gives a gentle beep of the horn to remind him of this fact. The cyclist flashes a gloved middle finger over his shoulder without turning around.

Bisping beeps again. This time the cyclist turns around to give him the finger. Oh, this freaking guy. Beep, beep, beep, goes Bisping. The cyclist comes to a full stop and turns to face the car, shouting reckless words that get immediately lost in the wind and drowned out by the incredulous laughter of Bisping’s passengers. Does this man have any idea that he is instigating an unnecessary traffic confrontation with a professional fighter? Probably not, no. But from the look of things, he’s intent on finding out.

“Actually,” says the man in the passenger seat, “we’re here.”

He points off to the right and there it is, the Big 5 sporting goods store we’ve been looking for. It’s funny, with the excitement over the cyclist, I almost forgot why we had packed into the car to begin with. I almost forgot that the whole thing started because Bisping needed a sauna suit and other assorted weight-cutting accessories, and now here we are.

As he pulls into the parking lot, Bisping can’t help but watch over his shoulder as the cyclist continues on in the center of the lane, making himself a nuisance to the next car. This guy, Bisping remarks, is probably also having a rough day. The way he’s going, this guy might be headed for a rough life.

Just getting to the Big 5 today was a bit of a chore. First he had to get his team together, which meant locating a bearded man named Lunchbox on the Palms casino floor, then sending a man named Jacko back up to the room to get himself a sweatshirt, then playing a couple hands of blackjack while we wait because, hey, might as well. One thing Bisping cannot do, it seems, is stand still for very long.

This proves to be a problem when he asks the hotel valets for his car and they seem briefly baffled by their own system of tickets and numbers. We end up waiting in the cold and the wind with all the other sad sacks, gathering around a gas heat lamp that isn’t even on. No problem, Lunchbox tells us. He can get it going. He can’t, as it turns out, but it hardly matters because as long as we can watch him frantically turning dials and pushing buttons and cracking jokes about how he might be on the verge of blowing us all up any moment, we’re not thinking about how cold and annoyed we are.

This serves as a neat little metaphor for Lunchbox’s role in Bisping’s mini-entourage, actually. Even though, over the course of our time together, I’m unable to get a satisfactory explanation for exactly what it is that he does — “I wear many hats,” he explains — he does seem like a good guy to have around on fight week.

He’s funny and oddly charismatic. He’s excited about nearly everything, and not just because he’s been sipping Red Bull through a straw for the past 20 minutes. The point is not that he’s the guy who can get the heat lamp going; the point is that he will try, and in trying he will provide a distraction. This week in particular, distractions are exactly what Bisping needs.

That’s kind of the point of this trip. He needs the plastics for his weight cut, just like he needs Pedialyte for immediately after the weigh-in, but for those he could have sent Lunchbox or even Jacko — a childhood friend of his who Bisping convinced to quit his job and go to work designing his website.

Really, this is about getting out of the hotel. After a morning of one repetitive interview after another, the last thing he wants to do is think or talk about fighting right now. Besides, if one more person asks him what was the difference between being a coach on The Ultimate Fighter and being a contestant, he might choke somebody.

“Let’s just go to Champs,” Lunchbox says once we’re in the car. “I know where there’s a Champs.”

Champs? Bisping has never heard of Champs. He wants to go to Big 5. Big 5 will have the plastics. Lunchbox attempts to explain that Champs and Big 5 are essentially interchangeable American sporting goods franchises, but Bisping isn’t convinced. He turns the music down and stops the car. Lunchbox is going to call and check. We haven’t even made it out of the Palms parking lot yet.

“Do you have sauna suits?” Lunchbox asks the Champs employee over the phone. “You know, like plastics?”

He waits a beat. We’re all held in a strange little spell, as if so much depends on the answer.

“You don’t?” he says. “Okay. Well, you really just made an ass of me right now.”

The car erupts in laughter. Bisping cranks the music back up and peels out of the parking lot. Big 5 it is.

