Archive for the ‘Ben Henderson’ Category

WEC 46 tickets at Arco Arena in Sacramento, CA, for ‘Varner vs Henderson’ on Jan. 10 for sale soon

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

WEC 46

Tickets for WEC 46: “Varner vs. Henderson,” which is slated for Arco Arena in Sacramento, Calif., on Jan. 10, 2010, will go on sale to the general public on Saturday, Nov. 7 at 10 a.m. PT.

WEC Newsletter subscribers, naturally, will be able to scoop up tickets prior to them being available for public consumption two days earlier on Thursday, Nov. 5 at 10 a.m. PT.

WEC 46 will feature the return of Jamie “C-4″ Varner, defending his lightweight belt against 155-pound interim champion Benson “Smooth” Henderson in the main event of the evening.

The Arco Arena is a venue with which the promotion is extremely familiar with thanks in larger part to former featherweight champion and local fan favorite, Urijah Faber. “The California Kid,” who is also coming back from a hand injury like Varner, will collide with top-ranked contender Raphael Assuncao in the co-featured fight of the night.

WEC 46 tickets can be purchased through StubHub.com (Note: StubHub often has seats available even if the event is “sold out”). It will also be available to watch on Versus at 9 p.m. ET on fight night.

For more on WEC 46 stay dialed in to MMAmania.com and remember to check out the latest WEC news and rumors right here.

WEC 46: ‘Varner vs Henderson’ announced for Arco Arena on Jan. 10

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

wec46poster

World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) today announced its first show of the New Year, which will feature the return of Jamie Varner, defending his lightweight belt against 155-pound interim champion, Benson “Smooth” Henderson, in the main event of the evening.

WEC 46: “Varner vs. Henderson” is scheduled for the Arco Arena in Sacramento, Calif., on Jan. 10, 2010.

It’s a venue with which the promotion is extremely familiar thanks in larger part to former featherweight champion and local fan favorite, Urijah Faber. “The California Kid,” who is also coming back from a hand injury like Varner, will collide with top-ranked contender, Raphael Assuncao, in the co-featured fight of the night.

The line up thus far is one that WEC General Manager, Reed Harris, is thrilled to promote.

Here’s a snip:

“ARCO Arena is one of our favorite venues to bring fights, the fans in Sacramento are some of the best. The world title bout between Varner and Henderson is a perfect way to start off the New Year. The title fight, plus the return of Urijah, makes this an instant winter classic.”

Henderson (10-1) defeated Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone at WEC 43 via razor-thin unanimous decision to successfully capture the interim gold. “Smooth” avoided countless submission attempts from Cerrone, while inflicting good damage in the early rounds. The victory was a large upset, introducing the relatively unknown Henderson to the fans of the sport.

A product of Arizona’s MMA Lab, Henderson has managed to string together nine straight victories since his only loss, which was to Chad Klingensmith at Ring of Fire 27: “Collision Course” in Dec. 2006. He is perfect (3-0) in the WEC with victories over Shane Roller, Anthony Njokuani and Cerrone.

Varner (16-2) gained the lightweight belt back in 2006 when he defeated “Razor” Rob McCullough via technical knockout. “C-4” has gone on to defend his belt twice with victories over Marcus Hicks and Donald Cerrone.

Varner has been sidelined for some time now because of injuries he sustained during the battle at WEC 38 in earlier this year January against Cerrone. One year later, Varner will finally be able to put his belt on the line again, hoping to defend it for a third time.

Stay tuned to MMAmania.com for breaking news and updates on WEC 46.

WEC 46: ‘Varner vs Henderson’ announced for Arco Arena on Jan. 10

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) today announced its first show of the New Year, which will feature the return of Jamie Varner, defending his lightweight belt against 155-pound interim champion, Benson “Smooth” Henderson, in the main event of the evening.

WEC 46: “Varner vs. Henderson” is scheduled for the Arco Arena in Sacramento, Calif., on Jan. 10, 2010.

It’s a venue with which the promotion is extremely familiar thanks in larger part to former featherweight champion and local fan favorite, Urijah Faber. “The California Kid,” who is also coming back from a hand injury like Varner, will collide with top-ranked contender, Raphael Assuncao, in the co-featured fight of the night.

