Strikeforce

Stolen from Yahoo!

Strikeforce a legit contender after EXC deal
By Dave Meltzer, Yahoo! Sports
Feb 5, 5:40 pm EST

More MMA Videos More From Dave MeltzerLauzon-Stephens highlights UFN 17 Feb 6, 2009 Remembering Helio Gracie Feb 5, 2009
A deal negotiated over several months was finalized Thursday with contract signings that immediately makes the San Jose, Calif.-based Strikeforce promotion the leading competitor to the industry leading Ultimate Fighting Championship.

Strikeforce promoter and co-owner Scott Coker confirmed separate deals were signed Thursday to both buy certain assets from Pro Elite, Inc., which ran the now-defunct Elite XC promotion, as well as television deals with both CBS and Showtime.

The first show under this deal will be April 11 at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, headlined by Frank Shamrock, 36, a legend from the early days of mixed martial arts in the U.S. and Japan.

Coker said the company is talking about several different opponents for Shamrock, a former UFC middleweight (now light heavyweight) champion, who lost his Strikeforce middleweight title to Cung Le on March 29, suffering a broken arm in the process.

Shamrock has proven to be one of the best non-UFC draws in the mixed martial arts business, headlining the two largest paid attendance shows ever in North America, both in his hometown of San Jose, as well as drawing two of the three largest ratings for MMA on the Showtime network, for matches with Renzo Gracie and Phil Baroni.

Coker said he did not purchase the contracts for all of the estimated 80 fighters under Elite XC deals, but that all the key names came with the deal, including Kimbo Slice, who still holds the record for the most-watched MMA match ever in North America in a CBS match last year.

Also confirmed as part of the deal were the country’s most popular female fighter, Gina Carano, lightweight stars Nick Diaz and Eddie Alvarez as well as Elite XC middleweight champion Robbie Lawler, and welterweight champion Jake Shields.

Elite XC’s heavyweight champion, Antonio Silva, would not be part of the deal because he is facing revocation of his fighting license for competing in a match in Japan on Jan. 4 while on suspension for failing a steroid test on July 26. In that match he won the vacant championship against the late Justin Eilers.

The promotion will use the Strikeforce name, and Coker said a decision regarding the status of the various championships recognized by Strikeforce and Elite XC would be forthcoming in about a week.

Coker said the deal would include 12 live events per year on Showtime, which would be split similar to the Elite XC contract. Roughly half will be live prime-time events featuring name fighters and held in major arenas, and the others will be developmental shows held in smaller arenas and on Native American reservations and airing later.

The CBS deal calls for up to four shows per year, airing on Saturday nights in prime time. Elite XC ran three events on CBS last year, two of which were considered ratings successes.

Strikeforce also has a television deal in place with NBC, airing a 30-minute show of taped matches from their video library in a late Saturday night/Sunday morning time slot that airs in most markets between 2 and 4 a.m.

The only official match for the debut show will pit Scott Smith, who had two shots at Lawler’s championship last year, against former IFL middleweight champion Benji Radach. Coker is also hopeful of putting together a match with Strikeforce lightweight champion Josh Thomson against K.J. Noons, who held the Elite XC version of the title before being stripped of it in October in a contract dispute with Elite XC management.

Strikeforce plans to line up match-ups this year from stars created on television and then go to the pay-per-view venue when ready.

“We’ll also be in the pay-per-view business, but not right away,” said Coker. “We’re looking at building Strikeforce fighters and Pro Elite fighters to make compelling matches. We’ll put those matches on pay-per-view when we’re ready.”

As far as the one potential superfight Elite XC left on the table – Carano against Brazilian Cristiane “Cyborg” Santos – Coker said Carano wants to do that match right away, but he wouldn’t commit to how soon.

Coker said Strikeforce would remain a private company owned by himself and Silicon Valley Sports and Entertainment, which runs the HP Pavilion in San Jose, as well as the NHL’s San Jose Sharks.

Strikeforce’s roster of fighters includes Le, Shamrock, Thomson, Gilbert Melendez, Joe Riggs, Bobby Southworth and Kazuo Misaki. It also recognizes Renato “Babalu” Sobral as light heavyweight champion and Alistair Overeem as heavyweight champion.

