Archive for the ‘DREAM’ Category

DREAM 12 post fight wrap-up and ‘white cage’ reactions

Monday, October 26th, 2009

The day after the first caged fight card in promotional history, the winners from DREAM 12 gathered at a hotel in Osaka for a post-fight conference.

The public reaction to the newly unveiled cage and the broad implication of caged fight card held by a major Japanese organization will likely become evident in weeks and months to follow.

For the time being, the immediate assessment of the cage — and the event on a whole — by those directly involved has been positive.

On the promotional side, DREAM event producer Keiichi Sasahara is pleased that DREAM 12 delivered a night full of thrilling action and capped off the year on a high note before the annual Dynamite! event on New Year’s Eve. Surrounded by a horde of reporters after the press conference, he jokingly remarked that DREAM might consider having another caged fight card on the NYE.

The fighters also seemed eager to fight again in the white, hexagonal cage if given the opportunity.

Alistair Overeem stated that he loves the color of the cage. Marius Zaromskis also chimed in, commenting that white is a color that brings fortune and a refreshing change from the black cage typically found in North America and UK.

Meanwhile, Eddie Alvarez, a veteran of several caged promotions, elaborated on the finer details of fighting in the new cage: He felt that, compared to the cages used by UFC and other American promotions, DREAM’s cage was more elastic, thus tempering the fear of injury from being pressed against it. Also, the spring in the cage magnifies the advantage of those who know how to utilize it in grappling.

Katsunori Kikuno, who fought in the cage for the first time in his loss to Alvarez, commented in the post-fight interview that he likes the animal ferocity that the cage awakens in the fighters: “The whole vibe is unlike anything you would feel at a sports event — it sharpens my senses and gets my blood boiling.”

WEC veteran, Yoshiro Maeda also preached to the choir by giving his two cents: “The cage was really spacious and I did not feel an ounce of stress while fighting in it. I hope that DREAM uses the cage more often.”

Kazushi Sakuraba, who submitted Zelg Galesic with a knee bar after being battered repeatedly in the face, was rushed to a hospital immediately after the fight in order to seek medical attention. Besides the swelling on the side of the head, the hospital examination turned up no injury to Sakuraba’s brain or skull. His opponent, Galesic, who was bound to a wheel chair after the fight, also suffered no significant injury besides a minor tear on the ligament in his knee.

Sakuraba confessed that the beating Galesic meted out was quite painful and that he even thought about tapping out.

While Sakuraba is usually an obvious choice of marquee name to grace the ring on the New Year’s Eve, his appearance in Dynamite! remains in question, considering that he has fought twice in a span of less than a month at DREAM 11 and DREAM 12. Should he decide to fight on NYE, Sasahara promised a fight with a grand theme. As for the potential opponent for the “Gracie killer” in the mega-fight, he mentioned “The Third-Generation Gracie fighters.”

Rolles Gracie, who has recently signed with UFC; Roger Gracie, who has defeated veterans, Ron Waterman and Yuki Kondo in his first two MMA fights; Ralek Gracie who has fought at DREAM 4.

These are among the new generation of the fabled clan that will now receive the torch borne by the likes of Rickson, Royce, Royler, and Renzo. Sakuraba has made his name in Pride FC as “Gracie killer” and if the younger members of the family step up to avenge the losses suffered by the elders and defend the family honor, the “revenge drama” promises an epic hype.

Maeda, Katsuyori Shibata, Marius Zaromskis, and Alistair Overeem all voiced their eagerness to appear on the NYE event.

From Keiichi Sasahara (DREAM event producer):

“I am relieved that we managed to stage all the fights without any accident. I was honestly nervous since this was our first caged fight card that the cage might break at some point during the night. There is a general impression that cage is not very spectator-friendly, and I indeed felt that while watching the fights. Nonetheless, I believe that we have succeeded in introducing a ‘Japanese cage’ that is different from the cages used elsewhere in the world after incorporating numerous modifications to the cage for spectator-friendliness. Our goal was to incorporate the best of both worlds (ring and cage). I would like to leave the final judgment to the fans.”

For our complete DREAM 12 recap click here.

DREAM 12 post fight wrap-up and ‘white cage’ reactions

Monday, October 26th, 2009

The day after the first caged fight card in promotional history, the winners from DREAM 12 gathered at a hotel in Osaka for a post-fight conference.

The public reaction to the newly unveiled cage and the broad implication of caged fight card held by a major Japanese organization will likely become evident in weeks and months to follow.

