COUNTDOWN TO 100: UFC rises from obscurity to become a smash hit

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COUNTDOWN TO 100: UFC rises from obscurity to become a smash hit


Dana White has told the story many times.

It was one of his first news conferences as president of the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and only three members of the media had gathered in New York to hear White and two fighters, Tito Ortiz and Evan Tanner, hype the organization's forthcoming card in Atlantic City.

Two reporters were Hispanic and one was from a fledgling mixed martial arts Web site.

"The guy from the Web site asked a question and it was answered," White said. "Then one of the other reporters asked Tito a question in Spanish and Tito says, 'I don't speak Spanish.' The two Hispanic reporters got up and left. You talk about humble beginnings."

Things certainly have changed for White and the Las Vegas-based UFC as the premier mixed martial arts organization readies itself for its historic UFC 100 card at Mandalay Bay on Saturday night.

Last Wednesday, more than 100 reporters assembled on a conference call featuring two competitors from the upcoming card.

UFC welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre, who will defend his title against Thiago Alves on Saturday, points to the increased media exposure as a catalyst for the growth of mixed martial arts and, in particular, the UFC.

"They've been following the sport more and more, and I think that's what gives us credibility. Before the sport was not mainstream. It was, for many people, like human cockfighting. It was a barbarian sport," St. Pierre said.

"Now, I think even the media, they've started following the sport, and they talk about us like real athletes, and that's what we are. We train like real professional athletes. That's our full-time job."

That acceptance did not come overnight.

White and his childhood friends, casino executives Lorenzo and Frank Fertitta, acquired the struggling UFC for just $2 million in 2001. Today, Forbes estimates it is worth about $1 billion.

At the time, the organization was such an enigma that it was banned from pay per view by most cable and satellite providers in the United States.

The rules of mixed martial arts just had been adopted, but because of a campaign launched by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., several years earlier, the sport was banned in nearly 40 states.

The first turning point toward the growth of the UFC came just before White and the Fertittas purchased the company.

The New Jersey State Athletic Control Board, along with help from people in the sport and other athletic commissions, including Nevada, established the Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts.

The rules enabled mixed martial arts to be seen as more sport and less "human cockfighting," as McCain had called the sport.

Still, many states banned the sport, and television only slowly allowed the events back on pay per view. Zuffa, the company formed by White and the Fertittas as the owner of the UFC, was hemorrhaging money.

"Lorenzo called me one day and said, 'Dude, I can't continue to burn my family's fortune on this thing. I'm blowing all my kids' money. I need you to get out there and see what you can get for this thing.' At this point, we're anywhere between $30 (million) and $40 million in the hole. I called him back and said I can get you $4 (million) for sure, maybe $6 (million). He says, 'I'll call you tomorrow,'" White said.

"I didn't sleep a wink that night. I told (our lawyer), 'I think it's over.' Lorenzo called me the next morning and said, '(Expletive) it. Let's keep it going.' I was already in overdrive, but I knew that I had to take it up a notch."

Still, White always believed the UFC could be a viable entity in the sports world.

"The only doubts I had were the timing and could we get done what we needed to get done. I knew it was an education process, and I knew we had to get on television."

He took care of both elements with one idea.

The UFC established a reality show on Spike TV called "The Ultimate Fighter." The first season produced several of the current stars of the UFC, but it was one fight in particular that is credited with pushing the organization to the next level.

Forrest Griffin fought Stephan Bonnar for the Season 1 light heavyweight title at Cox Pavilion. The bout was an instant classic. The fighters went back and forth at each other for three full rounds, with Griffin finally being declared the winner by unanimous decision.

That 2005 contest changed everything for the UFC.

The next year, in 2006, the company did an estimated $222 million in pay-per-view sales, by far the biggest year for the company up to that point.

Bonnar, who will fight Mark Coleman on the UFC 100 card, noticed a difference in the sport after the classic bout.

"It changed a lot of things. The thing I really take away from it is my whole life. I loved martial arts and nobody ever really understood where I was coming from. After that fight, it seemed like people accepted it and kind of embraced it, whereas before it was more of a spectacle. A lot of people have told me that fight kind of won them over and made them say this is a legitimate sport."

That doesn't mean the UFC is universally accepted.

New York State Assemblyman Bob Reilly has been an outspoken critic of the sport and, in particular, White. He has led opposition to regulation in his state, and mixed martial arts still is illegal in New York.

The UFC also was met by a great deal of resistance on its recent trip to Cologne, Germany. The city council there threatened to stop a planned event from taking place before eventually settling on a rule requiring all attendees to be at least 18 years of age.

The UFC's vice president for regulatory affairs, Marc Ratner, the former executive director of the Nevada Athletic Commission, thinks resistance will fade when the uninitiated gain more knowledge of the sport.