The line up thus far is one that WEC General Manager, Reed Harris, is thrilled to promote.

Here’s a snip:

“ARCO Arena is one of our favorite venues to bring fights, the fans in Sacramento are some of the best. The world title bout between Varner and Henderson is a perfect way to start off the New Year. The title fight, plus the return of Urijah, makes this an instant winter classic.”

Henderson (10-1) defeated Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone at WEC 43 via razor-thin unanimous decision to successfully capture the interim gold. “Smooth” avoided countless submission attempts from Cerrone, while inflicting good damage in the early rounds. The victory was a large upset, introducing the relatively unknown Henderson to the fans of the sport.

A product of Arizona’s MMA Lab, Henderson has managed to string together nine straight victories since his only loss, which was to Chad Klingensmith at Ring of Fire 27: “Collision Course” in Dec. 2006. He is perfect (3-0) in the WEC with victories over Shane Roller, Anthony Njokuani and Cerrone.

Varner (16-2) gained the lightweight belt back in 2006 when he defeated “Razor” Rob McCullough via technical knockout. “C-4” has gone on to defend his belt twice with victories over Marcus Hicks and Donald Cerrone.

Varner has been sidelined for some time now because of injuries he sustained during the battle at WEC 38 in earlier this year January against Cerrone. One year later, Varner will finally be able to put his belt on the line again, hoping to defend it for a third time.

Stay tuned to MMAmania.com for breaking news and updates on WEC 46.

Submission Impossible: Ben Henderson doesn’t know when to quit (Pic)

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Props: Sherdog.com

And it’s a good thing, as he won what’s widely considered one of the best fight of 2009.

Click here for our complete WEC 43 recap.

Submission Impossible: Ben Henderson doesn’t know when to quit (Pic)

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Props: Sherdog.com

And it’s a good thing, as he won what’s widely considered one of the best fight of 2009.

Click here for our complete WEC 43 recap.

WEC Quick Quote: Ben Henderson ‘definitely’ beat Donald Cerrone

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

cerrone_henderson_choke

“No excuses. I take my hat off to the guy. He did what he had to do. No excuses. It was a great fight and I’m ready to do it again anytime … I think he won the fight. Some people say it might not have gone that way, but he definitely won the fight.”

– Donald Cerrone tips his cap to Ben Henderson, saying “Smooth” did enough in their five-round, back-and-forth battle to earn the unanimous decision from the judges sitting ringside. “Cowboy” admits that he got off to a slow start — despite several tight submission attempts in the early going — which more than likely cost him the interim lightweight title, as well as rematch against his nemesis, 155-pound champion Jamie Varner, in the near future. But it was close. Real close. And there are more than a handful of fans who thought Cerrone should have had his hand raised when all was said and done. Are you one of them … or do you agree with the cowboy? Talk about one helluva fight.

WEC 43 weigh in photos gallery for ‘Cerrone vs Henderson’

Friday, October 9th, 2009

cerrone_henderson

Props: CombatLifestyle.com (Click the link to check out the complete gallery)

WEC 43 headliners Donald ‘Smart Dude’ Cerrone and Ben ‘Action-Packed’ Henderson trade barbs before their Oct. 10 main event fight

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Less than a week from their World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) interim lightweight title fight, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone and Ben Henderson were the featured guests on MMAmania.com’s exclusive presentation of Pro MMA Radio.

The main event goes down this Saturday, October 10 at WEC 43: “Cerrone vs. Henderson,” live from the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas, airing on Versus.

The bout was originally supposed to occur at the Covelli Centre in Youngstown, Ohio on September 2, but was reportedly delayed when Henderson suffered an undisclosed injury. It remains unclear how that injury was enough for the promotion to change locations altogether, despite having four UFC stars committed to attend the Youngstown event.

“Cowboy” Cerrone kicked things off, calling from the “TapouT House” where his ranch just welcomed six new young fighters who will ultimately train at Jackson Submission Fighting.

A five-fight WEC veteran, Cerrone (10-1, 1 NC) had mostly high praise for Henderson (9-1), “Of course there’s going to be people … who aren’t going to know much about (Henderson). But I know him, grew up with him, same town, seen him fight. Dude brings it. He’s high-paced, fucking action-packed the entire time.”