For the time being, the immediate assessment of the cage — and the event on a whole — by those directly involved has been positive.

On the promotional side, DREAM event producer Keiichi Sasahara is pleased that DREAM 12 delivered a night full of thrilling action and capped off the year on a high note before the annual Dynamite! event on New Year’s Eve. Surrounded by a horde of reporters after the press conference, he jokingly remarked that DREAM might consider having another caged fight card on the NYE.

The fighters also seemed eager to fight again in the white, hexagonal cage if given the opportunity.

Alistair Overeem stated that he loves the color of the cage. Marius Zaromskis also chimed in, commenting that white is a color that brings fortune and a refreshing change from the black cage typically found in North America and UK.

Meanwhile, Eddie Alvarez, a veteran of several caged promotions, elaborated on the finer details of fighting in the new cage: He felt that, compared to the cages used by UFC and other American promotions, DREAM’s cage was more elastic, thus tempering the fear of injury from being pressed against it. Also, the spring in the cage magnifies the advantage of those who know how to utilize it in grappling.

Katsunori Kikuno, who fought in the cage for the first time in his loss to Alvarez, commented in the post-fight interview that he likes the animal ferocity that the cage awakens in the fighters: “The whole vibe is unlike anything you would feel at a sports event — it sharpens my senses and gets my blood boiling.”

WEC veteran, Yoshiro Maeda also preached to the choir by giving his two cents: “The cage was really spacious and I did not feel an ounce of stress while fighting in it. I hope that DREAM uses the cage more often.”

Kazushi Sakuraba, who submitted Zelg Galesic with a knee bar after being battered repeatedly in the face, was rushed to a hospital immediately after the fight in order to seek medical attention. Besides the swelling on the side of the head, the hospital examination turned up no injury to Sakuraba’s brain or skull. His opponent, Galesic, who was bound to a wheel chair after the fight, also suffered no significant injury besides a minor tear on the ligament in his knee.

Sakuraba confessed that the beating Galesic meted out was quite painful and that he even thought about tapping out.

While Sakuraba is usually an obvious choice of marquee name to grace the ring on the New Year’s Eve, his appearance in Dynamite! remains in question, considering that he has fought twice in a span of less than a month at DREAM 11 and DREAM 12. Should he decide to fight on NYE, Sasahara promised a fight with a grand theme. As for the potential opponent for the “Gracie killer” in the mega-fight, he mentioned “The Third-Generation Gracie fighters.”

Rolles Gracie, who has recently signed with UFC; Roger Gracie, who has defeated veterans, Ron Waterman and Yuki Kondo in his first two MMA fights; Ralek Gracie who has fought at DREAM 4.

These are among the new generation of the fabled clan that will now receive the torch borne by the likes of Rickson, Royce, Royler, and Renzo. Sakuraba has made his name in Pride FC as “Gracie killer” and if the younger members of the family step up to avenge the losses suffered by the elders and defend the family honor, the “revenge drama” promises an epic hype.

Maeda, Katsuyori Shibata, Marius Zaromskis, and Alistair Overeem all voiced their eagerness to appear on the NYE event.

From Keiichi Sasahara (DREAM event producer):

“I am relieved that we managed to stage all the fights without any accident. I was honestly nervous since this was our first caged fight card that the cage might break at some point during the night. There is a general impression that cage is not very spectator-friendly, and I indeed felt that while watching the fights. Nonetheless, I believe that we have succeeded in introducing a ‘Japanese cage’ that is different from the cages used elsewhere in the world after incorporating numerous modifications to the cage for spectator-friendliness. Our goal was to incorporate the best of both worlds (ring and cage). I would like to leave the final judgment to the fans.”

For our complete DREAM 12 recap click here.

Monday morning scrap: UFC 104 and DREAM 12 weekend in review

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Fans of mixed martial arts were once again treated to an action-packed weekend chock full of fights thanks to the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and DREAM putting forth a bevy of top stars in the heat of battle.

UFC 104: “Machida vs. Shogun” went down from the Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif., and lit up the Internet message boards with its controversial decision in the night’s main event.

Were we witnessing the Machida era? Or the Machida error?

In addition to the light heavyweight brouhaha, rising heavyweight talent Cain Velasquez silenced his critics by obliterating former IFL stud Ben Rothwell despite poor timing — not poor decision making from referee Steve Mazagatti.