"It's always about education, still to this moment," Ratner said. "We think we're getting closer to the mainstream. As Dana always says, we haven't even scratched the surface yet. I still hear some of the same 1995 and 1996 arguments. No holds barred. Guys just get beat up and severely maimed. Guys have been killed in the ring. I have to say, 'Wait a minute. What are you talking about? That's not true. You don't know your facts.'"

A large number of people have gotten the message. Tickets to UFC 100 sold out during a presale without ever being available to the general public.

And after just three reporters showed up to that news conference eight years ago, the organization received more than 300 credential requests for Saturday's event.
 

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ULTIMATE FIGHTING CHAMPIONSHIP: Homegrown mixed martial arts league becomes major tou

ULTIMATE FIGHTING CHAMPIONSHIP: Homegrown mixed martial arts league becomes major tou

ULTIMATE FIGHTING CHAMPIONSHIP: Homegrown mixed martial arts league becomes major tourist draw

More than 4 million households order pay-per-view for six UFC events, data show

An evening of men punching each other in the face in an eight-sided fenced ring has become one of the area's top business ventures and tourist drivers, according to a new study by a local firm.

The results were not surprising to Lorenzo Fertitta, chairman and chief executive officer of Zuffa, which owns mixed-martial arts league Ultimate Fighting Championship.

"It's built on the root foundation of the first way human beings competed," said Fertitta, referring to Pankration, one of the events in ancient Olympic games. "So we don't think this is a fad, or that people are going to get sick of watching people compete in martial arts. This is something we think is going to go on forever and grow."

The UFC's growing fan base is also benefiting Las Vegas.

"The UFC is closely associated with Las Vegas by everyone who is involved: patrons, participants, more so than other events," said Jeremy Aguero, a principal of business advisory firm Applied Analysis, which was contracted to produce an economic impact study for the UFC. "The growth of that brand has benefited Las Vegas in the same way Las Vegas has been good for the UFC."

Zuffa requested the economic impact study from Applied Analysis to see how its events stack up against the economic impact of other local events, such as the National Finals Rodeo or NASCAR events.

"I wanted to do some research to see what kind of impact we're having on Las Vegas," Fertitta said. "I was curious how we stacked up against things that seem to get a ton of press and people seem to talk about."

The UFC generated $86.2 million in nongaming revenue for six events between Feb. 2, 2008, and Jan. 31. Only the NASCAR UAW-DaimerChrysler 400, which generated $134.3 million on March 2, 2008, ranked higher.

The UFC events attracted 80,087 people, with 56,435 of them coming to Las Vegas for the event, numbers provided by Zuffa show.

The league's attendance numbers place the UFC behind, in order, National Finals Rodeo, NASCAR, ACDelco NHRA Drag Races, the Aviation Nation Air Show, NHRA SummitRacing.com race, the Professional Bull Riders National Championship and the 10-day Cowboy Christmas Gift Show.

Add in attendance at Zuffa's seven smaller events -- The Ultimate Fighter events, Ultimate Fight Nights and World Extreme Cagefighting -- and the UFC's local economic impact climbs to the No. 2 spot.

"We felt like we were not getting the appropriate amount of credit for what we're bringing to the local economy," said Lawrence Epstein, Zuffa's executive vice president and general counsel.

Applied Analysis used event data tracked by the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority for its study.

Researchers from Applied Analysis also conducted interviews with 400 attendees of UFC 94 on Jan. 31 at MGM Grand and compared the data to visitor statistics from the visitors authority.

Among the study's findings, which Applied Analysis said has a 95 percent confidence level and involved an equal number of male and female UFC event attendees, the company found:

? The UFC 94 was the primary reason 90 percent of the attendees traveled to Las Vegas. Only 5 percent of visitors to Las Vegas come for a special event.

? 71.8 percent of attendees were from the United States and 27.5 percent were from Canada.

? 38 percent of attendees were from Southern Nevada.

? The UFC 94 was the first UFC event for 67.5 percent of the surveyed attendees.

? 73 percent of respondents said it was likely or very likely that they would attend another UFC event.

? 84 percent of the UFC visitors stayed in hotels -- four points lower than other visitors to Las Vegas -- spending $149 per night.

The survey's results come as little surprise to MGM Mirage, which hosts the UFC main event cards at two of the company's arenas.

"(Zuffa) have really done a great job of marketing," said Richard Sturm, president of entertainment and sports for MGM Mirage. "It really becomes an event when they're here."

UFC 94, which drew the largest attendance in the study, for example, attracted 14,948 fans to the MGM Grand Garden arena. The UFC 100, scheduled for July 11 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center, sold out in minutes.

Strum said the UFC events bring a good demographic to the host properties. Translation: UFC attendees fill the restaurants and spend lots of money in the casinos.

The Applied Analysis study confirmed that.

According to the study, 42 percent of UFC 94 visitors have a household income greater than $100,000, compared with 24 percent of the city's overall visitors.

UFC visitors also gamble more than typical Las Vegas visitors, arriving with a gambling budget of $931 compared with $556 for all visitors.