It needs to be said here that, for all his other talents, Michael Bisping is not a good driver. Even now, when he’s in no special hurry to get anywhere, he drives like a man who is fleeing the scene of a heist. He weaves through traffic at high speeds, engine roaring over the stereo so that he has to continually adjust the volume. He brakes suddenly and violently. He rolls through stop signs and rushes through red lights. Does his Range Rover even have a working turn signal? I have no idea, because he hasn’t attempted to use one yet.

At some point I flash back to earlier, in the UFC media room at the Palms hotel, when I overheard Bisping telling an interviewer about a bad car accident he was in as a youth. I have no problem believing this now, and I’m questioning my decision to leave my seat belt unbuckled rather than awkwardly feel around in the area near Jacko’s ass in search of the buckle. If Michael Bisping kills me in a car wreck two days before his fight with Jason “Mayhem” Miller, I’m going to be so pissed.

When we’re safely parked, I ask Bisping about the car wreck story. Oh yeah, he tells me. It was bad. Broken glass everywhere. Car upside-down. What a mess. Apparently not enough of a mess to make him reconsider his driving habits, but okay.

Of course, I don’t really get the story of the car accident, just the summary version. It’s the same when UFC director of media relations Ant Evans attempts to get Bisping to tell the story of when he got stranded in Bali on his way back from the World Jiu-Jitsu Championships.

Okay, Bisping says. He’ll tell the story, but not now. He can’t talk and concentrate on shopping, not while his body and brain are both so drained from the weight cut. Just walking around and functioning in this state of depleted nutrition is hard enough, and it’s beginning to fray his nerves.

Then again, can you blame him? You try and survive on distilled water and very little food, and your patience will be the first thing to go.

After securing the plastics and briefly arguing over whether the fact that there’s a picture of a woman on the box means that this is a women’s suit, we head to Walgreen’s for other weight-cutting accoutrements. Alobolene, to suck the moisture out of his skin. About six big cylinders of Morton’s salt, to put in a hot bath. Pedialyte, for when he steps off the scale. Cliff bars, Balance bars, enough water to flood a small village. And, oh yeah, how about a can of Pringles?

“Give me those,” Lunchbox says when he sees Bisping round the corner of the chip aisle with the Pringles in his hand.

“What?” Bisping says. Lunchbox just looks at him. He’s right, and Bisping knows it.

“Yeah, I’d probably crack them open tonight,” he admits. “I’d say, ‘I’m just going to have two,’ and then end up eating the whole can.”

Which is, of course, exactly how Pringles work. And if Bisping missed weight for a main event bout because he gave in to the temptation of Pringles, he’d never hear the end of it. Not from UFC president Dana White, whose generosity toward Bisping over the years has earned his unyielding loyalty, and not from the American fans, who love to hate him.

Only don’t mention that to Bisping. That’s the mistake I saw several interviewers make this morning, and it doesn’t exactly ingratiate them to Bisping, who is understandably a little weary of being asked how he feels about being despised by so many people. Who wouldn’t get sick of that? Not to mention, as Bisping sees it, they don’t actually hate him. Not really. They enjoy making him into a Vaudeville villain, someone to boo and hiss at when he appears onstage. But they don’t want him to go away. They love their villain, even if it’s taken him some time to get used to the role.

He’s not a bad guy; even “Mayhem” Miller says so. He is, if anything, a man who gets carried away sometimes. That’s true of his emotional outbursts before, during, and after fights, and it’s true of his generosity to fans and friends. He’s been known to blubber over devoted fans, offering to fly them around the world with him. He gave Jacko a job in a field he had no experience or qualifications in. He was as surprised as anyone when Jacko turned out to be quite good at it. Bisping just can’t stop himself sometimes, and so he plunges forward ever faster. Sometimes it results in a win for the whole team. Sometimes the car ends up upside-down.

The last addition to the shopping cart today comes in the checkout line. Three Snickers bars. It’s good stuff for after the weight cut, he insists. Just like a Balance bar, even though he already has a few of those, too. Is he going to eat them all, I ask.

“Nah,” says Lunchbox. “I’ll probably eat one.”

Bisping shoots him a look. “Well, then I’d better get one more,” he says.