On the heels of Zuffa’s latest pay-per-view, HDNet broadcast the DREAM 12 event from the Osaka-Jo Hall in Osaka, Japan, just a few hours later. While much of the talk surrounded “Demolition Can” and his slap-chop inspired guillotine over James Thompson, international superstars Eddie Alvarez and Kazushi Sakuraba were also in action.

In cased you missed any or all of it — or just want to keep the discussion alive — below are links to all the major storylines coming out of both events.

Let’s get to it.

UFC 104: “Machida vs. Shogun”

Live results and play-by-play

Main card recap and post-fight thoughts

Post fight press conference

Bonuses and awards

FightMetric stats analyzing main event

Cain Velasquez wants winner of Lesnar vs. Carwin

DREAM 12

Paulo Filho forced to withdraw

Recap and post-fight thoughts

Alistair Overeem calls out Fedor

Video gallery and fight highlights

Remember that UFC 105 is just around the corer — along with FieLDS Dynamite!! on New Year’s Eve for the Japanese scene. Keep it locked in right here at MMAmania.com for all the coverage you can handle.

DREAM 12 highlights and video gallery for Oct. 25 event

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

Alistair Overeem vs. James Thompson

Check out more from Eddie Alvarez, Kazushi Sakuraba and Yoshiro Maeda after the jump.

Eddie Alvarez vs. Katsunori Kikuno

Marius Zaromskis vs. Myeon Ho Bae

Kazushi Sakuraba vs. Zelg Galesic

Yoshiro Maeda vs. Chase Beebe

DREAM 12 results and discussion thread for Oct. 25 event

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

dream12-official

The “Cage of the Rising Sun” is now officially in the books. DREAM unveiled its white, hexagonal cage for the inaugural caged fight card in promotional history.

The implication of the event on the future of the promotion and Japanese MMA will unfold in the coming days, weeks, and months: For the time being, DREAM 12 delivered a fist full of action in Osaka-jo hall.

DEEP veteran, Tomoya Miyashita and fast-rising ZST prospect, Keisuke Fujiwara experienced a milestone moment as they became the first two fighters to step into the brand new cage.

Miyashita and Fujiwara kicked off the night with a fast-paced grappling action. In the first and second rounds, Miyashita scored the takedown and kept his foe on the ground, switching periodically to side control and half guard. Fujiwara kept Miyashita in check with upkicks when Miyashita postured up and defended well from submission attempts. In between positional transitions, Miyashita flattened Fujiwara with knee kick on the ground.

The third round proceeded in a similar fashion until Fujiwara locked in a tight triangle choke with two minutes left – he seemingly turned the table the most emphatic finishing attempt in the fight. Much to his dismay, he ultimately fell short as Miyashita survived and took a unanimous decision victory.

In the second fight of the night, UFC veteran and Cage Force lightweight champion, Kuniyoshi Hironaka, squared off with the Korean prospect, Won Sik park.

Hironaka had his takedown attempt stuffed while he and Park tested the water on the feet throughout the first round. Park started to find his rhythm toward the end of the round, countering Hironaka’s leg kicks with quick jabs. He landed a stiff counter with right hand and a punishing knee to the body as Hironaka back pedaled to the cage.

The round ended with Park’s taking rein of the stand-up exchange. Then, in a puzzling turn of event, Park’s corner threw in a towel, forcing the bout to end with an anticlimactic TKO victory for Hironaka. It appeared that Park sustained an eye injury that has rendered him unable to continue.

Yoshiro Maeda emerged triumphantly in a “survival match” between two fighters in desperate need for an emphatic victory.

Maeda opened the first round with stinging punch-kick combos. He used the nimble movement he has honed from his days as a ping pong whiz in secondary school to piece together multiple-punch combos followed by a kick. Beebe failed to capitalize on his lone takedown as Maeda got back to the feet with the aid of the cage. Maeda then returned fire with a takedown of his own – he pushed Beebe toward the cage and postured up to rain down hard punches. Then, in one swift transition, he took Beebe’s back and sank in a tight rear naked choke.

The jubilant Maeda expressed his gratitude to the hometown crowd and appealed for his slot in the New Year’s Eve Dynamite! Show.

On the other hand, former WEC bantamweight champion, Beebe, continues to be plagued by the recent spell of losses and mishaps: He has lost his fifth straight bout, including his controversial split decision loss to Mike Easton at UWC that was recently overturned to No Contest.