Nongambling expenses for UFC 94 visitors was nearly double those for other visitors, too: $1,528 per person versus $869 per person.

Fertitta said that although the UFC's local economic impact ranks second to NASCAR's, the mixed-martial-arts league's fan base may surpass even the fan base of the one-day auto race, thanks to television.

"Arguably, we are the most significant impact for (TV) impressions brought to Las Vegas," Fertitta said.

UFC events are seen in more than 100 countries and territories in 20 different languages. The league's fan base via television is anchored by the UFC's reality series, "The Ultimate Fighter," which just finished its ninth season with a series of matches at the Palms.

The UFC's pay-per-view audience also brings exposure to Las Vegas and MGM Mirage.

The study shows that just more than 4 million households ordered pay-per-view for the six events in the study. That's a lot of exposure for Las Vegas, based on the study's findings that each pay-per-view purchase has an average of eight viewers. Based on that number, the six events garnered a total of 33.7 million viewers.

"People are watching our events and there are always shots of MGM Grand, shots of Mandalay Bay, shots of Las Vegas," Zuffa's Epstein said. "We're constantly promoting the city. We're just generating the 10th season of 'The Ultimate Fighter' television program, a reality show based here in Las Vegas. And that show is a great poster child for the city, great vanity shots of Las Vegas."

Beyond television, the UFC's reach is extending into dens and playrooms around the world through video game sales.

"UFC Undisputed" for Xbox 360 and Playstation 3 was released in May.

The game also helps promote Las Vegas. The game includes screen shots of the city and lets players choose which venue they want to play in, including the arenas at the MGM Grand and Mandalay Bay.

Zuffa President Dana White said the video game's sales, 1 million copies the first week on the market, compared with the 300,000 the company expected, are just one sign of the league's wide appeal.

"If you look at the growth that we've had, we're only 9 years old," White said. "You look at all the countries we're in, all the television deals we have, to beat boxing in pay-per-view, we outrated 'Monday Night Football' on television."

Nine years is also a record of sorts for Las Vegas and the UFC.

White, who grew up in Las Vegas and attended Bishop Gorman High School with Fertitta, noted that in his lifetime many sports teams have moved to Las Vegas, but just as many disappeared quickly.

"How many years of my life growing up here, all these sports franchises that would pop up, and come and go every other weekend," White said. "(But) we've been here for nine years."

Fertitta and his brother, Station Casinos Chairman and CEO Frank Fertitta III, acquired the fledgling UFC, which was founded in 1993, for $2 million in 2001. Before the recession, the company was valued at more than $1 billion.

After the Fertittas bought the league -- the Fertittas each own 45 percent of Zuffa and White owns 10 percent -- many of the events were moved to Las Vegas.

The UFC wasn't an instant success for the Fertittas.

Its first events, held at the Thomas & Mack arena, were poorly attended. A November 2001 event drew just 4,300 people and gated $502,550.

Zuffa decided to move the events to the MGM Mirage arenas and the league began to take off.

The first event with MGM Mirage, a March 2002 event at MGM Grand, drew 7,663 people for a gate of $898,850. UFC 94 drew nearly 15,000 people with a gate of $4.3 million.

"The first couple of years it wasn't doing as well and we saw a potential in it and liked the event and stuck with it," Sturm said. "And we're glad we did."
 

THE_THONG

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good to see the ufc smoking

back in the day after it got dumped off time warner cable, and rally calls over "human cockfighting", i gave up too

i used to have to wait and get my vhs tapes from blockbuster :mj07:

i remember buying the first ufc stream and trying to watch it on 56k :mj07:
 

Lumi

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good to see the ufc smoking

back in the day after it got dumped off time warner cable, and rally calls over "human cockfighting", i gave up too

i used to have to wait and get my vhs tapes from blockbuster :mj07:

i remember buying the first ufc stream and trying to watch it on 56k :mj07:

WoW ! That must have taken about 8 hours?
 

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Pitbull's power could shock St-Pierre at UFC 100

Pitbull's power could shock St-Pierre at UFC 100

Pitbull's power could shock St-Pierre at UFC 100

Something was triggered in Georges St-Pierre when he was shocked by Matt Serra at UFC 69 over two years ago.

Since that loss, the Canadian karate specialist has been on a focused rampage, ripping through a who's who of the welterweight division. He has now regained his title and has become one of the most reconizable icons in mixed martial arts.

While St-Pierre's current stretch in the UFC is impressive, his recent opponents all have one thing in common - they're safe.

Unlike his opponent for this Saturday's welterweight title fight at UFC 100, St-Pierre (-300) has defeated five fighters who are very talented but don't possess the same power and knockout ability as Thiago Alves (+220).

?Thiago Alves is a big fighter,? says renowned boxing and MMA linesmaker Joey Oddessa. ?He walks around in excess of 220 pounds when not training... I would not feel comfortable laying -300 odds on anyone against Thiago Alves.?

