Chael Sonnen’s Trainer: ‘We Didn’t Train with Hendo, Jackson’s Too Conservative’

To say the last four days in the world of mixed martial arts has been chaotic is an understatement. We have never seen events transpire this way. As of last Thursday morning, UFC 151 was supposed to take place this Saturday with Jon Jones def…

To say the last four days in the world of mixed martial arts has been chaotic is an understatement. We have never seen events transpire this way. As of last Thursday morning, UFC 151 was supposed to take place this Saturday with Jon Jones defending his UFC Light Heavyweight Championship against Dan Henderson.

On Wednesday night, rumors started to swirl that Henderson had suffered an injury in training. On Thursday morning, the UFC sent out a press release to the media stating that Dana White would be holding a conference call at 2 p.m. ET to discuss 151.

The call took place with White saying that Henderson suffered a partially torn MCL and was out of the fight. Then, what White said after that was a shocker. The fight was offered to former two-time middleweight challenger Chael Sonnen, and he accepted the fight. But when the fight was offered to Jones, he turned it down.

After that, White announced UFC 151 was cancelled due to these circumstances. 

There has been a lot of controversy as to whether Jones should have or shouldn’t have accepted the fight. We caught up with Sonnen’s head trainer Scott McQuary, who breaks everything down for us on the Sonnen side.

“I got a text from Chael on Wednesday at about 6:30 Pacific saying we are going to have an emergency meeting and to call all the coaches into my office,” McQuary stated to Bleacher Report. “We met up and we all sat down. Chael said flatly, ‘You can’t watch the Dan Henderson/Jon Jones fight next weekend.’

“We were all kind of surprised. He goes, ‘Because you are going to cornering me against Jones.’

“Just about everybody’s jaws dropped. None of us really had any idea this was coming. Obviously we were all very excited looking at the prospect of it. There were a lot of different things to think about. Eight days isn’t a lot of time. Chael hadn’t really been in the gym a lot in the last couple months. He always takes some time off like most guys do after the fight.

“But he was down for it and we were down for it. We started making arrangements right there and then. Within five minutes, we were in the ring and training. It wasn’t until later that night, I get a text from him (Sonnen) at about 11:30 p.m. Pacific that Jones said no (to taking the fight).”

McQuary didn’t mince his words to Sonnen about why Jones didn’t take the fight.

“I said he (Jones) was a chicken,” McQuary stated. “I said he’s not taking this because he could lose. It’s stating the obvious. Anybody can lose, but I think he felt he had a pretty good chance to lose.”

Even after Sonnen found out, the Sonnen camp was still holding out hope all the way until Dana White announced the card was cancelled.

“If you look at Chael’s Twitter account, where he was tweeting to Jones and asking him, ‘Hey you got 30 minutes before Dana’s conference call to be a champion or a coward.’

“Obviously he was trying to bring him on to take the fight, poking away at him to get him to do it and even offered his purse as well. I don’t know what else Chael could have done. We held out hope for a last-second Hail Mary that Jones would have some cojones and step up to the plate. When Dana made the announcement, that sealed it for us.”

White stated in the conference call that Jones had talked to his head trainer Greg Jackson, who advised Jones to not take the fight due to having only three days to prepare for the fight.

Jackson also said to MMA Weekly in an interview that Sonnen had been training with Dan Henderson to prepare for Jones and felt Sonnen would have an advantage in the fact they had been working together. McQuary states that is the furthest thing from the truth.

“Chael was not training with Dan Henderson,” McQuary stated. “he had spoken on the phone with Dan a little bit, but no training whatsoever. Chael took some time off after the Anderson (Silva) fight to mentally and physically recover. It’s exhausting going through a camp like that. I can tell you completely that Chael hadn’t stepped into the gym until two weeks ago. He did three training sessions in those two weeks, and they were pretty light for him or anybody. He barely broke a sweat.”

A lot of people have been critical of Jackson giving that advice to Jones. McQuary feels that some trainers have more influence over fighters than others, and it makes Jackson look bad in this situation.