While Henderson has just two quick fights on WEC undercards, “Cowboy” thinks his own experience going five rounds with champion Jamie Varner will be a deciding factor. “I think the main event, huge arena, all the people is going to play an impact on me, man. That’s a huge thing to step into all of a sudden. Go on the undercard, go on the undercard, now all of a sudden you’re main event live TV. That’s a huge step.”

And for people who might not think the fight is main event-worthy, Cerrone expects a good fight. “People are underestimating the dude. I’m not. I know he’s a tough opponent. He’s going to come in, ready to go, five rounds, conditioning is not a problem for him. And he’ll wanna throw down.”

Perhaps one of the reasons the fight hasn’t been marketed appropriately is because Cerrone himself can’t seem to stop talking about an impending rematch with champion Jamie Varner that awaits him, should he beat “Smooth” first.

He admits it’s his motivation for Saturday’s fight. “I don’t even care about the belt, I just want Varner. Doesn’t matter, you know. I don’t care. I just want to shut his little mouth up. He’s not as good as he says he is. He’s not the best fighter in the world running around, running his mouth. You suck, bro.”

Cerrone, who was apparently told by Drew Fickett that Varner was “breakable mentally,” thinks he saw a glimpse of that in January at the end of their WEC 38 technical split decision, which fell in “The Worm’s” favor.

After “Cowboy” landed an illegal knee, Cerrone believes that both fighters recognized he’d be disqualified; only when he wasn’t, Varner broke and saw his chance to escape. “Then when I wasn’t, he was like ‘Oh shit … uh, I can’t see, my leg’s broke, my fuckin’ heart’s in a million pieces.’ So that’s what I think happened.”

When Varner twittered that his hand wasn’t medically cleared to be ready for a rematch, “Cowboy” responded that Varner’s “heart wasn’t ready.”

Perhaps it’s just a way to stay motivated. Cerrone even shared some choice words he had for former WEC welterweight posterboy Carlos Condit, who “Cowboy” helped prepare for his final WEC title defense against Hiromitsu Miura at WEC 35 in August 2008. Condit, who recently joined Team Jackson, had repaid Cerrone by helping Varner prepare for their title bout.

“I was calling him a bitch. That’s it. It was over after that. I was like … ‘Yeah fool, fucking, I go down there and train with you and help you get ready for your title fight, and then when it comes time for me to get a title fight, you go and train with Varner?’ That was it.”

Next up was Ben Henderson, who came up fighting on the same circuit as Cerrone and is now riding an eight-fight win streak. The two-time collegiate All-American wrestler and Taekwondo black belt earned his nickname “Smooth” from his head coach, John Crouch, because a lot of wrestlers who go into jiu-jitsu have difficulty relaxing. Henderson didn’t and is currently a purple belt.

Even Henderson kicked things off talking about everyone’s favorite “Worm,” calling Varner vs. Cerrone a “barnburner” and hoping “to have one of those types of fights” one day. Although Henderson leans toward Varner on the scorecards because of takedowns and damage, he credits Cerrone for pushing the pace and stalking Varner “Terminator-style.”

So what about this “undisclosed” injury that caused the WEC to relocate the event thousands of miles away?

Henderson tried playing it off slyly, “It was a small, little injury. It was an undisclosed injury, and to be honest, my managers, my team didn’t even disclose it to me what the injury was.”

He admits the injury was “nothing serious, it was nothing major.” He rested for a week and then started a new training camp. One week off and he was “good to go.” So why are we rescheduling again?

Then, as if the shell game wasn’t confusing enough, “I’m 100 percent now. I would have been fine in the September 2nd (fight) up in Youngstown. I would have been good to go. I would have had no problems about fighting on September 2nd. But thankfully I was able to fully recover, be 100 percent, not have any lingering doubts, ‘Oh, is this going to hold up, or is that going to hold up. Or will I be 100-percent for this fight?’”

Even host Larry Pepe was confused by it. When Pepe interviewed WEC founder Reed Harris several weeks back, Harris claimed the switch was because Henderson, as well as another undisclosed fighter, both had issues, so they opted to reschedule and move the event.