There’s some discussion about going in search of that cyclist once we’re back in the car. “The rate he was going, he’s probably only about 500 yards down the road,” Bisping says. Instead, we decide to fight the traffic back to the hotel, and Bisping begins to tell the story about getting stranded in Bali.

Actually, nevermind. “It’s a long story and it’s not really relevant and you’re not going to write about it anyway,” he says. Besides, he adds, it’s the kind of story best told over a couple of beers, and he won’t be having any of those until after the fight, unfortunately.

Lunchbox, too, begins to tell a story about getting in a fight with one of the solicitors on the Vegas streets who hand out cards advertising escorts, but no. Ant is on his phone, Jacko may not be listening, and Bisping has heard it already. Screw us all. He’s not telling it. And so it goes. One story after another dies on the vine.

“This is a miserable day,” Bisping says. And he’s right. It’s cold and windy. The traffic is a maddening snarl all the way back to the Palms. The sky outside is a dull and dirty grey. Bisping hates Vegas. Right now, maybe he hates everything, but he especially hates Vegas.

“I’ve left a piece of my soul floating around here,” he jokes. But it’s true. The TUF coaching stints. The long stays and longer waits. All this stuff you have to go through just to get into a fight on Saturday night. If he didn’t love it so much, it wouldn’t be worth it.

But when the time comes and they call his name, he’ll step out into the cramped Pearl Arena at the Palms, most likely to the sound of boos. They’ll let him have it and he’ll soak it up. They’ll make him their villain and he’ll play along. Sure he will. What choice does he have? He’s come this far. How can he turn back now? How could he ever possibly stand still, even for a moment?

 

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LAS VEGAS — The important thing to know is that the cyclist brought this on himself. You better believe he did. It’s the cyclist who picked the exact wrong time to occupy the righthand lane of a busy Vegas street, veering out in front of the exact wrong driver on the exact wrong day.

You see him doing it, and you know he’s got no clue what he’s in for. When he looks back over his shoulder before deciding to swerve his bike into the very center of the lane, thus locking the traffic behind him into his own agonizingly slow pace, how could he possibly know that the pristine black Range Rover that is now bearing down on him is being driven by UFC middleweight Michael Bisping? And how could he know that Bisping is in the midst of an unpleasant weight cut, that he’s been teetering on the verge of pissed off all day, that of all the things the British fighter’s been called over the years, a patient driver is definitely not one of them?

The poor, dumb cyclist. You’d almost feel bad for him if he wasn’t acting like such a jerk right now.

“What is he doing?” Bisping says, slowing the car down to a crawl. Even for a bicyclist, and even in the strong desert wind, this guy is slow.

It’s not as if he can’t feel us right behind him, either. It’s not as if he couldn’t easily move over to the side of the road to let us pass. Bisping gives a gentle beep of the horn to remind him of this fact. The cyclist flashes a gloved middle finger over his shoulder without turning around.


Bisping beeps again. This time the cyclist turns around to give him the finger. Oh, this freaking guy. Beep, beep, beep, goes Bisping. The cyclist comes to a full stop and turns to face the car, shouting reckless words that get immediately lost in the wind and drowned out by the incredulous laughter of Bisping’s passengers. Does this man have any idea that he is instigating an unnecessary traffic confrontation with a professional fighter? Probably not, no. But from the look of things, he’s intent on finding out.

“Actually,” says the man in the passenger seat, “we’re here.”

He points off to the right and there it is, the Big 5 sporting goods store we’ve been looking for. It’s funny, with the excitement over the cyclist, I almost forgot why we had packed into the car to begin with. I almost forgot that the whole thing started because Bisping needed a sauna suit and other assorted weight-cutting accessories, and now here we are.

As he pulls into the parking lot, Bisping can’t help but watch over his shoulder as the cyclist continues on in the center of the lane, making himself a nuisance to the next car. This guy, Bisping remarks, is probably also having a rough day. The way he’s going, this guy might be headed for a rough life.

Just getting to the Big 5 today was a bit of a chore. First he had to get his team together, which meant locating a bearded man named Lunchbox on the Palms casino floor, then sending a man named Jacko back up to the room to get himself a sweatshirt, then playing a couple hands of blackjack while we wait because, hey, might as well. One thing Bisping cannot do, it seems, is stand still for very long.