“It depends on the fighter,” McQuary stated. “In this case I think everybody has an influence. Trainers have more influence than others. Those guys (fighters) have a mind of their own. They have the right to free choice. If you give that power over like Jon Jones did to Greg Jackson, whether he was advocating responsibility or passing it off. I don’t know if that’s a completely smart decision. I think Greg Jackson is coming across as an extremely cautious coach that fights not to lose where Chael fights to win.”

It has been a criticism in the past of Jackson and his style of how he prepares his fighters. McQuary says just look at the fights.

“I think it plays a very protective way of winning and keeping a good record,” McQuary stated. “Greg has been criticized by other people in the past for doing just that. Having his fighters not necessarily going after the finish and utilize the other tools they have and taking risks. This is just another example to me of him trying to keep his fighters from taking any risks and protecting what they have.”

“Unfortunately you’re not going to be known as a legend that way,” McQuary stated. “You have to put it out there and you have to remember where you came from. A lot of these guys got their start or are getting into the UFC by taking a short-notice fight against somebody who was skilled and ready.”

People have wondered what Sonnen would have done if he was in the position that Jones was in. McQuary feels there would be no doubt at all.

“Absolutely without a doubt, in a heartbeat,” McQuary stated. “I wouldn’t even have to say anything. Chael steps up to the plate every time. He would have no doubt in his mind about the fight. Chael backs up what he says and follows it through with action.”

You can follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

GLORY: Tyrone Spong Signs a Multi-Fight Deal, Debut in December

Kickboxing organization GLORY announced today in a press release that they have signed heavyweight kickboxing legend Tyrone Spong to a two-year, multi-fight deal, with his debut set for the GLORY World Series event in Toyko in December with a date…

Kickboxing organization GLORY announced today in a press release that they have signed heavyweight kickboxing legend Tyrone Spong to a two-year, multi-fight deal, with his debut set for the GLORY World Series event in Toyko in December with a date to be announced soon.

The 6’2′, 228-pound 26-year-old and former It’s Showtime World Champion has scored KOs in over 60 percent of his victories, including his latest conquest, a third-round stoppage of all-time great Peter Aerts in Brussels, Belgium on June 30, 2012.

Spong made an immediate impact in the kickboxing world in 2003, his first professional year, reeling off 12 consecutive wins in a span of as many months. He notched his first major victory on Oct. 1, 2006 when he scored a thunderous first-round KO against world champion Kaoklai Kaennorsing of Bangkok, Thailand in Almere, Netherlands.

A marquee moment in his career was as a 2010 K-1 World Grand Prix finalist from the old K-1 organization.

“I am very happy to join GLORY and take part in their heavyweight division. It was clear to me that GLORY World Series represents the toughest challenge in kickboxing,” said Spong in the GLORY press release. 

Spong recently relocated to South Florida, where he trains alongside UFC superstars Alistair Overeem and Rashad Evans. In addition to being mentored by kickboxing legend Ernesto Hoost, Spong has also trained under professional boxing guru, Floyd Mayweather, Sr.

“The best stand-up fighters in the world are taking part in this league,” Spong continued. “And I want to prove that I am the best. I will be the king of the GLORY ring.”

Spong is renowned for his incredible athleticism and technical fluidity, attributes that allow him to move with a level of speed that is comparable to a lightweight.

“We are delighted to welcome Tyrone Spong to the GLORY heavyweight division,” said GLORY Ambassador Cor Hemmers. “He is a very exciting fighter and has a very impressive highlight reel. Fans can expect some superb performances and lots of knockouts.”

“Our roster of heavyweight superstars is beyond anything kickboxing has ever seen and, with the acquisition of Tyrone, it just became that much more outstanding,“ commented Marcus Luer, Managing Director of GLORY Sports International.