But after Henderson’s interview, it certainly sounds like the switch had more to do with rumored bad ticket sales or some other (undisclosed) issue than fighter injuries.

For those who think “Cowboy” has already looked past Henderson and onto Varner, “Smooth” gives Cerrone more credit, “I don’t think that a lot of his focus is on Jamie as much. I think he’s a smart dude, he’s very smart, he’s very intelligent. He knows how to pump up a rematch before a rematch is quite there.”

But still, Henderson admits he’s a fan of the sport too, “I can’t wait to watch the rematch. It’s just too bad that when they do rematch it’s going to be a three-round fight, not a five-round fight.”

Henderson also said he’s “definitely” not tapping, fought nearly blind until his recent PRK laser eye surgery, which helps him react faster, and while he doesn’t make predictions about Saturday’s outcome, he says, “The only thing I will say, for the most part, after the fight, my hand will be raised. And I’ve been right about that nine out of the 10 times that I’ve fought.”

Such determination. Nine out of 10 times.

Check out the complete interview as well as the entire Pro MMA Radio archive here.

WEC 43 headliners Donald ‘Smart Dude’ Cerrone and Ben ‘Action-Packed’ Henderson trade barbs before their Oct. 10 main event fight

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Less than a week from their World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) interim lightweight title fight, Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone and Ben Henderson were the featured guests on MMAmania.com’s exclusive presentation of Pro MMA Radio.

The main event goes down this Saturday, October 10 at WEC 43: “Cerrone vs. Henderson,” live from the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas, airing on Versus.

The bout was originally supposed to occur at the Covelli Centre in Youngstown, Ohio on September 2, but was reportedly delayed when Henderson suffered an undisclosed injury. It remains unclear how that injury was enough for the promotion to change locations altogether, despite having four UFC stars committed to attend the Youngstown event.

“Cowboy” Cerrone kicked things off, calling from the “TapouT House” where his ranch just welcomed six new young fighters who will ultimately train at Jackson Submission Fighting.

A five-fight WEC veteran, Cerrone (10-1, 1 NC) had mostly high praise for Henderson (9-1), “Of course there’s going to be people … who aren’t going to know much about (Henderson). But I know him, grew up with him, same town, seen him fight. Dude brings it. He’s high-paced, fucking action-packed the entire time.”

While Henderson has just two quick fights on WEC undercards, “Cowboy” thinks his own experience going five rounds with champion Jamie Varner will be a deciding factor. “I think the main event, huge arena, all the people is going to play an impact on me, man. That’s a huge thing to step into all of a sudden. Go on the undercard, go on the undercard, now all of a sudden you’re main event live TV. That’s a huge step.”

And for people who might not think the fight is main event-worthy, Cerrone expects a good fight. “People are underestimating the dude. I’m not. I know he’s a tough opponent. He’s going to come in, ready to go, five rounds, conditioning is not a problem for him. And he’ll wanna throw down.”

Perhaps one of the reasons the fight hasn’t been marketed appropriately is because Cerrone himself can’t seem to stop talking about an impending rematch with champion Jamie Varner that awaits him, should he beat “Smooth” first.

He admits it’s his motivation for Saturday’s fight. “I don’t even care about the belt, I just want Varner. Doesn’t matter, you know. I don’t care. I just want to shut his little mouth up. He’s not as good as he says he is. He’s not the best fighter in the world running around, running his mouth. You suck, bro.”

Cerrone, who was apparently told by Drew Fickett that Varner was “breakable mentally,” thinks he saw a glimpse of that in January at the end of their WEC 38 technical split decision, which fell in “The Worm’s” favor.

After “Cowboy” landed an illegal knee, Cerrone believes that both fighters recognized he’d be disqualified; only when he wasn’t, Varner broke and saw his chance to escape. “Then when I wasn’t, he was like ‘Oh shit … uh, I can’t see, my leg’s broke, my fuckin’ heart’s in a million pieces.’ So that’s what I think happened.”

When Varner twittered that his hand wasn’t medically cleared to be ready for a rematch, “Cowboy” responded that Varner’s “heart wasn’t ready.”