Alves is riding his own impressive streak into UFC 100. The Brazilian Muay Thai and Jiu-Jitsu specialist has an 18-2 career mark and hasn't lost in over three years, winning seven straight bouts ? five by way of knockout.

At 5-foot-9, Alves packs a ton of power into his stocky frame, earning him the fitting nickname ?The Pitbull?. Of his 18 career fights, 10 have ended with Alves' opponent staring up at the lights in a daze. Four of St-Pierre's past five opponents combine for just 13 career knockouts and the one guy with more KO victories than Alves (Matt Hughes with 13) has fought in 43 professional MMA bouts.

The biggest concern for MMA bettors eyeing the upset was Alves' weight issues. He's struggled to cut weight in the past, but reports out of his camp have him ahead of schedule to reach the set 170-pound limit by Friday's weigh-in.

Alves' standup power presents a true threat to St-Pierre's title reign. The champ was knocked out by Serra at UFC 69 (Serra's lone KO victory) and had a tough time against B.J. Penn's striking when those two met at UFC 94 last January.

?You never know what to expect until he gets hit,? says Oddessa. ?St-Pierre has steadily improved and avenged his only two career losses. But Alves might be the biggest and most powerful guy he has ever stepped into the Octagon with.?
 

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UFC 100: Mir finally quits his day job

UFC 100: Mir finally quits his day job

UFC 100: Mir finally quits his day job

MMA star says gig at gentlemen's club kept him 'grounded'


The dream of many young athletes is to get so successful at their chosen sport that they don't have to work a real job when they grow up.

Frank Mir faced the opposite dilemma.

The 30-year-old quit his job at the Spearmint Rhino just last year, despite the fact he had been an accomplished Ultimate Fighting Championship competitor for several years.

He said the number of people who recognized him after his thrilling submission victory over Brock Lesnar forced him to give up his gig at the gentlemen's club.

"The main reason I did it was that I didn't want to get in trouble. Too many people after the Brock fight were like, 'Oh, (expletive), it's Frank Mir," the Bonanza High School graduate said. "I just didn't want to be in an altercation where something would happen and then I'd have a lawsuit on me or someone take a cheap shot at me.

"You know, I'm sitting there in the club and there's 2,000 people around me. If someone wants to be a hero and hit me from behind and then twist the story up. It just wasn't a safe environment for me anymore," he said.

Mir will be only more recognizable after his rematch with Lesnar in a heavyweight title unification bout in the main event of UFC 100 on Saturday night at Mandalay Bay.

Mir said it won't be a problem for him, as he prefers just to stay home with his family anyway.

"I just don't go out as much," he said of dealing with his increasing fame.

Still, there are times he will be recognized in the course of his daily routine with his wife, Jen, and their four children. He said it usually isn't a problem.

"Ninety percent of the time, everyone is cool," Mir said. "It's just difficult sometimes when they want to have a full-blown conversation with you when you just want to pick up a carton of milk at Wal-Mart."

Mir (12-3) took the interim belt from Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira in December. Lesnar had knocked out Randy Couture in November to win the heavyweight title.

Mir said it was difficult to have to walk away from a job he had held for six years. He felt keeping his day job, or night job in this case, helped keep his ego in check as he rose through the ranks of the UFC.

"I always had this fear of becoming something that I'm not. I think you see celebrities nowadays where they could have been a normal guy, but five, 10, 15 years into stardom, because they live in a bubble, they become different people," he said. "In the back of my mind, I think those people don't have connections to the normal world. Everyone always treats them like a superstar. Whereas, when I put a suit on at the Rhino, I'd have to walk around and somebody would be like, 'Hey, dick.' "

Mir has other ways to keep himself humble.

"I kept a normal job, and I felt it kept me grounded," he said. "Now I realize it's my family that keeps me grounded."

Some moments from his past also help in that respect.

While Mir is on an upswing right now, it wasn't long ago that his career was in shambles.

After winning eight of his first nine professional fights and becoming the UFC heavyweight champion with a brutal submission of Tim Sylvia at just 25 years old, Mir saw his life change dramatically.

He was nearly killed in a motorcycle accident in Las Vegas and was told by two doctors that he would never fight again.

Mir returned to the Octagon after more than a year and a half but didn't look like the same fighter.

He lost two of his first three fights after the comeback, culminating in a 1:09 thrashing at the hands of Brandon Vera in November 2006.

He finally looked like the old Frank Mir when he quickly disposed of Antoni Hardonk. Then Mir got back on top by beating Lesnar and Nogueira last year.

The struggles have helped Mir stay focused on remaining at the top of his game.

"A lot of fighters, when they get to the top of the mountain, the reason they can't (stay there) is because they don't have enough humility about themselves. I wish I could say that I got that on my own, but I had to be really humble after the wreck," he said. "My performances kind of sucked. I've kind of just stuck with that humility and said, 'You know what? If I get my ass kicked every day in the gym, that means I'm learning.' "

What he learned from his first matchup with Lesnar might help him even more Saturday night.

