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GAMMA: 2002 and onward


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Alright so I decided to start a new dynasty this is technically my 2nd one. I started a Alpha-1 dynasty a long time ago but I only posted one show because to be honest I just wasnt feeling it at the time. However I feel now is the right time to do another one and actually stick with it. I hope you enjoy it as time goes on.

 

Please note that im currently in the year 2002 in my game and in 1998 I created about 10 or 11 new fighters so I could start my own FW division. Over time some lw's have moved down and some fw's have moved up so expect to see some new names.

 

Here are the current GAMMA rankings

 

HW

1. Raul Hughes

2.Aleksander Ivanov

3. John Rivero

4. Rav Kapur

5. Tim Boyer

6. Jonnie Durand

7. Sylvester Collins

8. Hassan Fezzik

9. Daniel Hornsby

10. Shane Gilchrist

 

LHW

1. Mike Watson

2. Eddie Whelan

3. Petey Mack

4.Souleymane Ya Konan

5. Anthony LeToussier

6. Lenny McFadden

7. Percy Catcher

8. Kunimichi Kikuchi

9. Maarten De Vries

10. Aleksei Chekhov

 

MW

1. Adam White

2. Kendall Tracey

3.Casim Yenkini

4. Uwe Maier

5. Ricky Heath

6. Zvonimir Asanovic

7. Jack Humphreys

8. Kramer Mayweather

9. Tucker Plumm

10. Jorge Hormazabal

 

WW

1. Patrick Thomas

2. Julio Regueiro

3. Buddy Garner

4. Neil Naiper

5. Juro Fukazawa

6. Randy Carsley

7. Paulo Roberto Bezerra

8. Korekiyo Anzai

9. Bixente Fontaine

10. Andrew Rush

 

LW

1. Sinali Shomen

2. Alberto Hernandez

3. Hans Hugo Daimler

4. Brandon Sugar

5. Jason Dalglish

6. Luis Basora

7. Eli Harris

8. Kojuro Ijichi

9. Roger Nights

10. Kafu Bunya

 

FW

1. Kid Kosaki

2. Giovani Silva

3. Go Yamamoto

4. Tsyoshi Fujita

5. Luke Hilton

6. Chojiro Goto

7. Scott Perkins

8. Sean Morrison

9. Darin Blood

10. Omar Buhari

 

Pound for Pound

1. Sinali Shomen

2. Raul Hughes

3. Mike Watson

4. Patrick Thomas

5. Adam White

6. Kid Kosaki

7. Kendall Tracey

8. Giovani Silva

9. Casim Yenkini

10. Eddie Whelan

 

 

HW Champion: Raul Hughes ( 2 time champion) defences 3

LHW Champion: Mike Watson (3 time champion) defences 0

MW Champion: Casim Yenkini defences 1

WW Champion: Patrick Thomas defences 3

LW Champion Sinali Shomen defences 2

FW Champion Giovani Silva defences 1

 

I'll post up the first show in a few and starting next event you guys can make predictions. Whoever predicts the most fights right will get to get to put together a couple fights for the event after that.

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GAMMA Fight Night

 

For the first time ever GAMMA travels to Argentina for a stacked night of free tv fights.

 

To kick the show off we got a good veteran vs a up coming prosepct

 

Mal Phe Roby 14-9 vs Fjodor Kanchelskis 3-0

Round 1

The round starts with some tentative striking. Both fighters look to be using their strikes merely to keep the opponent off-balance while they work for an angle for a takedown, rather than actually trying to inflict too much damage. Roby goes for the first takedown, but Kanchelskis has it well-scouted and they merely end up in a clinch. They tussle, ending up all the way back against the ropes. Both fighters try trips, but neither gets anything. Finally, the referee steps in and separates them. Kanchelskis storms back in almost immediately and takes Roby down, into guard. It's hard to say whether that was just a good takedown or whether Roby just had a lapse in concentration. Kanchelskis tries to pass the guard but can't, with Roby employing a rubber guard now. There's a definite stalemate, Roby is defending very well but isn't really offering any attacking threat or really trying to get out of this predicament. Kanchelskis makes a big effort to pass, and manages to get to half guard, but Roby has him tied up pretty well all the same. Time is ticking away, what has been a very tame round looks set to end without much in the way of highlights. It'll have to go to Kanchelskis on points, the takedown is really the only noteworthy thing that has happened. The round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Kanchelskis.

 

Round 2

The round begins with Roby taking the iniative, coming in quickly with a straight right and a leg kick. Kanchelskis replies with a snap jab and a wild left that misses by a long way. Roby goes for the takedown, but Kanchelskis sprawls. Roby tries to power through, but Kanchelskis uses that against him and turns it into a takedown of his own. They're quite close to the ropes, which may help Roby defend this. Kanchelskis is in guard. He throws a couple of half-hearted jabs, then tries to pass, but Roby isn't allowing it. Roby pulls Kanchelskis in tight, locking up both his arms. Kanchelskis pulls free and again tries to pass guard. This has turned into a bit of a stalemate, the referee may be thinking of standing them up if nothing happens soon. Kanchelskis tries a big right hand, which Roby defends well. He has quite a high guard, Kanchelskis has to be wary not to fall into a triangle when leaning in like that. Roby once again drags Kanchelskis down into a clinch, and this time even tries to work a guillotine, but Kanchelskis easily deals with it and hands out two solid right hands to the ribs along the way. We're back to Kanchelskis trying to pass guard. Roby tries to throw a big punch and almost hands an armbar to Kanchelskis, but he realises the danger in time and manages to recover. The referee finally gets them back to their feet due to the lack of progress that has been made. Kanchelskis scores with a jab, then a second. Roby goes for a sweeping kick to the right knee, but it isn't fast enough and gives Kanchelskis enough time to take him down again. Kanchelskis quickly goes to pass guard, looking for side control, but Roby once again defends it. It looks like a frustrating round will end with them on the ground, and almost certainly has to go to Kanchelskis on points due to him being the aggressor and getting two takedowns in. The round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Kanchelskis by 10-9.

 

Round 3

They clinch. Roby gets in a nice knee, but a second attempt sees him swept to the ground. Roby landed hard with Kanchelskis right on top of him, it looks like he got winded. Kanchelskis hits three big punches to the face, and Roby is rocked. Kanchelskis gets an arm, locks in a kimura, and Roby has no alternative but to tap out. The official time of the kimura submission is 0:45 of round 3.

The Winner by submission Fjodor Kanchelskis

 

A very impressive showing by Fjodor over a very solid fighter.

 

 

Liam O'Donnell 10-10 vs Stanley Carpenter 6-4

 

Round 1

Carpenter isn't hanging around, right from the start O'Donnell is forced onto the back foot by four hard shots, although none of them get through the gloves. O'Donnell circles, steps in, then unloads a combination of punches, but Carpenter weaves out of the way and scores with a beauty of a right hand, glancing above the right eye. That was some lovely counter punching from Carpenter, the timing had to be perfect and it was. O'Donnell is looking a bit frustrated, and uncorks a ragged-looking uppercut that missed by several inches. Carpenter really should have taken advantage of that mistake, O'Donnell was wide open for a moment there. Carpenter hits a high kick, catching O'Donnell on the shoulder. Jab from O'Donnell finds the mark, but it didn't have much power behind it as he was leaning backward too much. Carpenter fires off a couple of straight punches in response, but only finds gloves. They clinch, and the fight enters a lull. O'Donnell scores with a knee from the clinch, it landed around the hip area of Carpenter, who responds with a couple of shots to the ribs. The time runs out with them still clinched though. The first round is over. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Carpenter.