Perhaps it’s just a way to stay motivated. Cerrone even shared some choice words he had for former WEC welterweight posterboy Carlos Condit, who “Cowboy” helped prepare for his final WEC title defense against Hiromitsu Miura at WEC 35 in August 2008. Condit, who recently joined Team Jackson, had repaid Cerrone by helping Varner prepare for their title bout.

“I was calling him a bitch. That’s it. It was over after that. I was like … ‘Yeah fool, fucking, I go down there and train with you and help you get ready for your title fight, and then when it comes time for me to get a title fight, you go and train with Varner?’ That was it.”

Next up was Ben Henderson, who came up fighting on the same circuit as Cerrone and is now riding an eight-fight win streak. The two-time collegiate All-American wrestler and Taekwondo black belt earned his nickname “Smooth” from his head coach, John Crouch, because a lot of wrestlers who go into jiu-jitsu have difficulty relaxing. Henderson didn’t and is currently a purple belt.

Even Henderson kicked things off talking about everyone’s favorite “Worm,” calling Varner vs. Cerrone a “barnburner” and hoping “to have one of those types of fights” one day. Although Henderson leans toward Varner on the scorecards because of takedowns and damage, he credits Cerrone for pushing the pace and stalking Varner “Terminator-style.”

So what about this “undisclosed” injury that caused the WEC to relocate the event thousands of miles away?

Henderson tried playing it off slyly, “It was a small, little injury. It was an undisclosed injury, and to be honest, my managers, my team didn’t even disclose it to me what the injury was.”

He admits the injury was “nothing serious, it was nothing major.” He rested for a week and then started a new training camp. One week off and he was “good to go.” So why are we rescheduling again?

Then, as if the shell game wasn’t confusing enough, “I’m 100 percent now. I would have been fine in the September 2nd (fight) up in Youngstown. I would have been good to go. I would have had no problems about fighting on September 2nd. But thankfully I was able to fully recover, be 100 percent, not have any lingering doubts, ‘Oh, is this going to hold up, or is that going to hold up. Or will I be 100-percent for this fight?’”

Even host Larry Pepe was confused by it. When Pepe interviewed WEC founder Reed Harris several weeks back, Harris claimed the switch was because Henderson, as well as another undisclosed fighter, both had issues, so they opted to reschedule and move the event.

But after Henderson’s interview, it certainly sounds like the switch had more to do with rumored bad ticket sales or some other (undisclosed) issue than fighter injuries.

For those who think “Cowboy” has already looked past Henderson and onto Varner, “Smooth” gives Cerrone more credit, “I don’t think that a lot of his focus is on Jamie as much. I think he’s a smart dude, he’s very smart, he’s very intelligent. He knows how to pump up a rematch before a rematch is quite there.”

But still, Henderson admits he’s a fan of the sport too, “I can’t wait to watch the rematch. It’s just too bad that when they do rematch it’s going to be a three-round fight, not a five-round fight.”

Henderson also said he’s “definitely” not tapping, fought nearly blind until his recent PRK laser eye surgery, which helps him react faster, and while he doesn’t make predictions about Saturday’s outcome, he says, “The only thing I will say, for the most part, after the fight, my hand will be raised. And I’ve been right about that nine out of the 10 times that I’ve fought.”

Such determination. Nine out of 10 times.

Check out the complete interview as well as the entire Pro MMA Radio archive here.

WEC 43 headliners Donald Cerrone and Ben Henderson featured on tonight’s presentation of Pro MMA Radio

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Less than one week before they meet in the main event of WEC 43 at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas on Oct. 10, lightweight superstars Donald Cerrone and Ben Henderson will appear on MMAmania.com’s exclusive presentation of Pro MMA Radio tonight (Oct. 5) at 9 PM ET.

Hear from both “Cowboy” and “Smooth” as they prepare to take one step closer to determining the number one lightweight contender for current champion Jamie Varner’s 155-pound title.

Hosted by Larry Pepe, Pro MMA Radio is professional, guest-driven program that features some of mixed martial arts biggest names.

If you’re looking for a radio show that revolves around a couple of MMA fans ranting and raving about everything that’s already been covered ad nauseam, then Pro MMA Radio probably isn’t for you.

However, if you want to hear from actual fighters and industry insiders answering questions that are relevant to the current MMA scene, tune in every Monday night at 9 PM ET for our exclusive live feed.

See you tonight!