While promoting its key events in San Jose, it has run successful shows in other markets including Seattle, Denver, and Los Angeles. With the new deal, it will expand to running shows across the U.S.

Strikeforce still holds the record for the highest paid attendance for an MMA event in the U.S. – a Shamrock vs. Cesar Gracie match which drew 17,465 paying fans and 18,265 total on March 10, 2006. The UFC’s largest paying crowd for a U.S. show was 17,358, although there were more than 19,000 in the arena, for the March 3, 2007 fight between Randy Couture and Tim Sylvia in Columbus, Ohio.

Most of the fighters who had signed with Elite XC had been in a deep freeze since the company closed up shop in October. By not actually declaring bankruptcy, and attempting to sell what was left of the company, stalled negotiations meant most had not been able to fight for months.

A deal between Pro Elite, Inc. and Strikeforce was on the table ready to be signed in December, but it fell apart at the last minute.

Agents representing the key fighters were ready to serve Elite XC with legal papers, attempting to get the fighters declared free agents because they had to sit out months without being paid. In recent days, the agents had been informed that a deal was about to be completed with Strikeforce, and had held off on the legal process.

“It’s the best possible situation,” said Ken Pavia, who represents a number of fighters who had been under Elite XC contracts.

Nick Diaz getting ready to fight again.

Nick Diaz likely for April Strikeforce event
MMAjunkie.com Staff, MMAjunkie.com
Feb 6, 1:19 pm EST

   With Strikeforce's acquisition of select ProElite assets complete, as well as the announcement of a new broadcast contract with Showtime, the California-based organization is now turning its attention to their April 11 event.

And with Benji Radach and Scott Smith’s services already secured for the San Jose, Calif., event, and MMA legend Frank Shamrock and Strikeforce lightweight champ Josh Thomson seemingly not far behind, UFC, PRIDE and EliteXC veteran Nick Diaz (18-7) is the latest fighter rumored for the April 11 card.

The report comes courtesy of GracieFighter.com, the official website for Cesar Gracie’s training camp.

The full report appears unedited below.

Nick Diaz will most likely be fighting in late March or early April for StrikeForce. His last bout was to have taken place in Dream against Sakurai, but Japanese television executives nixed the match and replaced Sakurai’s opponent for a former pro wrestler they hoped would muster better ratings.

His opponent has yet to be named and final contracts have not been signed, however StrikeForce is committed to securing a marquee matchup for Diaz.

Diaz is currently on a three-fight win streak, including wins over Thomas Denny and Muhsin Corbbrey under the EliteXC banner.

Diaz had been competing at EliteXC’s lightweight limit of 160 pounds. Strikeforce’s lightweight division follows the more traditional 155-pound limit. It is currently unknown whether Diaz will attempt to make the 155-pound limit or compete in Strikeforce’s 170-pound division.

For the latest on Strikeforce’s April 11 card, stay tuned to the MMA Rumors section of MMAjunkie.com.

Wonder what they are gonna do with Kimbo? :smiley:

Another Strikeforce Press Release

Strikeforce signed Fedor. :smiley:

FEDOR SIGNS

World’s No. 1 MMA Heavyweight To Fight In STRIKEFORCE / M-1 Global Co-Promoted Events

First Fight To Air This Fall, Live on SHOWTIME®

NEW YORK (August 3, 2009)–After a week of intense negotiations and speculation, the hottest topic of discussion in the professional fight world has come to a head as the world’s number one heavyweight and most sought after mixed martial arts (MMA) champion Fedor “The Last Emperor” Emelianenko has signed a historic, multi-fight agreement that will see him headline mega-events co-promoted by world championship promotions STRIKEFORCE and M-1 Global.

Emelianenko, known globally as Fedor, will make his premium television debut this Fall when his first fight under the new agreement airs live on SHOWTIME®. Up until now, Emelianenko’s live fights have aired exclusively on pay-per-view in the United States.