 

Round 2

A crisp jab from O'Donnell starts the round, it tagged Carpenter on the cheek. Straight right from Carpenter in response, glancing off the side of the head, albeit without much power. O'Donnell steps in for an attack but is smothered by Carpenter who clinches. O'Donnell has to react quickly to avoid being tossed to the ground, but can't stop being driven into the ropes. Carpenter is virtually man-handling O'Donnell with his wrestling ability. Up against the ropes, Carpenter has the much stronger position. Right hand connects to the side of the body. And another. There isn't a great deal of power on them, but they're forming a big red mark on the body, and O'Donnell can't really do a lot in response; he can't seem to wrestle Carpenter off, and he can't work into a position to unload any strikes either. Carpenter fires off another two punches, then goes for a trip. O'Donnell spins out, almost falls, but manages to squirm out and back off quickly to the center. That was close, and O'Donnell knows it. O'Donnell throws a big right hand, but misses and is wide open, allowing Carpenter to take him down with ease. O'Donnell scrambles, Carpenter tries to stay with him , and a battle for ground supremacy happens. O'Donnell manages to sweep Carpenter, and the frenetic grappling ends with O'Donnell in Carpenter's guard. O'Donnell stands slightly, and throws a couple of downward punches, testing Carpenter's guard. He wants to try and move out of this into half guard, but Carpenter is keeping him at bay. O'Donnell pushes a leg aside, narrowly avoiding an up-kick, and manages to secure side control. Well worked. O'Donnell gets himself into a good position, a crucifix, pinning both of Carpenter's arms down. O'Donnell rears back...and plants a monster of an elbow right onto the chin! Carpenter couldn't do anything about it, and got absolutely creamed! The referee sees him go limp briefly as he loses consciousness, and pulls O'Donnell off, it's going to be a K.O. victory. Official time of the knock out is 3:08 of the second.

Winner by K.O. Liam O'Donnell

 

This is a very nice win for O'Donnell who picks up his first GAMMA win after losing his debut. He has now won 4 out of his last 5 fights.

 

Datuk Ong Ka Ting 11-8 vs Joshua Hope 6-6

Round 1

Exchange of punches to start, nothing really hit though. They go into a clinch, and the pace disappears as both fighters try and get the advantage. Eventually the referee separates them. Jab from Datuk, who then has to react quickly to avoid a right hook that was aimed right at the chin. Datuk puts on a burst of energy and fires off a big sequence of punches, maybe twelve or thirteen in a row, although not many actually connected. Hope covered up well, and gets in a couple of shots of his own before moving out of range again. Hope glances at the referee, not sure why. Low kick from Hope, almost to the groin, although it didn't look intentional. They come together in a clinch again, and it returns to a stalemate. Not a great round by anyone's standard, but that flurry should mean that Datuk will take the round on points. The round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Datuk.

 

Round 2

Touch of gloves starts the round. Datuk comes in quickly, and unloads with a beauty of a combination, two jabs, a hook, a body punch and an uppercut. One of the jabs and the body shot definitely got through, the others were blocked. Hope backs off, only offering a wayward right hand in response. They circle, then Datuk once again comes in with an aggressive rush. They exchange blows in a flurry, with Datuk bobbing and weaving excellently while throwing out crisp jabs. Hope got a leg kick in, but his jabs didn't find their mark. Datuk is relying on his superior striking skills so far, and it is paying dividends, Hope is getting picked apart and is looking increasingly unable to to contend with his opponent's better technique. Datuk throws a low kick, and that is really the first mistake of the round from him, as it is sloppy and allows Hope to move in and grab a clinch. Hope forces Datuk back against the ropes, and is clearly happy to have gained a position where Datuk cannot unload with strikes as effectively. Hope hits a knee, then gets three or four small punches in to the side of the head. Not much power in them though. Datuk sneaks in an elbow, and then attempts to get free, to no avail. Hope goes for a trip, but Datuk pushes free and quickly gets back to the center. Hope keeps his distance for a few moments to recover his composure, then gets ready to fight again. Datuk works an angle, throwing quick jabs all the time, then switches stance and hits a long looping punch that finds gloves. A right hand follows up though, and that does find the mark, causing Hope to throw a wild haymaker in response. Datuk tries to capitalise with a further flurry, and hits a nice left hook, but Hope soon has them back in a clinch. That goes on for a while, until the clock runs down. The round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to Datuk by 10-9.

 

Round 3

Good start from Datuk, taking Hope down almost immediately! Hope scrambles though, and gets back to his feet without taking any damage at all. Datuk will be disappointed with that. Hope comes in and throws two big right hands, but neither connects, and they put him off balance, allowing Datuk to score with a nice right hook to the side of the head, crunching into the top of the ear. Hope felt that one for sure. He stalks Datuk, trying to back him up against the ropes. It doesn't work though, Datuk keeps out of the way. Hope tries a kick, but Datuk catches the foot and uses it for a trip. Datuk gets Hope down for the second time, and this time is right on top of him in guard position. Datuk throws some punches, then tries to pass. Hope doesn't allow it, and tries to grab an armbar in response. Datuk easily stops that, and throws some more punches. That becomes the pattern, as the fight falls into a predictable pattern; punches from Datuk followed by a pass attempt, with Hope blocking the pass and throwing the occasional punch in response. The round ends like that, just as the referee was about to stand them back up. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Datuk.

 

Round 4

Hope starts fast, unleashing a bomb of a right hand, but Datuk avoids it without too much trouble. Hope isn't disheartened though, swinging two more huge punches, with Datuk getting out the way each time, but being forced all over the place. Hope finally backs off a little, breathing hard. That was quite a frantic start. Datuk opts to use that, and comes in to throw some jabs. Hope is backed up against the ropes, covering up. Datuk clinches. They struggle, and the fight enters a lull. Hope hits a knee strike to the hip. Datuk slips one leg behind Hope and uses that as leverage for a big trip. Hope landed hard, with Datuk on top. They're in half guard. It's to Hope's advantage that they're right next to the ropes, that is blocking Datuk from attacking the left hand side of the body. Hope is forced into action to defend a kimura attempt. Datuk tries to step over to mount, but Hope keeps his legs in position and ends up almost rolled into a ball. Datuk fires some stiff punches to the back, then one to the face. He reaches through and tries to secure an armbar, but has to be careful as he is in danger of getting picked off with a counter armbar too. Hope doesn't appear to be trying that though, instead trying to shift his weight so that he can get back up. Datuk isn't allowing it though, and gets a couple more punches in before settling back into half guard. Hope ties him up in a snug clinch. The action halts, and time expires before Datuk can get free. End of round 4. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Datuk.

 

Round 5

The round starts slowly, with both fighters circling, tentatively throwing out the occasional jab. Hope is the first to make a positive move, stepping in to throw a right hand, although he probably wishes that he hadn't, as Datuk picks him off with a crisp jab to the cheek. Hope throws a wild punch as a counter, but Datuk ducks and backs off out of range. They meet again in the center for an exchange of punches. Hope gets a clubbing blow to the side of the head in, but takes a hard shot to the stomach in return. The early pattern seems to be that Hope is looking for big punches, Datuk is happy to avoid them and use quick counter punches instead. They clinch up, and Hope manages to back Datuk up against the ropes. Hope takes a half step backward and throws a big right hand to the head, but Datuk ducks under at the last second, scores with a pair of punches to the gut, then darts out of trouble before Hope can unload. Hope may need to think about changing tactics, Datuk is looking far sharper in these striking battles, and is beginning to control the pace and tempo of the round. Hope fakes a right hand, then shoots out a low kick, catching Datuk on the thigh. Datuk presses forward for the first time, getting in close and using a couple of jabs to the body. Hope gets a nice left hook in, glancing off the gloves, and then clinches up. Time ticks away and the round ends just a few seconds after the referee separates them. The fifth round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Datuk. The three judges all give the match as 50-45 to Datuk Ong Ka Ting.

Winner by Unanimous decision Datuk Ong Ka Ting

 

Tough defeat for Hope in his return to GAMMA after he was fired 3 years ago. After he lost his first 5 fights he won 6 of next 7 prior to this defeat. A good win for Datuk but it wont do much to change his role as a gatekeeper.

 

Ichisake Miyagi 20-12 vs Will Kane 16-7

Round 1

Miyagi starts the round by throwing some low kicks. Kane checks them, then comes in and clearly wants to trade punches. Miyagi doesn't seem too bothered by that, and they enter into the first exchange of punches of the round. Difficult to say who came out on top, neither of them did a great deal of damage, most of the shots hit the opponent's gloves. Miyagi cleverly head-fakes, allowing him the time and angle that he needed to catch Kane with a beauty of a right hook. Kane stumbles backward, but doesn't go down. Miyagi presses the advantage by following in with a kick, then a right hand. Kane clinches. They remain clinched for a while. Kane scores with a nice knee, it appeared to catch Miyagi in the gut. Miyagi uses a single leg trip and takes the fight to the ground. Miyagi gets to side control upon impact, and immediately goes for an armbar. Kane reacts quickly, but is in real danger. Miyagi has his left arm straightened out, fortunately Kane has managed to roll and get a good position that is stopping Miyagi from getting the leverage needed to apply an armlock. Miyagi tries to step over and fully apply it, but Kane breaks free and gets him to back off with a couple of up-kicks. Miyagi steps back and motions for him to stand up. They go back to circling in the center. Kane hits a nice right hand, but takes one back too. The time runs down; Miyagi will probably get that round on points, he hit the best punch of the round, and got the only takedown, plus was the one who was working toward a submission. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Miyagi.

