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“Ultimate Fighter” Finale: The People’s Liveblog


(Photo courtesy of Combat Lifestyle. Check out the full album.)

You watched a lot of reality TV and sat through the lame TUF theme song countless times just to get to this point. Now we finally get to discover who is The Ultimate Fighter…by watching the rematch of a fight from the tournament semifinals.

Okay, so that part may be anti-climactic, but there’s a whole lot of other action on tonight’s fight card, including the always fun loser-gets-fired match between Kendall Grove and Evan Tanner. The Cage Potato liveblog starts at 9 pm EST. Remember to hit refresh so you can get the most updated acerbic wit possible.

9:00: And we’re off…

9:01: And we get as far as the post-gladiator montage interviews before CB Dollaway refers to himself in the third person again. Oh, those tricky editors.

9:04: The phrase “make or break” gets thrown around liberally by Mike Goldberg and Joe Rogan. I can’t help but wonder how many of Rogan’s stories start with, “When I was on ‘News Radio…’” Not that I wouldn’t want to hear those stories.

9:11: Riddle boasts that he is “actually at a real camp” these days. Judging by his haircut, that camp is Vidal Sassoon. Hi-yo! Keep coming back for clever quips like that all night long.

9:16: Goldberg notes: “Nobody smiled more on this season of ‘The Ultimate Fighter’ than Matt Riddle.” In all fairness, they only started keeping that statistic after season three.

9:24: A solid back-and-forth battle between Matt Riddle and Dante Rivera takes a turn as Riddle secures the mount. And then gives it up. Riddle attempts a nice little triangle, but Rivera isn’t having it. On to round three.

9:28: Riddle takes Rivera down right on the Keystone Light logo. Ouch. Rivera’s attempts at rubber guard do not escape Rogan’s notice, but Riddle works through it before getting back to his feet.

9:31: More mount from Riddle. Looks like he’s starting to take over, especially now that Rogan is already referring to this as a big victory for him. Presumptuous? Little bit. Accurate? Probably.

9:37: Riddle wins a unanimous decision. He smiles as if someone has told him they’re taking him for ice cream later.

9:43: Now we’re pausing so Dana White can promote his July 19 Anti-Affliction show. Don’t forget to pump up James Irvin. Done.

9:53: Spencer Fisher is taking it to Jeremy Stephens here in round one. That’s about all there is to say about it.

10:00: More of the same in round two. Fisher in total control, with the exception of a takedown from Stephens at the end of the round. I’m pretty sure I can hear Cecil Peoples marking it 10-9 for Stephens after that.

10:03: Referee Steve Mazagatti warns Fisher to “pick those shots wisely”. Are referees dispensing life guidance now? I’m not saying that’s a bad idea. Herb Dean could really sort some of these guys out.

10:07: Spencer Fisher toughs out the guillotine at the end and smiles from the effort. Well done.

10:12: Unanimous decision for Fisher. He responds with a Ric Flair ‘woo!’ We’d expect nothing less.

10:20: Joe Rogan sits down with Forrest Griffin and “Rampage” Jackson for an interview no one seems too excited about. “Rampage” salvages it by making fun of Griffin’s ears.

10:31: Diego Sanchez has got himself a good angry sneer going. Let’s see how it works out.

10:35: Who would have thought that Sanchez-Fioravanti would turn into a stand-up battle? Deal with it. That seems to be where this is going.

10:46: Entering round three, this is a surprisingly competitive and exciting fight. Despite having Fioravanti in trouble, Sanchez has been unable to finish him.

10:48: And right on cue Diego Sanchez delivers a big head kick, followed by a knee and then some punches that are mostly academic. Impressive finish from “The Nightmare”.

11:01: Big Nog and Frank Mir mug for the TUF 8 promo. Apparently we’re still calling Nogueira the “interim heavyweight champion”. That’s kind of like a girl you broke up with eight months ago saying that the two of you are ‘on a break.’

11:05: It’s time for extended packages on CB Dollaway and Amir Sadollah. You know, because we haven’t learned enough about their backgrounds.

11:12: CB and Amir smile at one another in the staredown. If my mom watched MMA, she would have both loved and misinterpreted that moment.

11:13: Dollaway wastes no time in getting Amir to the mat this time around. But Sadollah is wily off his back.