To the delight of the citizens of the Dong-bar nation, Korean judoka Dong Sik Yoon snapped his three-fight losing streak by edging out Team Quest prospect, Tarec Saffiedine. Saffiedine, a last-minute replacement for Paulo Filho whose whereabouts remains unknown, controlled the first round with crisp strikes on the feet. After repeatedly stuffing Yoon’s takedown and holding his own in the clinch, he maintained his momentum to begin the second round.

Finally securing a single-leg takedown, Yoon initially struggled to advance the action from the half-guard. After a scramble, Yoon took the back and worked for a twister. In the most thrilling portion of the fight, Yoon threatened to cork Saffiedine’s neck off with neck crank and rear naked choke attempts and ended the second round with a barrage of punches from the back mount.

After a lackluster third round, Yoon walked away with a split decision victory.

In the showdown between two pro wrestlers, Katsuyori Shibata faced his pro wrestling idol, Tokimitsu Ishizawa.

In an action-packed round, both fighters kept busy with a spirited albeit ungainly punching exchange. Shibata landed a left hook flush on Ishizawa’s chin with thirty seconds left and followed up with a flurry of pound to finish off his opponent.

Japanese MMA demigod, Kazushi Sakuraba returned for the second time this month and earned another quick submission victory — this time against Croatian striker, Zelg Galesic.

After circling around briefly to kick off the first round, Sakuraba changed level to grab Galesic’s ankle for a takedown and immediately transitioned into a heel hook and then Achilles lock. Galesic showed a flash of his grappling prowess to wriggled free and reverse position. Sakuraba persists and works for toe hold but Galesic pounds away from the back. Galesic remained relentless with the punches; with his face badly swollen, Sakuraba snuck a knee bar. Galesic grimaced in pain and tapped out, sending the crowd at Osaka-jo hall into elation over Sakuraba’s victory.

DREAM Welterweight champion, Marius Zaromskis again demonstrated the dynamic striking prowess that took him to the apex in the DREAM welterweight grand prix.

In a non-title bout against Myeon Ho Bae, he kicked off the round with a hyper-acrobatic jump kick. After absorbing a left hand counter from Bae, he backed away and several seconds later, unleashed a lightening quick left head kick to shut off Bae’s light — another stunning high kick KO and déjà vu from his recent past.

DREAM lightweight grand prix semifinalist and Bellator FC champion, Eddie Alvarez showed his trademark grit and unveiled another glimpse of his continuous evolution into a formidable fighter.

In the semi-final event of the night, Alvarez found himself in trouble early as a botched takedown attempt trapped him in Kikuno’s standing crucifix. Seemingly wilted from escaping the submission, Alvarez looked more sluggish than usual throughout the first round, as he landed several swinging hooks but absorbed his opponent’s hard body kicks. In the second round, the back-and-forth action continued with both fighters connecting in a striking exchange. As the action started to slow, Alvarez passed Kikuno’s guard on the ground and locked in an arm-triangle choke, forcing Kikuno to tap.

With the victory, Alvarez improved to 19-2, continued to cement his status as a top flight lightweight, and notched the fourth consecutive submission victory.

In the final event of the night, Overeem continued his winning streak amidst his trek outside Strikeforce. His opponent, James Thompson suffered his fifth straight defeat and continued his devolution into a curious relic from the Pride FC era.

Thompson kicked off the round with his trademark “gong rush.” Not falling into his same old trick, Overeem moved out of the way, and seconds later, launched a flying knee kick that almost vaulted him over the cage wall. After several clumsy attempts at landing punches and takedowns, Thompson got trapped in Overeem’s standing guillotine choke: A quick and unsurprising victory for the Strikeforce Heavyweight champion came at 0:32 of round one.

DREAM 12 weigh in video and quick results

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Fighting and Entertainment Group (FEG) held the official weigh-in event earlier today for DREAM 12, which takes place on October 25 from the Osaka-Jo Hall in Osaka, Japan.

The stacked mixed martial arts event will air LIVE in North America on Oct. 25 at 2:00 AM ET courtesy of HDNet. For all the sleepyheads and chislers who won’t shell out the few extra clams for a DVR, the event will be replayed at 10:30 p.m. ET on Friday, Oct. 30.

DREAM 12 will mark the first time ever that a major Japanese MMA event will take place inside a cage and features international MMA stars Alistair Overeem, Eddie Alvarez and Kazushi Sakuraba in action, among others.