"An advantage that I didn't have last time is I didn't know what it would feel like to be in there with him. Now I know what it feels like," Mir said. "Could he be that much stronger? How much stronger could he possibly get? Even world-class athletes, if they add 1 or 2 percent strength level, that's a great achievement. I have a pretty good idea what's going to happen in the fight."
 

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UFC veteran plans to settle score

UFC veteran plans to settle score

UFC veteran plans to settle score

There is the profound way of looking at it: The Ultimate Fighting Championship holds its 100th show Saturday night and perhaps the most symbolic matchup of such a historic moment will not be either of two title bouts, but rather when veteran Dan Henderson stares across at a younger and promising Michael Bisping.

There is also the Henderson way of looking at it:

"He's a douche bag."

OK then.

The profound way: Henderson fought and won the UFC 17 middleweight tournament in 1998. The event was called "Redemption," and that same fighter is now seeking deliverance back to the championship level he once knew. Standing in his way: Part of the future.

Henderson at nearly 39 is a reminder of where UFC once was and how far it has come; Bisping at 30 is evidence of the sport's depth of skill.

It's the ideal mix for such a significant evening.

Oddsmakers just don't think it will be close, is all.

They have approached the middleweight fight as they might the Patriots against the Lions, presenting Henderson at one point this week a 3-1 favorite while siding with a resume filled with opposing names even the most fringe UFC fan could recognize.

The Henderson way: "I've never really been fond of (Bisping). He probably talks more than most opponents I have fought. That doesn't change how I will fight or my desire to beat him up. He's just not anyone I would hang out with.

"He's just a bit of a douche bag, and from what I understand that's pretty much the consensus."

It's a sentiment with some history attached. Henderson and Bisping were coaches for the Ultimate Fighter 9, when the two-time U.S. Olympic wrestler from California led a team of Americans against those from the United Kingdom, directed by Bisping.

You sort of get the idea Bisping annoys Henderson more than anything, like the little brother who won't knock before entering. But instead of a wedgie, Henderson envisions settling the issue in a more violent manner, with fists and takedowns and ultimately a knockout or submission.

You sort of get the idea Bisping isn't all that worried.

"It was pretty civilized on the show," he said. "I tried winding things up a bit but it was nothing personal, just having a laugh like we do in England, just busting his balls and taking a piss as we say.

"But he has since said a few remarks about me in a disrespectful manner. If people are talking smack about you as a journalist, you would take it personally."

(Bisping has obviously never seen a journalist's e-mail account or listened to one's voice mail messages, when on most days, douche bag would be considered a compliment).

The profound way: Henderson is the only mixed martial artist to concurrently hold two titles in two different weight classes in a major MMA promotion, having carved his reputation in PRIDE and now hoping he has enough left to claim a UFC championship.

Bisping is 18-1 and was the Ultimate Fighter 3 champion in 2006, but while wins against Chris Leben and Jason Day and Charles McCarthy might help build a reputation, they certainly won't cement one. Beating a fighter the caliber of Henderson would begin such a process.

The winner on Saturday at Mandalay Bay likely steps in line to next face middleweight champion Anderson Silva, who submitted Henderson at UFC 82 in March of 2008. Those chances don't arise often, not for someone with 40 well in sight.

But his is a body telling Henderson there is mileage remaining, that while all those years as a college and Olympic wrestler might have expedited the aging process, fighting a few times a year in MMA has been far better than five times a day in a wrestling tournament.

The Henderson way: "UFC 17 seems like a long time ago," he said. "When I first got into fighting MMA, I didn't have many goals. I just wanted to make a little money and do my thing and then probably be a wrestling coach or go to chiropractic school. It was like with a stripper, just do it a few years ... But then I started making the money, and here I am.

"I'm ready to go. I'm ready to beat his ass. I think he's an OK guy. He talks a little too much for my liking. I really haven't said that many bad things about him.

"Other than, you know, he's a douche bag."

OK then.
 

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The Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas will host the historic UCF100. The featured bout has former professional and national collegiate wrestler Brock Lesner and Frank Mir battling for the undisputed heavyweight title. This is your classic size and speed against technique and experience matchup. Lesner is a -240 favorite at Bookmaker.com and a victory sets up another rematch, with each posting a win.

Welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre defends his UFC belt against Thiago Alves. St. Pierre is a well-known strategist inside the octagon. St. Pierre is a -310 money line favorite and must be cautious against Alves? quick strike attack. This is as good as it gets in the welterweight division and this should be special.
 

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UFC 100: St. Pierre yearns to be best

UFC 100: St. Pierre yearns to be best

UFC 100: St. Pierre yearns to be best

Welterweight faces next obstacle in quest to reach 'Ultimate' goal

One by one, Georges St. Pierre has knocked off each goal he has set for himself in his mixed martial arts career.