“I am looking forward to going back to work and fighting at the highest level,” said the 33-year-old Emelianenko. During his nine year professional fight career, which included a four and a half year stay with the world’s former top MMA promotion, the now defunct PRIDE Fighting Championship, the Russian native has faced and defeated all comers.

In his last effort, the 6-foot, 235-pound Emelianenko decimated the number two ranked heavyweight at the time Andrei “The Pitbull” Arlovski with a single punch in the first round (3:14) of the main event of Affliction: “Day of Reckoning” at Anaheim, California’s Honda Center on January 24.

“STRIKEFORCE is a top fight promotion that houses some of the greatest fighters in the world,” continued Emelianenko. “I am prepared to fight any of them.”

“We are extremely excited to have the opportunity to work with M-1 Global and Fedor,” said STRIKEFORCE Founder and CEO Scott Coker, a martial arts fight promoter of over 25 years. “Fedor has been the reigning king of MMA’s heavyweight division for quite some time now so being able to work with M-1 and Fedor will substantially increase the level of competition amongst the athletes in this weight class.”

“With the addition of Fedor and STRIKEFORCE’s new relationship with M-1 Global, SHOWTIME is now the home of the best pound-for-pound male and female fighters in the world,” said Ken Hershman, Senior VP and General Manager of SHOWTIME Sports®. “The Aug. 15 Carano-Cyborg matchup on SHOWTIME will clearly determine the best female mixed martial artist on the planet. Then, come this Fall, our subscribers again will witness history when the universally recognized best male fighter-Fedor Emelianenko-joins the already long list of world-class athletes on the STRIKEFORCE roster, and for the first time ever plies his skills live on SHOWTIME.”

Hershman continued: “We are better positioned now than ever before to deliver on our promise to televise the top fighters in mixed martial arts today.”

“I am very happy and excited about the upcoming collaboration with Strikeforce,” said Vadim Finkelchtein, President of M-1 Global. “We are very pleased that we found a reliable partner and I feel that Strikeforce and M-1 can support each other on many things. This will create big opportunities for both parties to test their fighters against worthy opponents.”

Though his official professional record is 30-1, Emelianenko is considered undefeated. The only blemish on his record is a December 22, 2000 fight that was stopped after 17 seconds and declared a TKO in favor of his opponent, Tsuyoshi Kohsaka, due to a cut Emelianenko sustained in the opening seconds of the matchup in Osaka, Japan.

Amongst those on Emelianenko’s list of impressive conquests are former PRIDE Heavyweight Champions Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, Mark “The Hammer” Coleman, and Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic as well as former UFC Heavyweight Champions Kevin “The Monster” Randleman and Tim Sylvia, whom Emelianenko submitted with a rear naked choke only 36 seconds into their main event showdown at Affliction: “Banned” on July 19, 2008.

Despite his extensive experience, Emelianenko’s debut under the new STRIKEFORCE-M-1 venture will, interestingly enough, mark his first start in a cage. To date, all of his bouts have taken place in a ring.

After co-promoting two events live on SHOWTIME in 2007 and 2008, STRIKEFORCE in March 2009 signed a multi-year agreement to stage live MMA events on the premium cable television network.

About STRIKEFORCE
STRIKEFORCE (www.strikeforce.com <http://www.strikeforce.com/&gt; ) is a world-class mixed martial arts cage fight promotion which, on Friday, March 10, 2006, made history with its “Shamrock vs. Gracie” event, the first sanctioned mixed martial arts fight card in California state history. The star-studded extravaganza, which pitted legendary champion Frank Shamrock against Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt Cesar Gracie at San Jose’s HP Pavilion, played host to a sold-out, record crowd of 18,265. Since 1995, STRIKEFORCE has been the exclusive provider of martial arts programming for ESPN and, after 12 years of success as a leading, world championship kickboxing promotion, the company unveiled its mixed martial arts series with “Shamrock vs. Gracie.” In May 2008, West Coast Productions, the parent company of STRIKEFORCE, partnered with Silicon Valley Sports & Entertainment (SVS&E), an entity created in 2000 to oversee all business operation aspects of the San Jose Sharks and HP Pavilion at San Jose.