 

Round 2

Miyagi is forced onto the backfoot almost immediately, having to retreat to avoid a series of sharp jabs. He ends up with his back to the ropes, with Kane advancing. A sharp right misses, and Miyagi takes the opportunity to pull Kane in to a tight clinch against the ropes. Kane tries to break free, but cannot. It looks like we know the strategies for this round already; Kane wants to stand and bang, Miyagi wants to keep things at close quarters. Kane tries for an elbow, but only succeeds in getting turned around so that he is now the one against the ropes. Trip from Miyagi, and we're down to the ground. Miyagi has side control, but Kane has landed with his left hand side against the ropes, so that side of the body is basically safe for now. Miyagi will have to try to work the right-hand side, and starts by ramming a knee into the ribs. Kane tries to squirm into a better position, but Miyagi puts a stop to that with a stiff elbow to the stomach. Miyagi tries to work a kimura on the right arm, but Kane defends it. Kane manages to bring a knee up and catch Miyagi in the side, something of a cheeky move given his position. Miyagi responds with five or six rapid-fire right hands to the face, but Kane covers up and doesn't take any serious damage at all. Time is ticking away though, and so far Miyagi may be easily winning the round, but he is not taking full advantage of this great position. Miyagi tries to float over into a mount, but Kane uses the ropes to push away and manages to unbalance Miyagi enough to get to a kneeling position, then standing, albeit back into a clinch. A knee from Miyagi is the last action of the round. The round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Miyagi by 10-9.

 

Round 3

Miyagi throws a nice series of straight rights from the start, bobbing and weaving to keep Kane from landing anything in return. None of the punches got through though, Kane parried them away. Nice crisp start to the round though. Kane hits a solid left, then a right. Miyagi felt both of them, and backs off a little. Kane charges right in to follow up though, and unleashes a powerful right hook, and Miyagi took it flush on the chin! Kane doesn't even bother following up on that, because Miyagi was out cold from the instant that that hit. Incredible punch. Official time of the knock out is 1:25 of the third round.

Winner by K.O. Will Kane

 

Miyagi looked good for for the first two rounds but Kane's right hand finally got tired of it. Nice win for Kane it puts his name back in there as a contender.

 

Maarten De Vries 21-10 vs Aleksei Chekhov 17-13

Round 1

The two competitors start slowly, circling and looking for an opening. De Vries fakes shooting in for a takedown, but Chekhov didn't buy it for a second. In comes De Vries from an angle to the right, but Chekhov had it covered all the way, and not only easily steps out of the way of the attempted right hand, but manages to score with a solid right hand to the side of the head. De Vries felt that, and is forced to cover up quickly as Chekhov steps in quickly and unloads with a flurry of powerful blows, looking to capitalise on the earlier strike. De Vries is forced back against the ropes, but to his credit, he did a good job defending those strikes and didn't seem to take any significant damage. Chekhov doesn't get in too close, realising that it would likely mean getting caught in a clinch, so he stands slightly back instead and throws some low kicks and looping punches. De Vries responds by throwing out some straight jabs, but neither fighter is really doing any damage to their opponent. Chekhov clearly grows tired of the wait, and moves in to hit a body blow. It connects, but De Vries is quick to tie him up in a clinch. That lasts quite a while, until the referee gets in there and breaks them up, telling them to fight. De Vries with a body shot. Chekhov scores with a stiff jab, and bobs and weaves to avoid all three of the rapid-fire punches that come back from De Vries. Nicely done. De Vries, realising that he is losing this round, comes forward with a sense of urgency, throwing right hands to put Chekhov on the back foot. Chekhov handles it well though, refusing to let De Vries get an angle, and using some nice counter punches to the body to further cement the fact that this round is going to him on points. Time expires with De Vries throwing increasingly desperate punches. End of round 1. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Chekhov.

 

Round 2

De Vries starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Chekhov manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Chekhov uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and De Vries is forced back against the ropes. Chekhov picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. De Vries uses a couple of looping punches to make Chekhov keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Chekhov bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. De Vries scores with a low kick. Other than a few half-hearted jabs, there's been a definite lull over the past minute. Chekhov unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. End of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Chekhov.

 

Round 3

They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Chekhov, providing the first moment of real action. De Vries hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Chekhov side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. De Vries is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. The round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to De Vries by 10-9.

 

Round 4

The fighters touch gloves, then circle. De Vries throws a low kick, but it was without any conviction, it seemed designed more to keep Chekhov from coming inside. De Vries works an angle, then comes in with a one-two combination, Chekhov responds with a crisp uppercut that wasn't far off from connecting. De Vries backs off slightly, maybe a bit relieved not to have taken that one on the chin. Neither fighter appears to be looking for any sort of takedown or grapple, this is all about the striking. Chekhov circles and throws a series of high jabs, but De Vries blocked them with ease, using the gloves. De Vries fakes a high kick, then storms in with a wild looking right hand and a series of body shots. Chekhov covers up and rides out the storm, clinching to stop any further blows. It was a nice attack from De Vries though, best action of the round. They stay clinched for a while, exchanging occasional punches to the ribs, then are separated by the referee. It looks like this round is going to the judges though, as there's only a few seconds remaining. De Vries throws a leg kick that connects, albeit without too much force, and the round is done. The round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 De Vries.

 

Round 5

De Vries seems to be growing in confidence over the past thirty seconds. He has just come up with four good separate straight rights, although I don't think any of them did too much damage. He moves in for another, but takes a wicked kick from Chekhov. De Vries looks wobbly, and his hands drop. Chekhov sees it, and comes in with a solid right hand that drops De Vries to the mat. Chekhov follows up with more punches, and the referee has to get in there and stop it, De Vries was not defending himself properly. I think it's the kick that did the most damage, it seemed to scramble his brains. Chekhov wins via 5th round TKO with the official time being 1:37.

Winner by TKO Aleksei Chekhov

 

Fantastic back and forth battle for 20 minitues but Chekhov's kicks arent considered some of the most feared in MMA for no reason that huge kick set up the finish. With this loss De Vries should fall out of the top ten and Chekhov should rise up the rankings.

MAIN EVENT Zvonimir Asanovic 20-9 vs Kramer Mayweather 9-5

Round 1

They come together, both throwing punches. Mayweather gets a nice clean shot in, and Asanovic stumbles backwards and falls to the floor. Mayweather is on top of him quickly, and unloads with two more big punches, both connect solidly. The referee jumps in and pulls him away before a third is thrown, this match is over by TKO. Replays show the referee may have been slightly early. The official time of the TKO is 0:39 of round 1.

Winner by TKO Kramer Mayweather

 

Mayweather makes quick work of the falling former lhw champ. If Mayweather can put together a couple more big wins he could be in line for a title shot.

 

Fight of the Night Aleksei Chekhov vs Maarten De Vries ( 5 stars)

KO of the Night Will Kane over Ichisake Miyagi

Submission of the Night Fjodor Kanchelskis over Mal Phe Roby

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GAMMA: Silva vs Yamamoto

 

Main Event: Featherweight Championship

Giovani Silva 29-13 vs Go Yamamoto 18-7

 

Silva has enjoyed an incredible late career surge he's putting his 5 fight win streak and title belt up against Yamamoto who beyond his run with ALPHA-1's LW title in 1996 never stood out at LW. However he's 3-0 as a FW and is coming off a big win over former 2 time FW champ Tsyoshi Fujita. The question for this fight is simple. At the age of 38 can Silva continue his incredible run or will the 35 year old Yamamoto finally step up to the next level.