His final achievement might take some time, but St. Pierre can take a step in the right direction tonight by successfully defending his Ultimate Fighting Championship welterweight title against Thiago Alves at UFC 100 at Mandalay Bay.

"Before I started doing MMA, I wanted to be a professional, and everybody told me I couldn't do it, and I did it," St. Pierre said. "Then I wanted to (make it to) the UFC. Everybody told me I couldn't do it, and I did it. I wanted to become UFC world champion. Everybody told me it's impossible. Matt Hughes is going to be there forever. I beat him. I was the champion."

The next goal was his most rewarding on a personal level.

"Then I wanted to make sure I had security -- enough money to take care of me and my family. I wanted to pay off my parents' house. After the Jon Fitch fight (August 2008), I did," he said. "It was the most beautiful day of my life."

There's only one item left on the 28-year-old's checklist.

"My goal is to be known as the best MMA fighter in history. That's what I'm fighting for," St. Pierre said.

It would be difficult to argue his potential to reach that plateau based on his performance in his last five fights.

Since being stunned by Matt Serra in one of the biggest upsets in UFC history, St. Pierre (18-2) has rolled through all of the top contenders in the 170-pound class. He reclaimed the belt against Serra in April 2008 and has successfully defended it twice.

Alves, however, represents a new challenge. At 25, the Brazilian has won seven straight fights. A feared striker, Alves (16-3) also has knocked off one contender after another in his last three fights.

St. Pierre said Alves will be his toughest test to date.

"Look at what he's done to Matt Hughes, Karo Parisyan and (Josh) Koscheck," St. Pierre said. "There's no doubt in my mind he's going to be my toughest challenge, but that's what I want. I want to be known as the greatest, and to be the greatest, you have to fight the best guys."

UFC president Dana White is not ready to anoint St. Pierre the best fighter today, much less ever. But that doesn't mean he can't reach that level.

"I'm always talking about (UFC middleweight champion) Anderson Silva being the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, and there's no doubt about it," White said. "But I think if Georges St. Pierre wins this fight, he's in the running to possibly take over that spot."

White thinks the matchup between the welterweight division's top fighters has not gotten the attention it merits.

"This is a fight that I believe has been not talked enough, a little overshadowed, I don't know what to call it," White said. "If this was a headline fight on any other card, people would be losing their minds over it."

But it is on the UFC 100 card that features the heavyweight title unification bout between Brock Lesnar and Frank Mir.

Lesnar, the champion, will try to avenge his only professional loss, to Mir, the interim champion, more than a year ago.

The two title fights top a deep card.

Dan Henderson and Michael Bisping, the coaches from the last season of "The Ultimate Fighter," will meet, with the winner probably getting the next chance at Silva.

Fitch will take on unbeaten Paulo Thiago in a welterweight bout. Fitch is 16-1 in his last 17 fights, with the loss by decision to St. Pierre in August.

Also, middleweights Alan Belcher and Yoshihiro Akiyama will square off.

A UFC Hall of Famer will be in action, but his fight is not guaranteed to make the broadcast. Mark Coleman, a 44-year-old who returned to the UFC from a 10-year absence and lost to Mauricio "Shogun" Rua in January, will look to get back on track against Stephan Bonnar.

Wrestling specialist Jake O'Brien will meet rising star Jon Jones, highlighting the rest of the undercard.

The first of 11 fights at the Mandalay Bay Events Center will begin at 4:35 p.m., with the five-fight main card airing live on pay per view at 7.
 

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American dream means everything to Brazil's Alves

American dream means everything to Brazil's Alves

American dream means everything to Brazil's Alves

Do you remember the part about a land which should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, about a place with opportunity for all according to ability and accomplishment?

You know, all the stuff you hear before turning the channel or shutting off the radio to calculate your weekly debt and verify you are still employed.

Thiago Alves doesn't think it's all some goofy slogan for a commercial or hokey words in song. He really believes it.

The kid can't get enough of the American dream.

He's a walking, talking, breathing 20th century novel.

"I love this country," Alves said. "The place where dreams come true. The place where if you put your mind to something and work hard, you can get it. You can be anything you want.

"It's not like Brazil."

I am guessing Thiago won't be hired as the next celebrity spokesman for the Rio de Janeiro tourist bureau.

What he could become tonight is something much more: a champion.

On any other card of the Ultimate Fighting Championship, Alves against Georges St. Pierre would stand as a pay-per-view main event on its own. Its hype could carry an entire show. It wouldn't need a running partner.

But in the extreme scale that has become UFC 100 at Mandalay Bay, the welterweight title fight instead will be staged before a matchup of heavyweights Frank Mir and Brock Lesnar.

"If (St. Pierre-Alves) was a headline fight on any other card," UFC president Dana White said, "people would be losing their minds and going crazy."

You won't find Alves arguing about placement.

He has waited years for this moment and stumbled along the way reaching it. He has been at times as disciplined as a 5-year-old left alone with a jar of jellybeans. He likes to party like Kyle Busch likes to race.