About M-1 Global
M-1 Global (www.m-1global.com <http://www.m-1global.com/&gt; ) has been one of the leading Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) organizations in the world for over a decade. M-1 has promoted over 150 shows worldwide since 1995.
Billed as the “World Cup of Mixed Martial Arts,” the M-1 Challenge is a full season of MMA events that showcases some of the best up and coming MMA fighters in the world. Broadcast to over 90 countries around the world, including HDNet in the United States, the M-1 Challenge pits teams of five fighters representing their respective countries against each other for international bragging rights and the title of M-1 Challenge Champions. Fighters who succeed on the M-1 Challenge’s international breeding ground will earn the opportunity to participate in major MMA events presented by M-1 Global and their promotional partners such as STRIKEFORCE.

About Showtime Networks Inc.
Showtime Networks Inc. (SNI), a wholly owned subsidiary of CBS Corporation, owns and operates the premium television networks SHOWTIME®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL® and FLIX®, as well as the multiplex channels SHOWTIME 2™, SHOWTIME® SHOWCASE, SHOWTIME EXTREME®, SHOWTIME BEYOND®, SHOWTIME NEXT®, SHOWTIME WOMEN®, SHOWTIME FAMILY ZONE® and THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ XTRA. SNI also offers SHOWTIME HD®, THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ HD, SHOWTIME ON DEMAND® and THE MOVIE CHANNEL™ ON DEMAND. SNI also manages Smithsonian Networks, a joint venture between SNI and the Smithsonian Institution. All SNI feeds provide enhanced sound using Dolby Digital 5.1. SNI markets and distributes sports and entertainment events for exhibition to subscribers on a pay-per-view basis through SHOWTIME PPV®.

i hope this organization becomes big so the ufc dosnt have a monopoly on the sport

strikeforce may be moving up in the world, but the world is falling apart. :slight_smile:

[QUOTE=GeneChing;951932]Strikeforce signed Fedor. :D[/QUOTE]

thats awesome

now they have my 2 fav fighters le and fedor, both beasts at the 185 and 235 spots.

. . . In Yahoo’s sports links, I see no MMA spot. I mean, there’s UFC, but no . . . anything else.

I’m looking forward to seeing Fedor fight again, hopefully someone of a bit higher caliber than his last two destructions.

Dana,talking major shiiat today,calling strikeFARCE,calling out cung and josh thopson

[QUOTE=Cimaroon;952558]Dana,talking major shiiat today,calling strikeFARCE,calling out cung and josh thopson[/QUOTE]must be something about the McMA mentality or something… :rolleyes:

Dana is threatened

The UFC has been dominant since the beginning of MMA. This is the first significant threat to Dana’s empire. It’ll be interesting, since his reaction to Strikeforce will reveal even more about his character.

Fedor’s match-ups: Who’s on deck?
08:21 PM

It didn’t take long for the reader backlash to start about Fedor Emelianenko’s decision to sign with Strikeforce:

* "Great....the fight everyone has been waiting for. #1 Fedor vs #13 Brett 'I dont know who you are' Rogers. Perhaps a rematch with Arlovski if we're lucky."
* "The MMA fans would have loved to see Fedor fight real competition. Now they get to see him fight has-beens or never-will-bes. ... All his hard work building his reputation has been ruined in the last two weeks"
* "I'm only interested if Fedor fights Brock and only if they both go undefeated between now and then. Otherwise, my ppv money stays in my pocket."
* "The only one who wins here is M-1 Global. Emelianenko will tear through this so called HW division in 3 fights, and fight nothing but cans after that. This is bad for the sport, I don't care what anyone says."

Andrei Arlovski, left, was the last man to fight Fedor Emelianenko. Could Brett Rogers, right, be the next one?

The USA TODAY/SB Nation consensus rankings appear to support the criticism. After Emelianenko at No. 1, five of the next six heavyweights work for the Ultimate Fighting Championship. (The exception happens to be the guy whose steroid testing result led to the current state of affairs).