Here are the complete DREAM 12 weigh in results:

Heavyweight:
James Thompson (126kg / 277.8 lbs) vs. Alistair Overeem (115kg / 253.5 lbs)

Middleweight (84kg):
Zelg Galesic (85kg / 187.4 lbs) vs. Kazushi Sakuraba (84kg / 185.2 lbs)
Tokimitsu Ishizawa (84kg / 185.2 lbs) vs. Katsuyori Shibata (83.3kg / 183.6 lbs)
Tarec Saffiedine (83kg / 183 lbs) vs. Dong-Sik Yoon (84kg / 185.2 lbs)

Welterweight (76kg):
Myeon Ho Bae (75.8kg / 167.1 lbs) vs. Marius Zaromskis (76kg / 167.6 lbs)

Lightweight (70kg):
Katsunori Kikuno (70kg / 154.3 lbs) vs. Eddie Alvarez (69.8kg / 153.9 lbs)
Won Sik “Parky” Park (70kg / 154 lbs) vs. Kuniyoshi Hironaka (70kg / 154.3 lbs)

Featherweight (63kg):
Chase Beebe (63kg / 138.9 lbs) vs. Yoshiro Maeda (62.8kg / 138.5 lbs)
Tomoya Miyashita (63kg / 138.9 lbs) vs. Keisuke Fujiwara (62.8 / 138.5 lbs)

Check out videos of the entire weigh in festivities after the jump:

DREAM 12 weigh in video and quick results

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Fighting and Entertainment Group (FEG) held the official weigh-in event earlier today for DREAM 12, which takes place on October 25 from the Osaka-Jo Hall in Osaka, Japan.

The stacked mixed martial arts event will air LIVE in North America on Oct. 25 at 2:00 AM ET courtesy of HDNet. For all the sleepyheads and chislers who won’t shell out the few extra clams for a DVR, the event will be replayed at 10:30 p.m. ET on Friday, Oct. 30.

DREAM 12 will mark the first time ever that a major Japanese MMA event will take place inside a cage and features international MMA stars Alistair Overeem, Eddie Alvarez and Kazushi Sakuraba in action, among others.

Here are the complete DREAM 12 weigh in results:

Heavyweight:
James Thompson (126kg / 277.8 lbs) vs. Alistair Overeem (115kg / 253.5 lbs)

Middleweight (84kg):
Zelg Galesic (85kg / 187.4 lbs) vs. Kazushi Sakuraba (84kg / 185.2 lbs)
Tokimitsu Ishizawa (84kg / 185.2 lbs) vs. Katsuyori Shibata (83.3kg / 183.6 lbs)
Tarec Saffiedine (83kg / 183 lbs) vs. Dong-Sik Yoon (84kg / 185.2 lbs)

Welterweight (76kg):
Myeon Ho Bae (75.8kg / 167.1 lbs) vs. Marius Zaromskis (76kg / 167.6 lbs)

Lightweight (70kg):
Katsunori Kikuno (70kg / 154.3 lbs) vs. Eddie Alvarez (69.8kg / 153.9 lbs)
Won Sik “Parky” Park (70kg / 154 lbs) vs. Kuniyoshi Hironaka (70kg / 154.3 lbs)

Featherweight (63kg):
Chase Beebe (63kg / 138.9 lbs) vs. Yoshiro Maeda (62.8kg / 138.5 lbs)
Tomoya Miyashita (63kg / 138.9 lbs) vs. Keisuke Fujiwara (62.8 / 138.5 lbs)

Check out videos of the entire weigh in festivities after the jump:

Momma Filho: Visa issues force son Paulo to withdraw from DREAM 12

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

PRIDE veteran and former WEC Middleweight Champion, Paulo Filho, was unable to travel to Japan for his scheduled fight against Dong Sik Yoon at DREAM 12 from the Osaka-jo Hall on Oct. 25, according to Tatame.com.

The report cites a statement from Filho’s mother, who blames Visa issues as the culprit behind her son’s absence from Japan’s inaugural cage fighting event.

This is not the first time controversy has surrounded the talented Brazilian. He experienced bouts with depression and an addiction to prescription drugs that led to his disastrous loss to Chael Sonnen in the WEC last year.

With the ordeal behind him, Filho rattled off two consecutive wins over Melvin Manhoef at DREAM 10 and Alex Schoenaur at Bitetti Combat in his home country of Brazil.

No word yet as to how this latest setback will affect his future bookings.