Among the heavyweight superstars whom Spong will join in Tokyo are Peter Aerts, Remy Bonjasky, Semmy Schilt and Jerome Le Banner—all GLORY fighters who, together, boast a collection of over 10 heavyweight World Grand Prix titles from the old K-1 organization—and rising stars such as Errol Zimmerman, Gokhan Saki, Anderson ‘Braddock’ Silva and Filip Verlinden.

You can follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

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Miesha Tate Is Ready to Be the Number One Contender and Get Her Title Back

What a difference five months can make. You’re in the main event in what was quite arguably the biggest fight in the history of Strikeforce. Now your headlining once again, but it is on the undercard of a channel that a majority of the public…

What a difference five months can make. You’re in the main event in what was quite arguably the biggest fight in the history of Strikeforce. Now your headlining once again, but it is on the undercard of a channel that a majority of the public doesn’t have.

This is the position Miesha Tate is in and isn’t too thrilled about it. Tate headlines the undercard portion of Strikeforce: Rousey vs Kaufman on Saturday night as she squares off against MMA veteran Julie Kedzie. The bout can be seen on Showtime Extreme starting at 8ET/5PT. 

She doesn’t get why she is on the preliminary portion of the card considering her credentials exceed some of the fighters who made the main card and feels it is a demotion.

“It’s confusing to me,” Tate told Bleacher Report. “I know I have more of a following than a few of the guys on the main card. It leaves me wondering why would they put me on the undercard versus a couple of the fights that are on there. Is it just because I’m a girl? Is it just because they don’t want to have two female fights on the main card? Otherwise it doesn’t make any sense.

“I do know that the people that matter are going to be watching and that’s matchmaker (Sean Shelby), Dana White, Lorenzo (Fertitta), my friends and family. I know their going to be paying attention. I don’t know how you would take a former world champion who has lost one fight after being on a six fight winning streak, with a huge following and put me on the undercard. It was insulting.”

Their was a lot of heat going into Tate’s loss to Ronda Rousey in March. You usually gain a measure for respect as a fighter for your opponent. In this case, more respect has been lost for Rousey in Tate’s eyes.

“She didn’t prove anything new (in the fight),” Tate stated. “I would have appreciated and would have a lot more respect for her if after the fight was done and would have said, “you know what, what’s done is done. We did a great job selling this fight.”

“If she would handled it more maturely instead of just saying, ‘whatever, I don’t feel bad about what I said,’ and continue to talk trash afterwords. I think I pretty much lost respect for her after that.”

Tate feels even with the rumblings of Cris Cyborg getting a title match with the winner of the main event that she will be the number one contender with an impressive performance over Kedzie.

“I think she (Cyborg) shouldn’t be able to just walk right in and fight for the belt,” Tate stated. “I’m not pointing any fingers at Cris, but I do know that she got suspended for illegal substance use. I don’t feel someone should be rewarded for that. I don’t think you should be able to come back from a one year layoff and get an instant title shot especially in a weight class where we all know is going to very difficult for her to make weight.”

“I think Julie Kedzie is a top ten fighter in the world,” Tate stated. “I know her record (16-10) is kind of so so. You have to realize that Julie Kedzie has fought the best females her entire career. She never backs away from a fight. it doesn’t matter if she got offered a fight two minutes or ten days before fight time. She’s always out there to fight, fought outside her weight class and a super tough girl. She’s not a chump and has a lot of experience. I think that Sean (Shelby), Dana (White) and those guys, if they’ve done any research on her know what kind of fighter she is and for me to go out there and get a dominant win means something.”

You can follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

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Ed Herman Puts the Past Behind Him and Is Ready to Shock the World

When you go through adversity in life, it’s how you bounce back that shows how strong you are. Ed Herman has shown how strong he is inside and outside the cage.Herman suffered a torn ACL and meniscus in his fight with Aaron Simpson at UFC 102 in 2…

When you go through adversity in life, it’s how you bounce back that shows how strong you are. Ed Herman has shown how strong he is inside and outside the cage.