This proves to be a problem when he asks the hotel valets for his car and they seem briefly baffled by their own system of tickets and numbers. We end up waiting in the cold and the wind with all the other sad sacks, gathering around a gas heat lamp that isn’t even on. No problem, Lunchbox tells us. He can get it going. He can’t, as it turns out, but it hardly matters because as long as we can watch him frantically turning dials and pushing buttons and cracking jokes about how he might be on the verge of blowing us all up any moment, we’re not thinking about how cold and annoyed we are.

This serves as a neat little metaphor for Lunchbox’s role in Bisping’s mini-entourage, actually. Even though, over the course of our time together, I’m unable to get a satisfactory explanation for exactly what it is that he does — “I wear many hats,” he explains — he does seem like a good guy to have around on fight week.

He’s funny and oddly charismatic. He’s excited about nearly everything, and not just because he’s been sipping Red Bull through a straw for the past 20 minutes. The point is not that he’s the guy who can get the heat lamp going; the point is that he will try, and in trying he will provide a distraction. This week in particular, distractions are exactly what Bisping needs.

That’s kind of the point of this trip. He needs the plastics for his weight cut, just like he needs Pedialyte for immediately after the weigh-in, but for those he could have sent Lunchbox or even Jacko — a childhood friend of his who Bisping convinced to quit his job and go to work designing his website.

Really, this is about getting out of the hotel. After a morning of one repetitive interview after another, the last thing he wants to do is think or talk about fighting right now. Besides, if one more person asks him what was the difference between being a coach on The Ultimate Fighter and being a contestant, he might choke somebody.

“Let’s just go to Champs,” Lunchbox says once we’re in the car. “I know where there’s a Champs.”

Champs? Bisping has never heard of Champs. He wants to go to Big 5. Big 5 will have the plastics. Lunchbox attempts to explain that Champs and Big 5 are essentially interchangeable American sporting goods franchises, but Bisping isn’t convinced. He turns the music down and stops the car. Lunchbox is going to call and check. We haven’t even made it out of the Palms parking lot yet.

“Do you have sauna suits?” Lunchbox asks the Champs employee over the phone. “You know, like plastics?”

He waits a beat. We’re all held in a strange little spell, as if so much depends on the answer.

“You don’t?” he says. “Okay. Well, you really just made an ass of me right now.”

The car erupts in laughter. Bisping cranks the music back up and peels out of the parking lot. Big 5 it is.

It needs to be said here that, for all his other talents, Michael Bisping is not a good driver. Even now, when he’s in no special hurry to get anywhere, he drives like a man who is fleeing the scene of a heist. He weaves through traffic at high speeds, engine roaring over the stereo so that he has to continually adjust the volume. He brakes suddenly and violently. He rolls through stop signs and rushes through red lights. Does his Range Rover even have a working turn signal? I have no idea, because he hasn’t attempted to use one yet.

At some point I flash back to earlier, in the UFC media room at the Palms hotel, when I overheard Bisping telling an interviewer about a bad car accident he was in as a youth. I have no problem believing this now, and I’m questioning my decision to leave my seat belt unbuckled rather than awkwardly feel around in the area near Jacko’s ass in search of the buckle. If Michael Bisping kills me in a car wreck two days before his fight with Jason “Mayhem” Miller, I’m going to be so pissed.

When we’re safely parked, I ask Bisping about the car wreck story. Oh yeah, he tells me. It was bad. Broken glass everywhere. Car upside-down. What a mess. Apparently not enough of a mess to make him reconsider his driving habits, but okay.

Of course, I don’t really get the story of the car accident, just the summary version. It’s the same when UFC director of media relations Ant Evans attempts to get Bisping to tell the story of when he got stranded in Bali on his way back from the World Jiu-Jitsu Championships.

Okay, Bisping says. He’ll tell the story, but not now. He can’t talk and concentrate on shopping, not while his body and brain are both so drained from the weight cut. Just walking around and functioning in this state of depleted nutrition is hard enough, and it’s beginning to fray his nerves.