 

Mason Archer 6-0 vs Shane Gilchrist 27-11

 

All of Archer's wins have come by head kick KO's 5 of his 6 wins ended in 2 rounds or less and he showed against Stratos Papaioannou that he can win if he goes deep into a fight as he knocked him out late into the 5th. With all that said Gilchrist is a big step up in competiton he's the ultimate gatekeeper beating him means your ready to step into the elite competition at HW.

 

Buddy Garner 22-4 vs Neil Naiper 16-5-1

 

Both of these men were top five MW's for years Garner won the MW belt twice and Naiper fought for it twice but sadly for him Adam White was the champ and Naiper found himself on the wrong end of a knock out twice. Both men are undefeated at WW and the winner of this one will be the number one contender.

 

Lukas Melberg 17-9 vs Roger Nights 17-4

 

Nights is a former FW champion this is his LW debut. Mellberg is a very good fighter in his own right and if he can put the world class kick boxer Nights on his back he could burn out a decision.

 

Hazzan Fezzik 32-4 vs Murger Boc 12-6

 

Since signing with GAMMA Fezzik is 1-2 with a win over the recently retired Rick Stanley but defeats to former HW champ Rav Kapur and number two ranked Ivanov. Boc is a good fighter but he's been beaten soundly against every top ten fighter he's ever fought and it seems likely that a hungry Fezzik will probably destroy him.

 

Hiro Arai 22-7 vs Mick Curran 9-3

 

This is a very interesting fight Arai is the most recent ALPHA-1 legend to sign with GAMMA he was KO'ed by Tim Boyer in his debut so he'll probably be hungry to get back on track in this one. Curran started his career going 5-0 in GAMMA until he had a falling out with managment and left the promotion two years ago. He went 4-3 outside GAMMA as a LHW but he's back to HW which seems to be better for him. This one is to close to call.

 

Paulo Roberto Bezerra 15-4 vs Nathan Chambers 11-6

 

Bezerra is close to a title shot this win would get him very close to that. Chambers lost his last fight this will be huge in getting back to contention if he wins.

 

Tsyoshi Fujita 22-5 vs Mario de Souza 17-14

 

Fujita is a former champion who could use a win and this fight seems to be prefect for him. It seems very likely that he'll either win by submission or a dominating decision.

 

Lloyd McAllister 9-5 vs Kenneth Simmons 7-2

Callum Henson 11-10 vs Felix Mattherson jr. 4-1

Jack Humphreys 21- 10 vs Paul Duffell 14-10-2

Zaco 16-5 vs Murry Darby12-6

 

Giovani Silva 29-13 vs Go Yamamoto 18-7

Mason Archer 6-0 vs Shane Gilchrist

Buddy Garner 22-4 vs Neil Naiper 16-5-1

Lukas Melberg 17-9 vs Roger Nights 17-4

Hazzan Fezzik 32-4 vs Murger Boc 12-6

Hiro Arai 22-7 vs Mick Curran 9-3

Paulo Roberto Bezerra 15-4 vs Nathan Chambers 11-6

Tsyoshi Fujita 22-5 vs Mario de Souza

Lloyd McAllister 9-5 vs Kenneth Simmons 7-2

Callum Henson 11-10 vs Felix Mattherson jr. 4-1

Jack Humphreys 21- 10 vs Paul Duffell 14-10-2

Zaco 16-5 vs Murry Darby12-6

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You predicted in mine, now I'll return the favor

 

Giovani Silva 29-13 vs Go Yamamoto 18-7

Mason Archer 6-0 vs Shane Gilchrist

Buddy Garner 22-4 vs Neil Naiper 16-5-1

Lukas Melberg 17-9 vs Roger Nights 17-4

Hazzan Fezzik 32-4 vs Murger Boc 12-6

Hiro Arai 22-7 vs Mick Curran 9-3

Paulo Roberto Bezerra 15-4 vs Nathan Chambers 11-6

Tsyoshi Fujita 22-5 vs Mario de Souza

Lloyd McAllister 9-5 vs Kenneth Simmons 7-2

Callum Henson 11-10 vs Felix Mattherson Jr. 4-1

Jack Humphreys 21- 10 vs Paul Duffell 14-10-2

Zaco 16-5 vs Murry Darby12-6

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Giovani Silva 29-13 vs Go Yamamoto 18-7

Mason Archer 6-0 vs Shane Gilchrist

Buddy Garner 22-4 vs Neil Naiper 16-5-1

Lukas Melberg 17-9 vs Roger Nights 17-4

Hazzan Fezzik 32-4 vs Murger Boc 12-6

Hiro Arai 22-7 vs Mick Curran 9-3

Paulo Roberto Bezerra 15-4 vs Nathan Chambers 11-6

Tsyoshi Fujita 22-5 vs Mario de Souza

Lloyd McAllister 9-5 vs Kenneth Simmons 7-2

Callum Henson 11-10 vs Felix Mattherson Jr. 4-1

Jack Humphreys 21- 10 vs Paul Duffell 14-10-2

Zaco 16-5 vs Murry Darby12-6

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GAMMA: SILVA VS YAMAMOTO

 

 

Live From Flordia in front a sold out crowd of 32,000 fans it's GAMMA's first event of 2002!

 

First up we have 4 very good undercard fights

 

 

Zaco 16-5 vs Murray Darby 12-6

 

Round 1

Darby hits some tentative punches, then comes in fast and forces Zaco to back up against the ropes, where they clinch. Darby hits a nice body shot, but takes two short punches to the side of the head in return. Zaco tries a trip, but it doesn't go anywhere. They separate, with Darby having to stay sharp to avoid a scorching right hand from Zaco. Darby drives Zaco up against the ropes and sweeps him for an astonishingly easy takedown. Darby seems to be feeling it, he starts raining down punches! A big shot catches Zaco right in the mouth, followed closely by one above the right eye. This could all be over very soon, Zaco is getting creamed. Darby fires off another big punch, this time grazing the ear...but Zaco suddenly snaps his guard shut, catching an overconfident Darby in a triangle choke! It looks like Zaco lured him into that one. Darby tries to fight it, but he is caught and looks like he is fading fast. Zaco squeezes even harder. Darby taps out! It's over. Official time of the triangle choke submission is 3:50 of the first.

Winner by Submission Zaco

 

Zaco lost his GAMMA debut via a 5th round tko to Lenny McFadden and he got a fright here tonight via Darby's gnp but he pulled off a beautiful triangle to score a win in his 2nd GAMMA fight.

 

 

Jack Humphreys 21-10 vs Paul Duffell 14-10-2

 

Round 1

Humphreys and Duffell circle to start. Duffell throws a couple of looping punches, neither hitting, while Humphreys sits back, waiting for an opportunity to attack. Duffell comes in closer, looking to unload with a right hand; that misses, and it allows Humphreys to slip a nice jab in, catching Duffell just underneath the right eye. Humphreys comes in and scores with a straight left, then bounces a right hand off the body. Duffell misses with a right cross, then backs off. Humphreys stalks him, forcing Duffell back up against the ropes. Humphreys doesn't rush in, instead standing back and throwing the occasional punch. Duffell throws a big left hand in response, but it misses by quite a margin. Humphreys pounces, hitting lefts and rights. Duffell covers up from the first two punches, then clinches up to prevent any more coming in. They're up against the ropes, Humphreys in the dominant position. They remain that way as the time ticks down. Humphreys throws the occasional knee, but can't really do much with his arms tied up like that. The referee finally tells them to break, and they return to the center. That clinch ate up a lot of time though. Duffell comes in hard and fast, bobbing and weaving, and throws a couple of big shots. Humphreys parries them with his gloves and scores with a well-executed counter punch, hitting just above the eye. They come in close again, throwing punches, but wind up clinched again. The time expires with them like that, and that round will definitely go down in Humphreys's favour. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Humphreys.

 

Round 2

Humphreys doesn't waste any time and throws two jabs to the face, but Duffell easily side-steps both and circles to the left. Duffell throws a head fake, then comes in fast from an angle with a looping punch, but misses and takes a glancing shot to the shoulder from a left hand counter. Duffell pushes Humphreys up against the ropes in a clinch. Duffell throws a knee, then a couple of short punches to the side of the head. Humphreys pushes him away and steps in to score with an uppercut. Duffell took it flush on the chin and is rocked! Another right hand drops Duffell against the ropes, and Humphreys follows up by unloading with a barrage of punches. The referee gets in and pulls Humphreys away, he wins the match by TKO. Official time of the TKO is 1:43 of the second.