Herman suffered a torn ACL and meniscus in his fight with Aaron Simpson at UFC 102 in 2009. As he was preparing for his comeback, Herman tore the same ACL again in 2010.

After not competing for almost two years, Herman returned at TUF 13 finale last June, as he stopped Tim Credeur in 48 seconds. Herman since then has rattled off two more victories as he submitted Kyle Noke and Clifford Starks.

Herman now enters quite possibly the biggest fight of his career as he squares off against former Strikeforce Middleweight Champion Jake Shields tonight at UFC 150. The “Short Fuse” feels the injuries gave him that something that was lacking in his career.

“I don’t ever want to say an injury is a good thing,” Herman told Bleacher Report. “I think (the injury) gave me that fire after I thought my career was possibly over. I didn’t want my career to be done yet. It gave me that motivation to take this opportunity and make the most of this second chance in my career. My mental approach has changed in just trying to enjoy this time while I’m here and take advantage of everything I can.”

After he defeated Clifford Starks at UFC 143, Herman told the UFC he wanted to fight a top-ten fighter and the UFC gave him that in Shields.

“It’s a great matchup,” Herman stated. “Jake’s a top-ten guy in the welterweight division, but I feel that also translates into the middleweight division. I was excited when the UFC told me about the fight and I jumped on the chance.”

Shields is returning to middleweight after posting a modest 2-2 record in the welterweight division after leaving Strikeforce and entering the UFC. Herman feels Shields is a better fighter at middleweight and plans on ruining Shields’ return to the division.

“He has fought better at middleweight,” Herman stated. “His most successful fights have been at this weight class. I plan on shocking the world and surprising Jake Shields by finishing him.”

You can follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

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Roland Delorme Relishing the Chance to Fight in His Home Country

A lot of fighters never get the opportunity to fight at home. It is a rare thing to see in the sport. In Canada, if it wasn’t for hockey, the UFC would be king. For Roland Delorme, he gets to come home. The native of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Delorme (8-1 MM…

A lot of fighters never get the opportunity to fight at home. It is a rare thing to see in the sport. In Canada, if it wasn’t for hockey, the UFC would be king. For Roland Delorme, he gets to come home.

The native of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Delorme (8-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) will get that chance for the very first time as he will square off against Francisco Rivera (8-2 MMA, 1-0 UFC) tomorrow night at UFC 149.

He was originally supposed to face top-ranked bantamweight Bibiano Fernandes, but circumstances unknown to the public have led Delorme to now face off with Rivera. He was expecting Fernandes to be his golden ticket but feels he will rise in the rankings either way.

“I was under the impression I was fighting Bibiano Fernandes,” Delorme told Bleacher Report. “I signed a contract saying I was fighting Bibiano Fernandes. Then for two weeks after that, that was the case. Then all of a sudden, it wasn’t. So that sucked.

“Bibiano Fernandes was going to punch my ticket to the big time. He’s a big-name fighter, big wins in some big organizations where he was champion.

“I felt that fight was a win-win for me. It was like, I can go out there and beat him and shoot up the rankings. Go from zero to hero, or I can go out and lose to him, still look pretty good and have the same thing happen.

“Where I still get good exposure, more fans still see me. I thought it was a win-win. It was unfortunate it didn’t happen. What can you do? It’s fighting.”

Delorme defeated Nick Denis via submission with one second left in the first round at UFC on Fox 3 in May. He wanted to fight on this card, but at first it was filled up. As luck would have it, Delorme got that call a short time later.

“Right after my fight when I was in the locker room, they (UFC) asked me when I would want to fight again, and I told them I want to fight in Calgary,” Delorme stated.

“Initially I was told the card was full. I was like, ‘well, if a spot opens, let me know.’ Then about two weeks later, they (UFC) called me back and said ‘yeah, OK, you want to fight in Calgary?’ I said ‘yes.'”

Delorme has never fought in his home country will now get the chance to do so in the biggest organization in the world.

“First off, it’s the first fight ever in Calgary,” Delorme stated. “I think it would a big event for Calgary. I think it would be a big event in Calgary just to begin with having their first UFC there.