Then again, can you blame him? You try and survive on distilled water and very little food, and your patience will be the first thing to go.

After securing the plastics and briefly arguing over whether the fact that there’s a picture of a woman on the box means that this is a women’s suit, we head to Walgreen’s for other weight-cutting accoutrements. Alobolene, to suck the moisture out of his skin. About six big cylinders of Morton’s salt, to put in a hot bath. Pedialyte, for when he steps off the scale. Cliff bars, Balance bars, enough water to flood a small village. And, oh yeah, how about a can of Pringles?

“Give me those,” Lunchbox says when he sees Bisping round the corner of the chip aisle with the Pringles in his hand.

“What?” Bisping says. Lunchbox just looks at him. He’s right, and Bisping knows it.

“Yeah, I’d probably crack them open tonight,” he admits. “I’d say, ‘I’m just going to have two,’ and then end up eating the whole can.”

Which is, of course, exactly how Pringles work. And if Bisping missed weight for a main event bout because he gave in to the temptation of Pringles, he’d never hear the end of it. Not from UFC president Dana White, whose generosity toward Bisping over the years has earned his unyielding loyalty, and not from the American fans, who love to hate him.

Only don’t mention that to Bisping. That’s the mistake I saw several interviewers make this morning, and it doesn’t exactly ingratiate them to Bisping, who is understandably a little weary of being asked how he feels about being despised by so many people. Who wouldn’t get sick of that? Not to mention, as Bisping sees it, they don’t actually hate him. Not really. They enjoy making him into a Vaudeville villain, someone to boo and hiss at when he appears onstage. But they don’t want him to go away. They love their villain, even if it’s taken him some time to get used to the role.

He’s not a bad guy; even “Mayhem” Miller says so. He is, if anything, a man who gets carried away sometimes. That’s true of his emotional outbursts before, during, and after fights, and it’s true of his generosity to fans and friends. He’s been known to blubber over devoted fans, offering to fly them around the world with him. He gave Jacko a job in a field he had no experience or qualifications in. He was as surprised as anyone when Jacko turned out to be quite good at it. Bisping just can’t stop himself sometimes, and so he plunges forward ever faster. Sometimes it results in a win for the whole team. Sometimes the car ends up upside-down.

The last addition to the shopping cart today comes in the checkout line. Three Snickers bars. It’s good stuff for after the weight cut, he insists. Just like a Balance bar, even though he already has a few of those, too. Is he going to eat them all, I ask.

“Nah,” says Lunchbox. “I’ll probably eat one.”

Bisping shoots him a look. “Well, then I’d better get one more,” he says.

There’s some discussion about going in search of that cyclist once we’re back in the car. “The rate he was going, he’s probably only about 500 yards down the road,” Bisping says. Instead, we decide to fight the traffic back to the hotel, and Bisping begins to tell the story about getting stranded in Bali.

Actually, nevermind. “It’s a long story and it’s not really relevant and you’re not going to write about it anyway,” he says. Besides, he adds, it’s the kind of story best told over a couple of beers, and he won’t be having any of those until after the fight, unfortunately.

Lunchbox, too, begins to tell a story about getting in a fight with one of the solicitors on the Vegas streets who hand out cards advertising escorts, but no. Ant is on his phone, Jacko may not be listening, and Bisping has heard it already. Screw us all. He’s not telling it. And so it goes. One story after another dies on the vine.

“This is a miserable day,” Bisping says. And he’s right. It’s cold and windy. The traffic is a maddening snarl all the way back to the Palms. The sky outside is a dull and dirty grey. Bisping hates Vegas. Right now, maybe he hates everything, but he especially hates Vegas.

“I’ve left a piece of my soul floating around here,” he jokes. But it’s true. The TUF coaching stints. The long stays and longer waits. All this stuff you have to go through just to get into a fight on Saturday night. If he didn’t love it so much, it wouldn’t be worth it.