Alves was once suspended by the Nevada Athletic Commission for eight months for testing positive for a diuretic, which he said he used to make weight for a fight. Another time, he simply failed to make weight. It's as if he cuts down with a butter knife.

What did he do during those eight months on suspension?

"Partied," he said.

He is as free talking about missteps as he is his desire to beat St. Pierre and win a title at age 25. The only thing standing in his way is the most athletically gifted welterweight champion in UFC history.

Anderson Silva, as middleweight champion, is considered the best UFC fighter on the planet, but St. Pierre resides in the same neighborhood.

"I get to fight one of the best in the world and get my belt at the same time," said Alves, who on Friday made weight for the 170-pound fight. "He has it, but I'm taking it. No disrespect to Georges, but this is my time. There is no doubt in my mind.

"I was born for this moment. I just know it. I'm ready. I can't wait."

He is convinced it will happen because of the young man who arrived from Brazil six years ago, with $70 in his pocket and unable to speak a word of English. He made $220 a week while training with American Top Team in Florida back then and sent half his wages home to family each month. He still does. The envelope is just heavier now.

He is convinced St. Pierre's time as champion is over because he really believes the fantasy exists for those who chase hard enough. Alves dreams big.

An interesting point: He learned English because, in his view, if you're going to embrace and live in a country, it's on you to speak the language. He loves everything American except its soccer because, well, football to Brazilians is as close to a life-and-death experience as walking the streets of Rio after dark.

There hasn't been the trash talking around St. Pierre-Alves as other UFC 100 fights. You haven't seen the level of laughable self-importance as Lesnar arriving to media functions with his own public relations team, led by some guy shooting for a Jon Bon Jovi look who walks around giving the impression of always texting someone important.

It has been more business than anything for the main event before the main event. Thiago Alves is just ready, is all. He has chased this moment for years.

"I got here when I was 19," he said. "I started fighting and got a little money and fame, and it's true I enjoyed myself a lot. But I always knew what I came here for. Leaving and going back was never an option. I have to finish my goal of winning a title or my life has no meaning.

"There is more opportunity here in America. It's just waiting for you to take it."

And if he does by winning tonight, what then?

"Then," Alves said, "I'm really going to party."
 

Lumi

LOKI
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Lesnar wins if Mir tries to box

Lesnar wins if Mir tries to box

Lesnar wins if Mir tries to box

Favored heavyweight will land the big shot, analyst Cofield says


If Frank Mir has proven one thing, it's the bigger man is not always better in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. But now Mir has to prove it a second time.

Brock Lesnar, a 6-foot-3-inch, 275-pound powerhouse, is a minus-220 favorite over the 245-pound Mir in the UFC 100 heavyweight title bout tonight at the Mandalay Bay Events Center.

The main event is a rematch of a fight Mir won by kneebar submission on Feb. 2, 2008. Lesnar called the result a fluke, after he dominated most of the way. Mir latched onto Lesnar's leg and forced him to tap out at the 90-second mark.

Mir returns as the underdog against Lesnar, a former World Wrestling Entertainment star and relative mixed martial arts newcomer, and analyst Steve Cofield said the right fighter is favored.

"It's kind of like the well-rounded MMA guy, fighting for the whole MMA community, against Lesnar, the big meathead who people think only deals on power. It's not accurate," said Cofield, a local ESPN Radio host and an MMA writer for Yahoo! Sports.

"I think Lesnar is going to win. At these odds, Lesnar is still affordable. But it's right on the edge. If it goes to minus-250 or 280, there might be some value on Mir."

Lesnar weighed in at 265 pounds Friday, but he's expected to be at least 275 -- about 30 pounds heavier than Mir -- when the fighters meet in the octagon.

In their first fight, Lesnar rocked Mir and took him down. But Mir, a jiu-jitsu specialist, weathered the storm and almost snapped Lesnar's leg. Lesnar rebounded with a unanimous decision win over Heath Herring and a second-round TKO of Randy Couture.

"It's bullcrap that Lesnar's just raw power," Cofield said. "His ability to get people down is ridiculous. He's fast and powerful. Mir is not a clown. He's not an easy guy to take down.

"I think Mir is going to try to stay on the outside. I think his boxing is better, and he throws all the different combinations of punches. The problem with Mir is they're acting like he's going to be your classic boxer, and he's going to get in and get out and land four- or five-punch combinations, and I don't think it's going to happen.

"His game plan is to do cardio and try to move around, which I guess on the surface seems like a good thing. But if Mir tries to box him, he's going to get caught at some point. Lesnar is going to land punches. And if it's on the ground, I don't think Lesnar is going to get caught again. Lesnar is the pick."