“Even though they’ve had I don’t know how many changes to the card, it’s still a big event for Calgary. A lot of people are going to go because it’s the UFC. Doesn’t matter whose in it, it’s UFC.

“I never had the opportunity to fight in Canada before. I never had the opportunity to fight in my country in front of my home fans, and I’m really looking forward to it. It’s been a dream of mine to fight in Canada for the UFC.”

UFC 149 takes place tomorrow night from the Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The Delorme vs Rivera fight will take place on the preliminary portion of the card, which airs on FX starting at 8 p.m. EST, 5 p.m. PST.

 

You can listen to the entire interview with Roland Delorme here.

You can also follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com

Ben Saunders Wouldn’t Mind If Bellator Tourney Fights Were Held in One Night

Back in the inception of the UFC in 1993 and on some Pride cards, fights were held in a one night tournament style. Now with athletic commissions overseeing the sport and Pride no longer being around, we don’t see that format anymore. If Ben Saunders h…

Back in the inception of the UFC in 1993 and on some Pride cards, fights were held in a one night tournament style. Now with athletic commissions overseeing the sport and Pride no longer being around, we don’t see that format anymore. If Ben Saunders had a say, we would see that format once again.

Saunders (13-5, 4-2 BFC) returns to the Bellator cage tonight as he squares off against MMA veteran Brian Warren (18-15 MMA, 0-0 BFC) at Bellator 72 in a catchweight fight of 178 pounds. The fight will headline preliminary portion of the card, which you on see on Spike.com

Saunders feels if Bellator went to that format, it would be a battle to how strong a fighter really is.

“It’s probably of the most hardcore things you can do in the fight game that is,” Saunders told Bleacher Report. “The only thing that maybe come to a more hardcore level is three fights in 1 night.  A lot of us honestly if you ask people in Bellator, they might tell you because I will tell you how. I would rather try and to test the waters and see. Everything’s by chance. Everything is circumstance.

“You don’t know what happens in a fight. You don’t know what happens with injuries in camp. You don’t know everything that’s going on. it’s almost like if your doing it all in one night, your only doing one weight cut all in one night. The chance is still there. Do you get injured in one of your fights? Does your opponent get injured in one fight?

“It really comes down to just mental toughness. Push through it and try to make it work. You also got to realize is the reality of it and you know your mind can push you through a million things, but if the body can’t do it for whatever reason there might be issues overcoming. That’s the sport as far as the whole tournament format goes. It’s just a battle of wills, a circumstantial chance.”

Saunders has fought in two tournaments in Bellator with making the finals in his first go around and the semi-finals last season. He feels the Bellator tournament style has showed how strong he really is.

“I honestly thought I was always a mentally strong fight,” Saunders states. “it was more like the test to see how strong you are. That’s the same thing as the fight game in general. Being able to see how good you are. Testing yourself against the best in the world. What people don’t understand is those five losses that I might have are so huge. If I actually look at what it actually means.

“If I look at how I lost them and really try to completely analyze things like that, I’m able to break down my strengths, my weaknesses. I get to really see things. I think it just definitely helps out.”

The card tonight takes place in Tampa, Florida, which isn’t too far from where Saunders trains at with American Top Team in Orlando. That was the only reason Saunders took this fight.

“That was the main reason and the only reason when they asked me to be on the card that I pretty much accepted because it was in Florida,” Saunders stated. “I never get to fight in Florida. I got to fight in a local WEF show before I signed with Bellator. Other than that, it was three years before I fought in Florida before that. My career coming up was all Florida based.

“I definitely miss being able to fight in front of my friends, my family, close fans, students and my teammates. It’s a completely different atmosphere when your at home. That definitely gave me the incentive to fight and train my butt off to come here and put on a phenominal perfomance for all of them.”

You can listen to entire interview with Ben Saunders here.

You can also follow me on Twitter @fightclubchi.

Read more MMA news on BleacherReport.com