But when the time comes and they call his name, he’ll step out into the cramped Pearl Arena at the Palms, most likely to the sound of boos. They’ll let him have it and he’ll soak it up. They’ll make him their villain and he’ll play along. Sure he will. What choice does he have? He’s come this far. How can he turn back now? How could he ever possibly stand still, even for a moment?

 

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With or Without Awards, MMA Trainer Greg Jackson Is Just as Happy

LAS VEGAS — Ask Greg Jackson’s wife, Stephanie, if she minds all the Saturday nights her husband spends away from the family, calmly instructing grown men in the art of fighting other people for money, and you’ll get a slight shrug and a deadpan respo…

Greg JacksonLAS VEGAS — Ask Greg Jackson‘s wife, Stephanie, if she minds all the Saturday nights her husband spends away from the family, calmly instructing grown men in the art of fighting other people for money, and you’ll get a slight shrug and a deadpan response.

“He just sits around,” she says with a straight face. “I don’t know why everybody thinks he’s some big deal.”

She doesn’t have to say she’s joking, and he doesn’t have to admit that he finds it funny. You know that line about how “love means never having to say you’re sorry”? Somehow this seems better.

Jackson is here because, once again, he’s nominated for the Coach of the Year honor at this year’s World MMA Awards. It’s the same award he won last year. And the year before that. It’s the award that’s meant to honor not only the success of his enormous stable of high-level fighters, but also all the hours he puts in on the road at events and back home in Albuquerque in the gym.

But don’t expect Jackson to get too fired up about awards and honors, even now. It’s “nice to be appreciated,” he admits, but once you get him talking about it you get the sense that he might rather be holding pads than dressing up for an awards show.

Maybe that’s because, if given a choice, he would.

“I think it was [Henry Wadsworth] Longfellow who said — and I’m going to totally mess up the quote and say it not nearly so eloquently — that the fame should be a natural consequence of the talent. You shouldn’t wake up in the morning for the fame, you should wake up in the morning for the talent. For me, my talent is helping my guys.”

And sure, I know what you’re thinking: did Greg Jackson just quote a 19th-century poet to answer a question about awards within the world of professional prizefighting? The answer is yes, but anyone who knows Jackson already knows that this isn’t particularly unusual behavior for him.

To Jackson, it seems as if the weird thing is not so much that he’s been so successful as a coach and trainer, but that this is even a job at all.

“It was on my mind today,” he says. “Just look at all this talent, all this. You have stuff like the award shows. You know, I was happy teaching in a shack.”

That’s not a euphemism, by the way. When Jackson met his wife he was “teaching in a 1,000-square-foot shack and living in 400 of them,” he says. Stephanie walked into his gym one day learn some grappling after previously dabbling in karate and was struck by how young this new instructor was.

“He was 23 at the time,” she says. “You just didn’t walk into dojos or martial arts studios and see someone so young.”

She was the only woman in Jackson’s grappling classes at the time, she notes, but she “dropped karate like a hot potato because it was just so fun.”

Fourteen years later, the two of them are still together, Jackson’s shack has grown into a martial arts empire, and MMA has gone from bizarre curiosity to mainstream sport. It’s been a strange ride for Jackson, and one that still surprises him at times.

Take this morning, for example, when he was working with another group of fighters, including the ones he refers to simply as “my Russians.” It was one of those strange moments where he looked around the room and found himself thinking about the all the twists and turns it took to get to this place, without any of them really knowing where they’d end up.

“And we had a blast today,” he says. “We were all united by this love of MMA. So when I’m there teaching moves, it was like being surrounded by this hunger to learn. You have so many different cultures and different personalities and different stories, and they’re all unified by this one unique thing. So I’m thinking, I’m just a kid from the south valley of Albuquerque, New Mexico. All the fighting I did was on the banks of the Rio Grande River, and no one knows where that is. How did I get here?”

Maybe the better question is, what if he hadn’t? What if the sport hadn’t taken off? What if his students hadn’t harassed him into being a part of it? What if he was still teaching in that shack in Albuquerque, with no awards or magazine clippings to put on the wall, and no famous students to spread his gospel?

“Then I think I’d be just as happy,” he says. “I really would.”

 

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