Polish MMA website MMA Rocks is reporting that Team Quest fighter Tarec Saffiedine will step up on short notice to replace him. “The Sponge” also answered a last-minute call to compete at DREAM 10, outpointing Seichi Ikemoto for the unanimous decision victory.

Yoon, currently on a three-fight losing streak, last suffered an anticlimactic TKO loss due to injury to TUF 8 alum, Jesse Taylor, also at DREAM 10.

He injured his foot after “JT Money” shot for a takedown early in the first round. Prior to DREAM 10, he has dropped bouts to Andrews Nakahara and Gegard Mousasi.

For more on the upcoming DREAM 12 event click here.

DREAM 12 preview for Oct. 25 ‘caged’ event at Osaka-jo Hall

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

dream12-official

UFC 104: “Machida vs. Shogun” is not the only major mixed martial arts show set to go off this weekend — DREAM 12 is scheduled to take place at Osaka-jo Hall in Osaka, Japan, on Sunday, Oct. 25.

It will mark the first time ever that a major Japanese MMA event will take place inside a cage. DREAM 12, which will feature a trio of champions, is set to air exclusively throughout North America on HDNet, beginning at 2 a.m. ET on fight night.

Strikeforce Heavyweight Champion Allistair Overeem, Bellator Fighting Championship Lightweight Champion Eddie Alvarez and DREAM Welterweight Champion Marius Zaromskis are all slated to compete at DREAM 12. In addition, the legendary Kazushi Sakuraba is booked to take on Zelg Galesic, former WEC Bantamweight Champion Chase Beebe will battle Yoshiro Maeda, and former WEC Middleweight Champion Paulo Filho is set face Yoon Dong-Sik.

It’s going to be a fun early morning of fights to say the least. And to get you pumped for the festivities we put together a quick DREAM 12 preview of the top fights on the card.

Let’s get cracking:

Kazushi Sakuraba vs. Zelg Galesic

The Japanese MMA icon, Kazushi Sakuraba, returns to the ring for the second time in a month to replace Melvin Manhoef against Zelg “Benkei” Galesic. At DREAM 11, Sakuraba came back from a 10-month hiatus to breeze through the former professional boxer and MMA debutant, Rubin Williams. Galesic also makes his return to the ring after a long layoff. He last fought in DREAM 6 in September of last year in a losing effort against Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza in the semifinal round of the promotion’s middleweight tournament.

Like fellow Croatians Mirko Cro Cop and Branko Cikatic, Galesic is known for his striking. An ITF Taekwondo fourth degree black belt, he captured the middleweight title in now defunct Cage Rage promotion before fighting in K-1 Hero’s, PRIDE and then DREAM. Besides striking, Galesic has also shown a flash of submission prowess against Curtis Stout and Taiei Kin; however, his submission defense remains a question mark, as he has proven vulnerable against accomplished grapplers such as Jacare, Dong Sik Yoon and Makoto Takimoto. This does not bode well against the “IQ Wrestler,” Sakuraba, who is known for his submission artistry and valiant effort against hard-hitters who outweighed him by 20 pounds or more. For Sakuraba, Galesic should be a good measuring stick of how much fight he has left, given his age and wear-and-tear.

Yoshiro Maeda vs. Chase Beebe

The two WEC veterans square off to vie for a compelling victory. Blame it on Miguel Torres, but both fighters seek to snap their recent streak of losses and uninspired performances that started with their losses to the former WEC bantamweight champion.

Both fighters fought in the DREAM Featherweight Grand Prix. While Maeda defeated American Top Team prospect, Micah Miller, before falling to the eventual finalist, Hiroyuki Takaya, in the quarterfinal, Beebe suffered a deflating technical knockout loss to former Greco Roman world champion, Joe Warren, in the preliminary round. Beebe fought earlier this month against Mike Easton for UWC bantamweight title, losing a controversial split decision that was later overturned to “no contest.” Prior to the bout, he was on a three-fight losing streak.

This potential fight-of-the-night candidate pits two scrappy fighters against one another. Maeda has demonstrated his striking prowess against opponents with a variety of stylistic stripes: He excels at piecing together crisp, punch-kick combinations. For all his aggression, however, his defensive liabilities have been his downfall in his seven career losses, all of which have come by technical knockout or submission. Before stumbling into current slump, Beebe kicked off his career in a high gear, running through his opposition with aggressive wrestling, complemented by his go-to finishing moves of rear naked and guillotine chokes.