11:16: Sadollah locks up a very similar armbar to the one he finished Dollaway with on the show, and CB taps once. He apparently feels that this shouldn’t count as real tapout for some reason. CB, you tapped. Because you were locked up. Now let’s move on.

11:22: Amir Sadollah seems as surprised as anyone now that he’s the season seven winner. Somehow that only makes him more likable.

11:27: Here I thought we were going to get through a full Spike TV broadcast of the UFC without a stilted interview/advertisement for some other idiotic Spike TV show. What a fool I’ve been. At least we get a quick look at some show about a factory that seems to be based on an idea that took twenty seconds to think up.

11:34: Rogan refers to Evan Tanner as “a great writer”. If Jim Shepard were watching this, he’d be very sad right now. Rogan then goes on to refer to the “web log” that Tanner writes. If only there were a more succinct word for that.

11:41: Near the end of the first, we’ve already seen a hell of fight. Grove attempts to take Tanner’s back and fails. Both these guys are such unknown quantities, anything could happen.

11:44: Replays confirm that Grove’s knee was, as the kids say, totally sick.

11:45: Grove is using his range well early in the second. If only he could keep out of the clinch.

11:46: There’s that knee from Grove again. But it leads to a takedown. Grove gets back to his feet and punishes Tanner some. Tanner starting to remind us all of his gutsy/bloody performance against Rich Franklin, only with a beard this time.

11:49: Grove ends the round with some kicks that make me feel like vomiting. Or maybe that’s the Chinese food and vodka.

11:55: Both guys look tired and a little desperate here in the final moments. Great effort from both men. It’s a shame someone probably has to get fired behind this.

11:59: Split decision for Kendall Grove. It’s not a finish, but it will keep him employed.

12:02: Eastman-McFedries is up next. Turns out Marvin Eastman is 38. And still holding on to the dream. Is that encouraging, or a cautionary tale? Guess we’ll see.

12:05: Cautionary tale. McFedries just put a hurting on “The Beastman”. Guess who’s going to be selling Lady Kenmore’s at Sears before the month is out.

Results of the rest of the undercard:

Josh Burkman def. Dustin Hazelett via submission (armbar) round two
Dean Lister def. Jeremy Horn via submission (guillotine choke) round one
Rob Kimmons def. Rob Yundt via submission (guillotine choke) round one
Matt Brown def. Matt Arroyo via TKO (punches) round two

The Tim Credeur-Cale Yarbrough fight was cancelled because Credeur tested positive for the prescription drug Adderall.

And on that note, we’re done. Have a good night, Potato Nation.

Written by admin on June 21st, 2008 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on Finale and live blog and Ulitmate Fighter and fight and liveblog and UFC and Spike TV and tuf and MMA.

TUF 7 Rating - Week 11

MMAPayout.com has learned that the 6/11 episode of the Ultimate Fighter on Spike drew a 1.1 rating (1.4 million viewers). The program drew quarter hours of 1.10, 1.07, 1.21, and 1.21. The key demographic numbers were a a 1.72 in M18-34 and a 1.47 in M18-49. The M18-49 number was good enough for second place on basic cable for the time period.

After bottoming out at 0.9 in week, the series has rebounded and appears to be building some momentum heading into the live finale. Spike had pushed the NBA playoffs as the culprit for much this season's decline. Some had doubted that rationale, citing the fact that this isn't the first season to face the NBA playoffs. However, this is the highest rated NBA post season in years and the season's rebound the last two weeks has coincided with the lack of NBA competition.

Written by admin on June 12th, 2008 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on ratings and tuf and MMA.

The Ultimate Fighter 7: The Limo Incident Was More Than Just A Broken Window

After seeing the previews for next weeks episode of The Ultimate Fighter 7, there has been much speculation about what happens and who gets kicked off the show and no longer allowed to be a part of the UFC. I have no idea who it is, but I think it is going to be more [...]

Written by admin on June 12th, 2008 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on Jesse Taylor and Jeremy May and Amir Sadollah and CB Dolloway and Tim Credeur and tuf and The Ultimate Fighter and UFC and Dana White and ultimate fighting and MMA.

What’s Wrong with The Ultimate Fighter?

The Ultimate Fighter has played a pivotal role in the popularity rise of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. The television show has produced a host of major stars and big money fights in the past three and a half years. However, the current season of the show has produced a feeling of general malaise.