Winner via TKO Jack Humphreys

 

Humphreys looks good getting a needed win since being defeated in 3 out of his last four. Jack was publicly outraged by being put on the undercard one has to wonder if that lit a fire in him.

 

 

Felix Mattherson Jr. 4-1 vs Callum Henson 11-10

 

Round 1

Henson doesn't waste any time and throws two jabs to the face, but Mattherson easily side-steps both and circles to the left. Mattherson throws a head fake, then comes in fast from an angle with a looping punch, but misses and takes a glancing shot to the shoulder from a left hand counter. Mattherson range-finds with a couple of jabs. Henson wisely doesn't get too close. Mattherson works for an angle. Henson steps in and fires off a scorching right hand, but it's well wide. He threw it with such force that it put him off balance though, and that gives Mattherson the chance to counter by unloading with a bomb of a right hand, flooring Henson! Mattherson follows up by diving in to try and finish the match. Mattherson is able to mount Henson before he has time to regain his wits, and fires off three punches in quick succession. Henson tries to roll his hips to shift Mattherson out of this dominant position, but can't do it. Mattherson opens up Henson's hands with a left, then smashes a right hand right into the temple. Henson goes limp, and the referee dives in to stop Mattherson from landing any further blows. Henson is out cold. Mattherson wins via knock out at 1:42 of the first round.

Winner via KO Felix Mattherson Jr.

 

Impressive showing for the rising prospect Mattherson a step up in competition looks to be in order.

 

 

Kenneth Simmons 7-2 vs Lloyd McAllister 9-5

 

Round 1

McAllister leads with the right hand to set up a low kick, Simmons deals with it well. They clinch, but only for a few seconds before it gets broken. Both throw stiff jabs at the same time, neither connects properly. Back to the clinch. It has been a disjointed start to the round, the flow hasn't quite developed properly. Simmons uses a knee to the ribs before backing McAllister up against the ropes. Right hand from McAllister connects though, that was well timed. Simmons breaks the clinch and backs off. That was sloppy on his part, McAllister was basically gifted a free shot. Three quick jabs from Simmons sting the gloves, then a crashing hook to the body finds its mark. Good recovery. McAllister fires off a low kick again, but it's well wide. Simmons hits a solid left, then a right. McAllister felt both of them, and backs off a little. Simmons charges right in to follow up though, and unleashes a powerful right hook, and McAllister took it flush on the chin! Simmons doesn't even bother following up on that, because McAllister was out cold from the instant that that hit. Incredible punch. Official time of the knock out is 3:30 of the first round.

winner via KO Kenneth Simmons

 

Big win for Simmons and in very impressive style. McAllister had a five fight win streak outside of GAMMA and won his GAMMA debut but he had no chance against the rising star.

 

Main Card Fights

 

Tsyoshi Fujita 22-5 vs 17-14 Mario de Souza

Round 1

The fighters come together right in the center. Fujita throws out a jab, but de Souza bobs out of the way and uses a right hand to glance a blow off the side of the ribs in response. de Souza works an angle and storms in suddenly with three crisp jabs and a looping overhand punch, Fujita covered up quickly but at least one of the jabs hit home. de Souza is making Fujita look sluggish in comparison, such is the speed and crispness with which he is delivering strikes. Fujita hits a low kick before back-pedalling to avoid a clubbing blow. They both seem to be looking for an opening, and it's creating a stalemate at the moment. They meet in the center to exchange a flurry of strikes that gets the crowd on their feet. de Souza got slightly the better of it, he definitely snuck through a right hand that rocked Fujita slightly. Fujita initiates a clinch, and the action grinds to a halt. Fujita looks out of ideas, he is being repeatedly lured into these exchange of strikes, but de Souza is clearly winning them. Fujita needs to find some way to deal with them. Not much time left in this round. The referee separates them. de Souza tries a speculative high kick, but Fujita saw it coming and was well out of range by the time it came. Fujita tries to work an angle, but de Souza is having none of it and fires off a straight right hand to keep him from stepping in. Comfortable round for de Souza, he will probably be disappointed not to have done more damage given his dominance of the striking in this round. The round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 de Souza.

 

Round 2

de Souza starts with a high kick, but Fujita was well out of range. An exchange of punches goes nowhere, and they fall into a clinch. The referee separates them when nothing happens. de Souza steps in and exchanges strikes with Fujita, neither fighter gets a particular advantage from it. Fujita parries away a nice right hand and gets in a crisp counter punch that catches de Souza on the shoulder. The round has been a little flat so far, neither of them is really forcing the issue. They enter into a clinch, which doesn't help matters, and that seems to last for an eternity before the referee separates them and tells them to get on with it. de Souza finally shows some fire, putting together a combination of two jabs, a cross, and an uppercut. Fujita did well to defend it, bobbing and weaving out of the way and using his gloves to parry away anything that was too close. He uses a low kick to the thigh as a response, then steps in and unloads with two fine punches, although de Souza blocked them. de Souza scores the best punch of the round so far, coming in fast, ducking under a dangerous right hand, and catching Fujita square in the face with a lunging overhand right. Fujita backs off and covers up, clearly having felt that one, and unfortunately de Souza's attempts to follow up and thwarted as he gets tied up in a clinch near the ropes. The time expires, with de Souza probably having stolen that round thanks to that one big punch. The round ends. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for de Souza.

 

Round 3

Flat start to the round, thirty seconds of circling without any actual contact. The fans begin to get a bit restless. de Souza is the first to try something, stringing together a couple of jabs and a low kick, but Fujita blocked the first two and avoided the latter. A lunge from de Souza is meant to set up a punch, but it's clumsy and just leaves him off balance. Fujita is quick to react, and gets a great shot to the side of the face in before de Souza can cover up. That landed above the left eye and has left an ugly red mark. No cut, but that will start to swell and could give de Souza some problems later on. de Souza moves in for a right hook, but takes a hard kick to the knee, then is forced to retreat so as not to get caught with the two right hands that follow. Fujita is staying on it though, and glances three shots off the gloves of de Souza before they wind up in a clinch. That punch above the eye, or maybe the mistake that led to it, seems to have completely thrown de Souza off, since that moment he has been comprehensively out-struck and is now in danger of losing this round. They struggle in the clinch, neither fighter managing a great deal more than minor blows. de Souza goes for a trip, but Fujita cleverly spins out of it and the two fighters are back to circling. Not a great round for purists, it has all been a bit disjointed, but that one shot from Fujita may prove decisive. As the round comes to an end, they wind up back in another clinch, with nothing coming of it. The round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Fujita by 10-9.

 

Round 4

de Souza comes out fast, but gets hit with a counter right hand strike when he throws a left hand which was too high. Fujita moves in and hits a nice body shot before they clinch. de Souza gets in a short, sharp jab to the side of the head, it looked to hit right on the ear. Fujita didn't like that, and scores with two knee strikes and a punch to the cheek. They break apart. Fujita swings and hits a nice right hand. de Souza fires off a series of sharp jabs, all hitting gloves. He throws out a looping left, but gets tagged with a punch to the jaw and stumbles to the ground! Fujita dives in to finish him off, but he scrambles back up quickly and they end up facing off on their feet again. Replays show that the punch barely connected, it was more of a stumble on de Souza's part than anything else. It might not look that way to the judges though. Fujita looks more confident after that, and puts together a nice chain of strikes, ending with a scathing low kick that catches de Souza on the outside of the calf. He definitely felt that. Time is running out; Fujita will probably take this round on the judges' score cards, primarily due to that one dubious knock down. The 4th round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to Fujita by 10-9.