Eddie Alvarez vs. Katsunori Kikuno

Eddie Alvarez returns to DREAM after his successful run in the first season of the Bellator Fighting Championship. He had a breakthrough run in DREAM Lightweight GP, dispatching Andre Amade, Joachim Hansen, and Tatsuya Kawajiri. In his last DREAM appearance on last NYE, he fell to Shinya Aoki via heel hook. He now brings his brand of explosive boxing-wrestling combo against the Tsuyoshi Kohsaka protégé, Katsunori Kikuno.

Kikuno, who has cut his teeth in Japanese promotion, DEEP, where he captured the lightweight title, made a successful DREAM debut against Andre Amade at DREAM 10. A dedicated practitioner of Kyokushin Karate, he has turned heads with his crescent kick, which is rarely utilized in MMA. Against Alvarez, he looks to utilize his footwork and kicks to keep his opponent at bay and exploit the smallest of openings to land a finishing blow.

Marius Zaromskis vs. Myeon Ho Bae

The DREAM welterweight champion, Marius Zaromskis, returns to action for a non-title bout after his surprising breakthrough in the welterweight tournament. A Cage Rage veteran who trains out of London Shootfighters, Zaromskis entered the grand prix as a virtual unknown and considerable underdog: He sent a shockwave through the MMA world by upsetting tournament favorite, Hayato “Mach” Sakurai, in the semifinal round with a high-kick technical knockout before dispatching Jason High with high-kick yet again to snatch the inaugural DREAM welterweight title.

His opponent, South Korean prospect Myeon Ho Bae, is a veteran of MARS, M-1 and DEEP. He possesses a background in wrestling and has won seven of his last eight fights. Still an unknown quantity, Bae has an opportunity to gain instant recognition by upsetting Zaromskis.

Paulo Filho vs. Dong Sik Yoon

The resurgent Paulo Filho returns to DREAM to take on the slumping Dong Sik Yoon. After his ignominious loss of WEC middleweight title to Chael Sonnen and end of the undefeated run, Filho receded from the scene to recover from his bouts with depression and prescription drug abuse. Seemingly healthy and back in form, he submitted Melvin Manhoef at DREAM 10 and defeated Alex Schoenaur by decision at Bitetti combat in his native Brazil.

Yoon started his MMA career with 0-4 record in PRIDE before evening his win-loss column. Since then, however, he has suffered another losing streak, dropping bouts to Gegard Mousasi, Andrews Nakahara, and Jesse Taylor. In his last fight against Taylor at DREAM 10, he suffered a leg injury in the first round that rendered him unable to continue.

An underrated talent whose losing record does no justice to his actual potential, Yoon is known for his signature “dongbar,” which he used to earn three of his four victories. He will face another stiff challenge in Filho; he may surprise Filho with his submission savvy, but is much more likely to fall prey to Filho’s stifling top control.

Alistair Overeem vs. James Thompson

Alistair Overeem has been keeping himself busy lately, fighting in K-1, Golden Glory’s 10th anniversary event, and now, DREAM. In other words, anywhere outside Strikeforce, or the United States, more specifically. His puzzling refusal to make the first defense of Strikeforce heavyweight title has stoked the suspicion of the use of a banned substance. Aside from the controversy, he has seen success in the ring. He comes off the first-round submission of Tony Sylvester at Ultimate Glory 11: “A Decade of Fights” only a week ago. Last month, he successfully outworked the grizzled K-1 elder statesman, Peter Aerts, in the K-1 World Grand Prix.

James Thompson, on the other hand, has seen his career plummet since the dissolution of PRIDE. He has lost four consecutive fights, with all the losses coming via KO. He incurred one of the losses against Kimbo Slice in an infamous Elite XC bout in which his giant cauliflower ruptured into a bloody mess. Most recently, he was knocked out by “Big” Jim York in Sengoku earlier this year. As a last-minute nominee for Overeem’s opponent, it looks like he may become a fodder for another highlight-reel knockout – effectively pulverizing his chin and allowing Overeem to pad his resume and “heal his right hand” before making his putative return to Strikeforce in 2010.

Kuniyoshi Hironaka vs. Won Sik Park

UFC veteran and newly minted Cage Force lightweight champion, Kuniyoshi Hironaka, returns to DREAM. After an unsuccessful UFC run during which he defeated Forrest Petz but fell to Jon Fitch, Thiago Alves and Jonathan Goulet, he picked up a win/loss pair in DREAM. Since then, he has dropped down from welterweight to lightweight and been on a three-fight winning streak. In his last fight, he fought for the vacant Cage Force lightweight title, previously held by Sengoku lightweight champion, Mizuto Hirota, and earned the first title of his career with a first round technical knockout.