But don’t sell Strikeforce’s roster short. The second-biggest U.S. promotion lacks anyone with the hype of UFC champion Brock Lesnar, but the top of its heavyweight roster presents formidable options:

  • Brett Rogers. No. 8 in the consensus rankings. Received a huge lift from his 1st-round knockout of Andrei Arlovski earlier in June. His only other name opponent was journeyman James Thompson, but Rogers remains unbeaten and has twice as many fights as Lesnar. Having won all 10 of his bouts via KO or TKO, Rogers has unquestionable power – he can dethrone Emelianenko if he touches his chin.

  • Alistair Overeem. No. 10 in the rankings. Beat Paul Buentello, a former No. 1 contender in UFC, to win the Strikeforce heavyweight championship. Also has a win over dangerous striker Sergei Kharitonov and manhandled Mirko “Crocop” Filipovic in their no-contest for Dream last year. Since bulking up to the 240-pound range, Overeem has shown improved power and strength, without losing the speed he had as a light-heavyweight. His chin deserves some scrutiny; he has been knocked out by Chuck Liddell, Bobby Hoffman and Kharitonov, among others.

  • Fabricio Werdum. No. 14 in the rankings. If not for one uppercut by Junior Dos Santos, Werdum likely would still be in UFC, possibly contending for a title. He’s one of the best grapplers among big men – no less than Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira has said Werdum has superior jiu-jitsu – and has beaten several notable fighters, including Kharitonov, Overeem, Brandon Vera, Tom Erikson, Roman Zentsov. He defeated Gabriel Gonzaga twice. He even has a win over an Emelianenko – Werdum submitted Fedor’s younger brother Aleksander in November 2006.

  • Paul Buentello. No. 24 in the rankings. He once fought for a UFC title and has won 12 of his last 14 fights. He trains with an acclaimed camp in American Kickboxing Academy and most recently beat one of Emelianenko’s team mates, Kiril “Baby Fedor” Sidelnikov, by relying on a thoughtful game plan that neutralized Sidelnikov’s biggest threat on the feet – an overhand right reminiscent of Emelianenko’s own bread-and-butter punch.

UFC President Dana White dismissed Strikeforce’s heavyweights as “nobodies” in a message passed on to multiple news outlets, including USA TODAY. But consider what UFC has to offer for credible competition over the next year or so, other than Lesnar and Frank Mir:

* Randy Couture. A 46-year-old. A very tough, very skilled 46-year-old, to be sure, but each day brings him closer to qualifying for an AARP membership.
* Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. Already lost to Emelianenko twice.
* Cain Velasquez. Has all of six fights.
* Shane Carwin. His 11-0 record is comparable to Rogers' 10-0 resume -- if you remove Rogers' win over a former UFC champion.
* Junior Dos Santos. At 8-1, his record is thinner than Rogers' or Carwin's.

The list could get even shorter in the near term – Couture-Nogueira and Carwin-Velasquez knock at least two men off their perches.

Either way, Emelianenko faces a paucity of exciting, big-name challenges. Little wonder that his choice came down to building his business instead.

[QUOTE=GeneChing;952681]The UFC has been dominant since the beginning of MMA. This is the first significant threat to Dana’s empire. It’ll be interesting, since his reaction to Strikeforce will reveal even more about his character.[/QUOTE]when people with a small amount of mental and emotional maturity feel threatened, they resort to name calling and other childish actions - doesn’t matter what line of work you are into or what you do… just a simple observation. :slight_smile:

[QUOTE=uki;952683]when people with a small amount of mental and emotional maturity feel threatened, they resort to name calling and other childish actions - doesn’t matter what line of work you are into or what you do… just a simple observation. :)[/QUOTE]

completely true.

so dana white is refering to fedor as a nobody? lol

i remember watching an interview with fedor, i guess he grew up in a very poor area of russia. he said that when he goes to fight he looks at every opponent as a man who is trying to force him back into that situation. thats a motivation a lot of fighters just dont have. its past wanting to win, thats the true will to survive.