 

Round 5

The two fighters circle. Fujita flicks out a couple of jabs, then an unconventinal looping right hand. de Souza easily side-steps it, but trips and falls to the ground! He is up quickly, before Fujita could get in. Replays confirm that it was purely a stumble, the punch was well wide of the mark. de Souza moves in, ducks under a big right hand, and gets two crisp jabs in before getting smothered into a clinch. One of those jabs landed hard, Fujita is a little rattled. They struggle in the clinch, both throwing small punches to the back and ribs. The referee separates them. Fujita forces de Souza back up against the ropes, and starts throwing jabs. He looks to be keeping de Souza in position, waiting to unload a big punch. Fujita does, lunging in with a huge right cross, but de Souza saw it coming and goes underneath it, scoring with a right hand to the gut on the way past. Fujita turns and tries to follow up immediately, but gets tagged with a wicked left hook that drops him to one knee. Fujita is up quickly, causing de Souza, who was about to dive in, to back off. Replays show that the punch connected, but Fujita was already going downward to duck the punch, so it wasn't as powerful as first thought. Fujita throws a high kick, but it doesn't do anything but cause de Souza to step back. The time expires without anything further of note happening. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 de Souza. The official scores are in; two judges give 48-47, the other 49-46, all for Mario de Souza.

Winner via Unanimous decision Mario de Souza

 

Massive upset here Souza is considered a weak fighter and this lose is terrible for Fujita.

 

 

 

Paulo Roberto Bezerra 15-4 vs Nathan Chambers 11-6

 

Round 1

Bezerra isn't hanging around, right from the start Chambers is forced onto the back foot by four hard shots, although none of them get through the gloves. Chambers circles, steps in, then unloads a combination of punches, but Bezerra weaves out of the way and scores with a beauty of a right hand, glancing above the right eye. That was some lovely counter punching from Bezerra, the timing had to be perfect and it was. Chambers is looking a bit frustrated, and uncorks a ragged-looking uppercut that missed by several inches. Bezerra really should have taken advantage of that mistake, Chambers was wide open for a moment there. Bezerra hits a high kick, catching Chambers on the shoulder. Jab from Chambers finds the mark, but it didn't have much power behind it as he was leaning backward too much. Bezerra fires off a couple of straight punches in response, but only finds gloves. They clinch, and the fight enters a lull. Chambers scores with a knee from the clinch, it landed around the hip area of Bezerra, who responds with a couple of shots to the ribs. The time runs out with them still clinched though. End of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Bezerra by 10-9.

 

Round 2

They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Chambers, providing the first moment of real action. Bezerra hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Chambers side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. Bezerra is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Bezerra by 10-9.

 

Round 3

The two competitors start slowly, circling and looking for an opening. Chambers fakes shooting in for a takedown, but Bezerra didn't buy it for a second. In comes Chambers from an angle to the right, but Bezerra had it covered all the way, and not only easily steps out of the way of the attempted right hand, but manages to score with a solid right hand to the side of the head. Chambers felt that, and is forced to cover up quickly as Bezerra steps in quickly and unloads with a flurry of powerful blows, looking to capitalise on the earlier strike. Chambers is forced back against the ropes, but to his credit, he did a good job defending those strikes and didn't seem to take any significant damage. Bezerra doesn't get in too close, realising that it would likely mean getting caught in a clinch, so he stands slightly back instead and throws some low kicks and looping punches. Chambers responds by throwing out some straight jabs, but neither fighter is really doing any damage to their opponent. Bezerra clearly grows tired of the wait, and moves in to hit a body blow. It connects, but Chambers is quick to tie him up in a clinch. That lasts quite a while, until the referee gets in there and breaks them up, telling them to fight. Chambers narrowly misses a right cross. Bezerra scores with a stiff jab, and bobs and weaves to avoid all three of the rapid-fire punches that come back from Chambers. Nicely done. Chambers, realising that he is losing this round, comes forward with a sense of urgency, throwing right hands to put Bezerra on the back foot. Bezerra handles it well though, refusing to let Chambers get an angle, and using some nice counter punches to the body to further cement the fact that this round is going to him on points. Time expires with Chambers throwing increasingly desperate punches. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Bezerra.

 

Round 4

Chambers starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Bezerra manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Bezerra uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and Chambers is forced back against the ropes. Bezerra picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. Chambers uses a couple of looping punches to make Bezerra keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Bezerra bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. Chambers scores with a low kick. About thirty seconds pass without any contact, and the crowd become a little restless. Bezerra unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. End of round 4. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Bezerra.

 

Round 5

The two fighters circle. A series of looping punches from Chambers forces Bezerra back up against the ropes, and he has to cover up to withstand the three strikes that follow. No real damage caused, but Chambers is aggressively chasing this match. A hook finds the body and Bezerra clinches. They almost lose their balance as they jockey for position, Bezerra gets in a couple of knees when they regain their footing. Chambers seems to be trying to break the clinch, it's Bezerra who is holding it tight, perhaps hoping to calm the energetic start that Chambers had. The referee finally does break them up, after nearly a full minute of inactivity. Bezerra steps back, and Chambers comes after him , sensing an opening. Bezerra suddenly puts the brakes on and swings for the fences, driving a right hand to the chin. Chambers couldn't get out of the way in time and takes it full force. He goes down like a puppet with his strings cut, he is out cold. Bezerra goes to follow up to be sure, but the referee cuts him off, calling a halt to the match. The official time of the knock out is 3:54 of round 5.

Winner via KO Paulo Roberto Bezerra

 

Very impressive fight for Bezerra he's probably only one fight away from a title shot.

 

Hiro Arai 22-7 vs Mick Curran 9-3

 

Round 1

Curran scores the first meaningful blow of the round, hitting a powerful overhand right that thumped past the gloves. Arai shakes it off though, and scores with a nice low kick to the outside of the thigh. He steps in to throw some strikes, but Curran moves to a new angle and scores with a series of jabs. Arai turns and swings a heavy right hand, but Curran goes underneath it and hits a wicked kick to the gut. That exchange really showed the difference between the two fighters; Curran looks light on his feet and very agile, Arai looks slow and sluggish by comparison. Arai will need to find a way to nullify Curran's footwork, perhaps by getting in close, as he has been picked apart for the first half of this round. Curran darts in again, and gets in a nice flurry. Arai manages to hit a crisp jab in return, but one of Curran's punches caught him above the eye, leaving a mark, so he came off the worse from that exchange. The round ends without any further big strikes happening, Curran controlling the round with his superior movement. End of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Curran.

 

Round 2

Curran starts fast, firing off several crisp jabs that keep Arai on the back foot. A solid left hits gloves, but it's really just a set-up for Curran to step in and use an uppercut. Not sure how much of it caught Arai, but certainly enough to to make him grab a clinch to stop any further punishment. Great start to the round from Curran, it has been total domination so far. The clinch is broken, and the two fighters exchange some long range jabs that are easily avoided. Arai is looking a little lost so far, Curran is controlling this round by virtue of his crisp accurate punches and higher aggression levels. Curran glances at the referee, not sure why. Curran leads with the left, then moves in and gets in a wicked right hand that grazes the cheek. Arai was fortunate there, if that had landed properly it would have been over. Arai comes back with a leg kick to set up a one-two combination, but the round is coming to a close and it's going to be too little too late. The one bright spot for Arai is that although Curran clearly won the round, he didn't actually turn that dominance into any sort of real damage. The round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Curran by 10-9.

 

Round 3

Arai isn't hanging around, right from the start Curran is forced onto the back foot by four hard shots, although none of them get through the gloves. Curran circles, steps in, then unloads a combination of punches, but Arai weaves out of the way and scores with a beauty of a right hand, glancing above the right eye. That was some lovely counter punching from Arai, the timing had to be perfect and it was. Curran is looking a bit frustrated, and uncorks a ragged-looking uppercut that missed by several inches. Arai really should have taken advantage of that mistake, Curran was wide open for a moment there. Arai hits a high kick, catching Curran on the shoulder. Jab from Curran finds the mark, but it didn't have much power behind it as he was leaning backward too much. Arai fires off a couple of straight punches in response, but only finds gloves. They clinch, and the fight enters a lull. Curran scores with a knee from the clinch, it landed around the hip area of Arai, who responds with a couple of shots to the ribs. The time runs out with them still clinched though. End of round 3. Blurcat.com gives that one to Arai by 10-9.