Cofield analyzes three more of tonight's fights:

? Mac Danzig (+150) over Jim Miller -- Danzig is the best value on the card from a 'dog standpoint. It's a totally even fight. Their striking is about the same, but Danzig is a lot stronger on the ground. He's a good submission fighter and a strong guy for the weight. Miller is a little small for the weight, and you've also got to watch his confidence coming into this one because he got destroyed in his last fight by Gray Maynard, who's from Danzig's camp.

? Alan Belcher (+200) over Yoshihiro Akiyama -- Belcher is a great stand-up guy, is really good with kicks and he's getting better on the ground. Akiyama has been fighting in Japan. He's 12-1, but when you look at his record, a lot of his opponents are smaller guys who aren't that accomplished. He fights at 185 but he's probably really a 170-pounder. Belcher used to fight at 205.

? Georges St. Pierre (-280) over Thiago Alves -- I wouldn't bet Georges at minus-280, but I think he's going to win the fight. Georges is going to get him down and do a good job of controlling him. Georges will grind it out in a two- or three-round fight.
 

Lumi

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Finally, it?s fight night for UFC 100

Finally, it?s fight night for UFC 100

Finally, it?s fight night for UFC 100
the betting possibilities

Heavyweight title

Despite Frank Mir?s victory by first-round submission in their first fight, in February 2008, Brock Lesnar was installed as a minus 220 betting favorite (risk $2.20 to net $1) in today?s headliner, with the price on Mir listed at plus 180 (risk $1 to net $1.80). The line that really jumps off the betting board, however, is the price of 2-1 on Lesnar winning in the first round ? by far the shortest odds in the round proposition, according to the Venetian sports book on the Strip. Lesnar did control the tempo in much of the first bout before Mir caught him in a kneebar and forced the tapout. The other odds in the round prop range from 9-2 (Lesnar in Round 2) to 24-1 (Mir in Round 5).

Welterweight title

Although Thiago Alves enters the co-feature on a seven-fight winning streak, early betting action has favored Georges St-Pierre, who has earned a reputation as one of the top all-around fighters in mixed martial arts. The price on St. Pierre opened around minus 300 and has drifted up to the range of minus 320 to minus 330. Oddsmakers and the betting marketplace like St. Pierre to win by five-round decision, a 7-2 choice in the round proposition.

Middleweight clash

Another good match pits leading middleweight contenders Michael

Bisping and Dan Henderson, rival coaches on the ninth season of ?The Ultimate Fighter? reality-competition show. Though Henderson, coming off a split-decision victory against Rich Franklin in January, remains a solid favorite, bettors seem to have spotted some value on the underdog Bisping. After opening as high as minus 270, the odds on Henderson have been adjusted to as low as minus 220 on Henderson in Las Vegas casinos. The takeback on Bisping, who fights out of Great Britain, stands at plus 190.

Shop around

The odds on UFC bouts, particularly those on a deep card such as UFC 100, tend to undergo substantial adjustments as fight time approaches, based on money coming in at the betting windows. There?s no guarantee bettors will find any ?scalping? opportunities on UFC 100 fights ? that is, taking advantage of moves in the line to bet both sides in a fight in order to lock in a profit or set up a no-risk chance at a little score ? but it will likely be possible to bet with little or no ?vigorish? by looking around Las Vegas for the best numbers.

For example, at the same time this week bettors who like Yoshihiro Akiyama could find him as low as minus 240 at the Las Vegas Hilton (as opposed to minus 270 to minus 300 elsewhere), and those who like Alan Belcher in the same fight could find him at plus 230 at the Venetian (as opposed to plus 190 elsewhere).

Quickest win

Perhaps the most creative betting proposition on UFC 100 asks which fighter will record the ?fastest win? of the night. The entire card is included in the prop offered at the Venetian, with odds offered on 15 individual fighters plus the ?field,? or all other fighters not listed. Brock Lesnar is a decided favorite at odds of 3-1, followed by Frank Mir and Jon Jones, each at 6-1. Though Jones? two UFC bouts have each ended in a three-round decision, before he joined the organization he registered five consecutive first-round stoppages in MMA fights last year.



Fight Facts
■Main event: Frank Mir vs. Brock Lesnar
■At stake: UFC heavyweight championship unification
■Time/site: 5 p.m. today; Mandalay Bay Events Center
■Tickets: Sold out at $100 to $1,000
■TV: Pay per view ($44.99); broadcast begins at 7 p.m.
■Featured bout: Thiago Alves vs. Georges St-Pierre, UFC welterweight championship
■Other bouts: Michael Bisping vs. Dan Henderson, middleweights; Jake O?Brien vs. Jon Jones, light heavyweights; Paulo Thiago vs. Jon Fitch, welterweights; Yoshihiro Akiyama vs. Alan Belcher, middleweights; Mark Coleman vs. Stephan Bonnar, light heavyweights; Mac Danzig vs. Jim Miller, lightweights; Tom Lawlor vs. C.B. Dollaway, middleweights; Shannon Gugerty vs. Matt Grice, lightweights; Dong Hyun Kim vs. T.J. Grant, welterweights
 
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