[QUOTE=Lucas;952692]completely true.[/quote]of course it is…

so dana white is refering to fedor as a nobody? lol
sounds like a few other macho-man hotshots on the boards.

i remember watching an interview with fedor, i guess he grew up in a very poor area of russia. he said that when he goes to fight he looks at every opponent as a man who is trying to force him back into that situation. thats a motivation a lot of fighters just dont have. its past wanting to win, thats the true will to survive.
russians are a force to be reckoned with… vodka gives them special powers. :smiley:

[QUOTE=uki;952709]of course it is…
sounds like a few other macho-man hotshots on the boards.
russians are a force to be reckoned with… vodka gives them special powers. :D[/QUOTE]

lol to true. have you read this book:

Bloodbrothers: The Criminal Underworld of Asia

there is a section that covers organized crime in russia and the HUGE involvment in the actual development of modern russia as a country and the party that the criminal community played. similarly to australia, the eastern sections of russia (ie siberia) was essentially a prison type of settlement to start, yet over time developed into actually living communities with their own systems of control. eventually this spread throught russia all the way to the top.

many russians have had it very very hard. a very hardy people. just dont cross the wrong ones. :wink:

[QUOTE=Lucas;952755]many russians have had it very very hard. a very hardy people. just dont cross the wrong ones.[/QUOTE]i had a friend in berlin who ran from the russian military… he was like 5’2" and was recruited when he was like 20 or something… he told them he was crazy, they said no you’re not, so he grabbed the officers glass and smashed it, cutting himself up pretty bad until they gave him a release waiver for psychosis or some crap… he fled to germany… i asked him why he did it and he said that he wouldn’t make it thru boot camp. :slight_smile:

ouch. that doesnt suprise me for some reason. i can only imagine how hardcore that boot camp would be.

So Dana…

Looks like this Saturday will be a bigger fight than just Carano vs. Cyborg.

UFC schedules broadcast against Strikeforce event
Aug. 11, 2009

LAS VEGAS – The Ultimate Fighting Championship will re-broadcast several bouts from its landmark UFC 100 show on Spike TV on Saturday night.

That just happens to be the same day as a big event for Strikeforce, the promotion that’s emerging as UFC’s most legitimate competitor.

UFC 100, held July 11 in Las Vegas, was among the biggest pay-per-view events in MMA history. Brock Lesnar retained his heavyweight title in the main event.

UFC’s move undoubtedly will draw some MMA fans away from the Strikeforce show on Showtime from San Jose, Calif.

UFC president Dana White publicly criticized Strikeforce for the first time last weekend after the Bay Area-based promotion signed heavyweight Fedor Emelianenko, who rebuffed UFC’s overtures.

I support Strikeforce

#1. I hate monopolies. UFC has dominated for long enough.
#2. Strikeforce is San Jose based, so their local for me.
#3. Strikeforce has always been respectful to Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine.

Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:37 pm EDT
If the UFC wants to hurt Strikeforce, they need to try harder
By Maggie Hendricks

This Saturday, the UFC is airing tons of fights on Spike television. For the small cost of basic cable, you can watch fights from UFC 100, including Mir vs. Lesnar, as well as the entire Top 100 fights countdown. What is the cause of the UFC sharing their closely guarded vault?

Strikeforce, of course. The UFC is counterprogramming against Strikeforce: Carano vs. Cyborg. It’s all part of the UFC’s plan to crush their new enemy, “Strikefarce.” Too bad it isn’t going to work.

Strikeforce is going to attract both casual sports fans, who want to see Gina Carano fight, and MMA fans, who want to see not only Carano vs. Cyborg, but also Mousasi vs. Sobral and Melendez vs. Ishida. We also want to see if Jay Hieron takes out his frustration from being screwed over by Affliction and Nick Diaz on Jesse Taylor’s face.

So that leaves Spike with UFC and Brock Lesnar fans from his days of MMA. Guess what? Those people, the ones loyal to Dana White and the UFC no matter what, wouldn’t turn on Showtime on Saturday night if it were the last station left on Earth.

If the UFC was serious about taking viewers away from Strikeforce, then they should have done what they did last July, when “Affliction: Banned” aired. Put together an Ultimate Fight Night, have some live action to combat live action.

This round of counterprogramming is just silly, and won’t do anything to hurt the strong card that Strikeforce has put together, despite its bad luck.

i agree with gene they need another big company out there
lol same thing happend with elite xc airing its shows on tv the fertittas and white were posting free shows of their ppv