 

Round 4

The round begins, and it is Arai who starts better, energetically bounding straight into action by throwing a three-punch combination and a scything leg kick. Curran defended all four blows well, but is forced to be on the backfoot right from the word go. Arai works for an angle, coming in from the left hand side with a high right hand. Curran ducks under it and nestles a stiff jab in the solar plexus. It doesn't seem to slow Arai down much though, as he swiftly turns and hits a crisp left to the side of the head, followed almost instantly by a mid-level kick that smacks above the hip of Curran. Interesting first minute of action, Arai is looking particularly sharp. Curran tries to turn the momentum by advancing quickly and driving Arai back against the ropes with a series of jabs and hooks, and they end up clinched. Curran tries a knee from that position, but it is blocked. Arai scores with two sharp blows to the ribs, and then they break away from each other. A looping left from Curran, but it's wide of the mark. They square up to each other in the center. Arai throws a head fake and comes in from low down to hit a rising shot that catches Curran on the side of the head. Curran got a shot in too though, although it hit the shoulder rather than the head. Time is running down; Arai has probably done enough to win the round, but it has turned quite scrappy since the clinch against the ropes, both will probably be slightly unhappy with that. Curran tries a late surge, coming in hard and fast with a leading left, but Arai defends it well and scores the only meaningful shot of the exchange with a crisp left hand. The round is over. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Arai.

 

Round 5

Not much happening at first. Arai is the first to make a move, coming in with a right hand that narrowly misses. Curran gets in a jab that landed on the left cheek of Arai, and leaves a mark. Quite a slow paced round so far. Arai takes another jab and moves in to retaliate, but it was a set-up and he gets creamed with a high right kick to the side of the head! Arai stumbles but doesn't go down, and has to cover up as Curran comes in with a series of punches to try and finish the job. Arai somehow manages to hold on long enough to get his senses back, and buys some time by clinching. Hard knee from Arai from the clinch, and Curran felt that, he looks a little tired from unloading that barrage. They break, and Arai gets in a nice right hand. They tangle near the ropes, and the referee has to come in and pull them apart. End of the round. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Curran. The official scores are in; two judges give 48-47, the other 49-46, all for Mick Curran.

Winner via unanimous decision Mick Curran

 

A very tough hard fought win for Curran this win should firmly establish him as a top ten HW.

 

 

Hazzan Fezzik 32-4 vs Murgur Boc 12-6

Round 1

Boc throws the first punch of the round, a high searching jab that didn't carry a great deal of threat with it. Fezzik throws a one-two combination in return, neither connecting, then steps in and delivers a hard kick to the outside of the thigh. Boc steps back, throwing a right hand as he does to buy himself space. They circle, then move in again to exchange strikes, neither fighter getting a clear advantage. They come together again and the same result. It has become something of a stalemate at the moment. They come together to exchange strikes for the third time, and this time they wind up in a clinch. Fezzik hits a knee to the ribs. A couple of shots to the back from Boc. They struggle all the way back, with Boc ending up backed up against the ropes. Fezzik hits another knee, but there wasn't much power behind it. Boc stomps downward onto his foot. Boc manages to reverse their positions, but that only lasts about thirty seconds before it gets reversed once more. Fezzik gets an arm free and tries to throw a big shot to the cheek, Boc ducks under it and gets the arm back under control. The referee finally breaks them up, and we're back to where we started. Boc tries a high kick to start, but Fezzik saw it coming and easily avoids it. They come back together in the center, and it's Fezzik who gets the first sustained attack of the round, hitting two hard body shots and a jab that caught Boc on the nose. Boc hits a straight right, enough to stop Fezzik from following up any further. The time expires with them standing. Not a great round for either of them or the crowd, it was very scrappy. The round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Fezzik.

 

Round 2

Slow start; nearly a full minute of circling, occasional fakes, and long-range jabs. Neither fighter is creating much. Fezzik works an angle, but takes a low kick to the shin when he advances. They clinch, and end up with Boc backed up against the ropes. Fezzik gets a couple of right hands to the body, but his attempts at knee strikes are deflected by Boc, who uses his legs well to defend. Fezzik pulls free and takes a step back, then powers in a right hand. Boc gets out the way, ducks under a second right hand, and backs up to the center. Fezzik follows, and we're back to circling. Uninspiring action so far, they've both been fairly devoid of inspiration. Fezzik hits a couple of right hands, both hitting gloves, then a left hand to the body that connected. That was the best shot of the round so far. Boc tags him with a flicked jab to the cheek, but it had virtually no power on it. Boc leans in to a looping left, but it puts him off balance and it's only at the last second that he gets his chin out of the way of a vicious right cross that comes back. If that had hit, we may have had a knock out. Time runs out with them standing, circling again. The 2nd round ends. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Fezzik.

 

Round 3

Exchange of punches to start, nothing really hit though. They go into a clinch, and the pace disappears as both fighters try and get the advantage. Eventually the referee separates them. Jab from Fezzik, who then has to react quickly to avoid a right hook that was aimed right at the chin. Fezzik puts on a burst of energy and fires off a big sequence of punches, maybe twelve or thirteen in a row, although not many actually connected. Boc covered up well, and gets in a couple of shots of his own before moving out of range again. For a second it looked like Fezzik was about to go for a takedown, but nothing came from it. Low kick from Boc, almost to the groin, although it didn't look intentional. They come together in a clinch again, and it returns to a stalemate. Not a great round by anyone's standard, but that flurry should mean that Fezzik will take the round on points. The round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Fezzik.

 

Round 4

Fezzik starts with a high kick, but Boc was well out of range. Boc looks to be working an angle. Fezzik steps in and exchanges strikes with Boc, neither fighter gets a particular advantage from it. Boc parries away a nice right hand and gets in a crisp counter punch that catches Fezzik on the shoulder. The round has been a little flat so far, neither of them is really forcing the issue. They enter into a clinch, which doesn't help matters, and that seems to last for an eternity before the referee separates them and tells them to get on with it. Fezzik finally shows some fire, putting together a combination of two jabs, a cross, and an uppercut. Boc did well to defend it, bobbing and weaving out of the way and using his gloves to parry away anything that was too close. He uses a low kick to the thigh as a response, then steps in and unloads with two fine punches, although Fezzik blocked them. Fezzik scores the best punch of the round so far, coming in fast, ducking under a dangerous right hand, and catching Boc square in the face with a lunging overhand right. Boc backs off and covers up, clearly having felt that one, and unfortunately Fezzik's attempts to follow up and thwarted as he gets tied up in a clinch near the ropes. The time expires, with Fezzik probably having stolen that round thanks to that one big punch. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Fezzik.

 

Round 5

Fezzik starts tentatively, and scores with a few sharp leg kicks. A straight left connects, and Boc is forced backward to avoid an uppercut. Good start from Fezzik. Boc tries to come inside, but eats a kick to the thigh. They clinch briefly, but it goes nowhere. Looping right hand from Boc, but it only caught Fezzik on the shoulder. Another kick connects from Fezzik, and that sets up a nice combination to the body. The accuracy of his kicks has been excellent so far, and is keeping Boc from doing very much. About thirty seconds pass without any contact, and the crowd become a little restless. Right hand from Boc, that one definitely registered, but I don't think it had much power behind it. The time ticks away without anything further of interest happening. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Fezzik. The official scores are: 50-45 (twice), 49-46 for Hassan Fezzik.

Winner via unanimous decision Hazzan Fezzik

 

Fezzik picks up his second win in GAMMA but most people expected him to end Boc's night early but a win is a win.

 

 

Lukas Mellberg 17-9 vs Roger Nights 17-4

Round 1

Mellberg throws two high punches, then steps in for a hook to the body. Nice combination, but Nights defended with ease. They clinch up next to the ropes, but a short struggle only ends with them separating and coming back in. Mellberg misses with a straight right. Nights hits a standing kick, and Mellberg is rocked, stumbling backwards and falling to the floor. Nights leaps into action and fires off a barrage of right hands. The referee dives in and protects Mellberg, bringing the fight to an end. The kick didn't knock Mellberg out, but it left him stunned, and that was all that Nights needed to finish the job. The official time is 1:29.

Winner via TKO Roger Nights

 

Nice LW debut for the former FW champ against a dangerous fighter.