Ratings are the lowest for any season. CB Dollaway is the only fighter on the season who appears to have star potential. But the most confounding development is the limited buzz for the fight between charismatic coaches Quinton “Rampage” Jackson and Forrest Griffin.

When the season began, the choice of Jackson and Griffin as coaches was widely praised. Both are high level fighters with larger-than-life personalities. The feeling was their presence would increase ratings and lead to a very high pay-per-view buy rate for their championship fight.

In fact, tickets for their fight have sold slower than for the most recent Las Vegas event featuring B.J. Penn vs. Sean Sherk. It seems highly unlikely Griffin vs. Jackson will do UFC’s highest buy rate of the year as was once predicted. The question is thus why that fight hasn’t sparked the interest that was almost universally expected?

The answer to that question comes in the one key miscalculation the UFC made: the relationship between the coaches. As much as some would like to pretend otherwise, boxing and MMA have always been built around feuds and always will be. This doesn’t mean that you need to have fighters pretending to hate each other for every major event. However, it is hard to build a fight when there isn’t at least a sense of tension between the fighters.

Jackson and Griffin on The Ultimate Fighter don’t appear to have even a competitive rivalry, let alone a grudge. The Ortiz-Shamrock, Hughes-Serra and Penn-Pulver seasons of the show featured coaches who wanted to best the other at everything. Fans were left thinking, “If these guys want to beat each other so badly at bowling or ping pong, imagine how seriously they are taking their fight.” Jackson and Griffin have had the exact opposite effect. By joking their way through the show, fans are left thinking they don’t care as much about their fight as they actually do.

With UFC promising the most shocking development in Ultimate Fighter history this week, there is still time for Jackson vs. Griffin to become a hotly anticipated fight. But as it stands, their good-natured personalities have backfired in achieving the ultimate goal of the show, which is to build a big money fight at the end.

Written by admin on June 11th, 2008 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on marketing and opinion and analysis and tuf and UFC and MMA.

Spencer Fisher and Jeremy Stephens Added to The Ultimate Fighter® Finale

Fisher and Stephens Added to The Ultimate Fighter® Finale SPENCER “THE KING” FISHER AND JEREMY “LIL’ HEATHEN” STEPHENS TO FIGHT LIVE ON SPIKE TV SATURDAY, JUNE 21 The Battle Between Hawkeye Lightweights Will Be Featured On The Ultimate Fighter® Team Rampage vs Team Forrest Finale UFC® lightweight contender Spencer “The King” Fisher will battle fellow Iowa native and [...]

Written by admin on May 19th, 2008 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on Jeremy Horn and ultimate fighting and tuf and Jeremy Stephens and Spencer Fisher and The Ultimate Fighter and UFC and MMA.

Brad Imes to Replace Injured Branden Lee Hinkle on IFL Mohegan Sun Card May 16

5/8/2008 Imes Challenges Roy Nelson For Heavyweight Belt; Conn. Native Latina, New York’s Franchi Match Up in Lightweight Bout as Jim Miller Withdraws NEW YORK, May 9, 2008 –Mixed martial arts veteran Brad Imes (Sacramento, Calif.) will challenge Roy Nelson (Las Vegas) for the heavyweight championship as part of the nine-bout card as the International Fight League [...]

Written by admin on May 10th, 2008 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on tuf and international fight league and Branden Lee Hinkle and gogoplata and martial arts and Brad Imes and The Ultimate Fighter and UFC and IFL and MMA.

Picks To Win THE ULTIMATE FIGHTER Finale Tonight

I’ve procrastinated in making picks for the winner of The Ultimate Fighter finale tonight, so here are some quick picks, I also tend to pick underdogs, so…

Clay Guida over Roger Huerta
Tommy Speer over Mac Danzig
John Koppenhaver over Jared Rollins
George Sotiropoulos over Billy Miles
Ben Saunders over Dan Barrera (via Jeet Kun Do)
Richie Hightower over Troy Mandaloniz
Matt Arroyo over John Kolosci by submission
Dorian Price over Roman Mitichyan
and in the upset of the night Paul Georgieff will defeat Jonathan Goulet. Yeah, it’s doubtful, but I’m sticking with it.

On another note, Ricky Hatton will KO Floyd Mayweather Jr. tonight.

Written by admin on December 8th, 2007 with comments disabled.
Read more articles on Mac Danzig and ultimate fighter and tuf and Clay Guida and Roger Huerta and The Ultimate Fighter and UFC and MMA.