The reinvigorated Hironaka faces South Korean prospect, Won Sik Park, who has been on an eight-fight undefeated streak in DEEP, MARS, and M-1 since losing in his debut. A taekwondo practitioner, long-limbed Park possesses aggressive striking and competent grappling. A winner of numerous grappling competitions in his native Korea, he has only gone the distance twice in his nine-fight career.

This bout looks to be a competitive one, as Park seeks to maintain his momentum against a veteran fighter in Hironaka. Hironaka is known for his submission skills, judo-bred throws and heavy hip, and ground-and-pound. With his move down to the lightweight division, he has also found power in his strikes, as evident in his last two fights — technical knockout victories over Katushiko Nagata and Yoshihiro Koyama.

Katsuyori Shibata vs. Tokimitsu Ishizawa

Katsuyori Shibata recently snapped his losing streak with a unanimous decision victory over Ikuhisa Minowa at DREAM 8. His opponent and fellow pro-wrestler, Tokimitsu Ishizawa, returns to MMA for the first time in nearly three years. A veteran of now defunct K-1 Hero’s and PRIDE, Ishizawa notched the most significant victory of his career in 2000 when he defeated the outlaw of Gracie clan, late Ryan Gracie.

Keisuke Fujiwara vs. Tomoya Miyashita

Fujiwara, a featherweight ZST prospect, makes his leap to the big stage to take on DEEP veteran, Miyashita. Fujiwara has risen through the ZST ranks and made a name for himself as a hard hitter. Miyashita has earned most of his victories by submission: His weapon of choice is guillotine choke, which he boasts as the best among all Japanese fighters. He has won four of his last five fights.

That’s a wrap, Maniacs.

Remember that DREAM 12 will begin early morning Sunday (Oct. 25) at 2 a.m. and air LIVE on HDNet.  An encore presentation is scheduled for Friday, Oct. 30 at 10:30 p.m. ET.

Of course, MMAmania.com will provide the latest DREAM 12 results and provide a detailed recap of all the action as soon as it concludes. In the meantime, feel free to share your DREAM 12-related thoughts and predictions in the comments section below.

Tim Sylvia agrees to FieLDS Dynamite!! debut; eyes fight against Hong Man Choi

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Maniacs, calibrate your freak show radar!

Manager Monte Cox has given the green light for his client, former UFC Heavyweight Champion Tim Sylvia (25-6), to verbally agree to his participation in the FieLDS Dynamite!! event on New Year’s Eve in Japan, according to MMA Fanhouse.

The tentative all-star line-up for the Dynamite!! 2009 MMA/K-1 hybrid fight card includes such notable names as Kid Yamamoto, Kiyoshi Tamura, Kazushi Sakuraba, Shinya Aoki, Tatsuya Kawajiri, Badr Hari, Jerome Lebanner, Alistair Overeem, and Hong Man Choi.

Make note of the last two names, as they are the likely opponents for Sylvia.

Cox gives his two cents on Sylvia’s Japanese debut on the annual FEG-hosted combat sport extravaganza: He thinks that Hong Man Choi is a more judicious choice of an opponent than Alistair Overeem because the “Maine-iac” is currently on the comeback trail.

Since exiting UFC in the wake of his loss to Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira at UFC 81, Sylvia lost two consecutive bouts to the heavyweight king, Fedor Emelianenko and boxer-turned-MMA fighter, Ray Mercer in a total of 45 seconds.

He restored himself to the winning column with a first-round TKO victory over Jason Riley at an Adrenaline MMA event last month. Though he broke his right hand in the bout, the injury reportedly has fully healed.

Alongside the potential Sylvia-Choi showdown of the giants, the not-so-Hulk-like Super Hulk Tournament finalists, Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou and Ikuhisa Minowa, will square off the tournament gold.

In the K-1 department, the main event of the night will be the farewell bout for the two-time K-1 MAX champion, Masato against a yet-to-be-determined opponent. Masato is scheduled to face either the winner of this year’s K-1 MAX tournament or his arch rival, Andy Souwer: The two are not mutually exclusive, as Souwer is one of the four finalists of the K-1 MAX tournament.

For more on FieLDS Dynamite!! click here.