 

 

Buddy Garner 22-4 vs Neil Naiper 16-5-1

Round 1

Garner starts strongly, immediately rushing in for a takedown. Napier got taken by surprise a little, but wrestles his way free of the grapple and pulls to safety. Napier doesn't hang around for a second attempt, he uses a looping left to set himself up to come in close and score with a series of strikes, two or three nice body shots included. Garner covers up, throwing the occasional jab as a counter. Napier goes for a vicious uppercut, but gets pulled into a clinch. Garner goes for a takedown via a trip, but Napier defends it. Another trip attempt, another failure. Garner pushes Napier up against the ropes and tries to wrestle him to the ground, but Napier keeps his balance and sprawls to stop it. Napier gets in a hard right hand to the side of the face, taking advantage of the fact that Garner was leaning in too far. Napier reverses so that Garner is against the ropes. They remain clinched, with nothing more than minor strikes being thrown, for a long time. The referee finally breaks them apart and gets them back to the center. Napier throws a kick, waist-high, but Garner avoids it. That could have been used for a takedown attempt if Garner had been quicker and caught it. Napier hits two or three punches in a row, stinging the gloves of Garner. The round draws to a close. It'll be interesting to see where the judges go with this, as Napier clearly got the better strikes in throughout the round, but Garner did probably show more aggression by virtue of his almost constant attempts to get the takedown. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Napier.

 

Round 2

Napier works an angle and comes in from the side of Garner, getting two good jabs in before a ragged left misses by quite a margin. Garner hits a low kick to back Napier against the ropes, then works the body with a series of short punches. Napier fights out and the action returns to the center. They come together, both throwing punches. Garner gets a nice clean shot in, and Napier stumbles backwards and falls to the floor. Garner is on top of him quickly, and unloads with two more big punches, both connect solidly. The referee jumps in and pulls him away before a third is thrown, this match is over by TKO. Replays show the referee may have been slightly early. Garner wins via 2nd round TKO with the official time being 2:51.

Winner via TKO Buddy Garner

 

In a fight people have wanted to see since 1998 Garner comes out on top and his reward will be the next shot at Patrick Thomas's WW title which will be one of the most anticipated fights of 2002.

 

 

Shane Gilchrist 27-11 vs Mason Archer 6-0

Round 1

They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Archer, providing the first moment of real action. Gilchrist hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Archer side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. Gilchrist is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Gilchrist by 10-9.

 

Round 2

Archer starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Gilchrist manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Gilchrist uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and Archer is forced back against the ropes. Gilchrist picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. Archer uses a couple of looping punches to make Gilchrist keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Gilchrist bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. Archer scores with a low kick. Archer looks to be working an angle. Gilchrist unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. The 2nd round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Gilchrist.

 

Round 3

The fighters touch gloves, then circle. Gilchrist throws a low kick, but it was without any conviction, it seemed designed more to keep Archer from coming inside. Gilchrist works an angle, then comes in with a one-two combination, Archer responds with a crisp uppercut that wasn't far off from connecting. Gilchrist backs off slightly, maybe a bit relieved not to have taken that one on the chin. Neither fighter appears to be looking for any sort of takedown or grapple, this is all about the striking. Archer circles and throws a series of high jabs, but Gilchrist blocked them with ease, using the gloves. Gilchrist fakes a high kick, then storms in with a wild looking right hand and a series of body shots. Archer covers up and rides out the storm, clinching to stop any further blows. It was a nice attack from Gilchrist though, best action of the round. They stay clinched for a while, exchanging occasional punches to the ribs, then are separated by the referee. It looks like this round is going to the judges though, as there's only a few seconds remaining. Gilchrist throws a leg kick that connects, albeit without too much force, and the round is done. The round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Gilchrist by 10-9.

 

Round 4

The round begins, and it is Gilchrist who starts better, energetically bounding straight into action by throwing a three-punch combination and a scything leg kick. Archer defended all four blows well, but is forced to be on the backfoot right from the word go. Gilchrist works for an angle, coming in from the left hand side with a high right hand. Archer ducks under it and nestles a stiff jab in the solar plexus. It doesn't seem to slow Gilchrist down much though, as he swiftly turns and hits a crisp left to the side of the head, followed almost instantly by a mid-level kick that smacks above the hip of Archer. Interesting first minute of action, Gilchrist is looking particularly sharp. Archer tries to turn the momentum by advancing quickly and driving Gilchrist back against the ropes with a series of jabs and hooks, and they end up clinched. Archer tries a knee from that position, but it is blocked. Gilchrist scores with two sharp blows to the ribs, and then they break away from each other. Gilchrist throws out a few jabs, nothing too dangerous though, Archer easily avoided them. They square up to each other in the center. Gilchrist throws a head fake and comes in from low down to hit a rising shot that catches Archer on the side of the head. Archer got a shot in too though, although it hit the shoulder rather than the head. Time is running down; Gilchrist has probably done enough to win the round, but it has turned quite scrappy since the clinch against the ropes, both will probably be slightly unhappy with that. Archer tries a late surge, coming in hard and fast with a leading left, but Gilchrist defends it well and scores the only meaningful shot of the exchange with a crisp left hand. The round ends. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Gilchrist.

 

Round 5

Archer backs Gilchrist up against the ropes in a clinch. There's a struggle, and Archer pops his right arm free and gets in two brutal elbows to the side of the head before Gilchrist can re-tie the arm back up. Those were really crunching blows, the second one in particular rocked Gilchrist. Archer gets his arm free again, and delivers another two vicious blows. Gilchrist doesn't go down, but may well be out on his feet. The referee seems to think so, as he covers Gilchrist up, stopping any further punishment. Those deadly elbows have won the match for Archer. Archer wins via fifth round TKO at 19 seconds.

 

Wow what a comeback Archer knew he was down 4 rounds to 0 and he came out with bad intentions in the 5th and it only took 19 seconds to give Gilchrist a brutal beating

 

 

MAIN EVENT: Go Yamamoto 18-7 vs Giovani Silva 29-13 for the Featherweight Championship

 

Round 1

The round begins, and it is Yamamoto who starts better, energetically bounding straight into action by throwing a three-punch combination and a scything leg kick. Silva defended all four blows well, but is forced to be on the backfoot right from the word go. Yamamoto works for an angle, coming in from the left hand side with a high right hand. Silva ducks under it and nestles a stiff jab in the solar plexus. It doesn't seem to slow Yamamoto down much though, as he swiftly turns and hits a crisp left to the side of the head, followed almost instantly by a mid-level kick that smacks above the hip of Silva. Interesting first minute of action, Yamamoto is looking particularly sharp. Silva tries to turn the momentum by advancing quickly and driving Yamamoto back against the ropes with a series of jabs and hooks, and they end up clinched. Silva tries a knee from that position, but it is blocked. Yamamoto scores with two sharp blows to the ribs, and then they break away from each other. Both fighters circle. They square up to each other in the center. Yamamoto throws a head fake and comes in from low down to hit a rising shot that catches Silva on the side of the head. Silva got a shot in too though, although it hit the shoulder rather than the head. Time is running down; Yamamoto has probably done enough to win the round, but it has turned quite scrappy since the clinch against the ropes, both will probably be slightly unhappy with that. Silva tries a late surge, coming in hard and fast with a leading left, but Yamamoto defends it well and scores the only meaningful shot of the exchange with a crisp left hand. End of round 1. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Yamamoto.

 

Round 2

Two jabs from the left hand of Yamamoto set up a hard waist-high kick, but Silva steps back to avoid it. Nice attempt though. Yamamoto moves in closer, bobbing and weaving, and looks to score with a looping right hand, but Silva uses the gloves to parry it away, then counter-strikes with a crisp jab and a kick to the knee. Good opening to the round, both fighters are looking lively. Yamamoto finds himself backed up against the ropes briefly, and has to scramble to safety to avoid a flurry of strikes. Silva is working for position, and is currently looking the more composed of the two. Silva scores with a kick to the outside of the thigh, but it didn't have a great deal of power on it. Yamamoto returns fire with a jab, and then tries for a takedown. Silva doesn't pull guard, but instead tries to spin out of it and get back to his feet, but it proves to be a mistake as he isn't able to get free and only ends up giving his back to Yamamoto! Yamamoto gets one arm in and snakes it around the throat of Silva, squeezing his wind-pipe shut. Silva tries to pull the arm free, but can't, and so rolls over in a last-ditch effort to break free. It is to no avail though, as that allows Yamamoto to get a body-scissors in too. With no alternatives left, Silva taps out. Yamamoto wins via rear choke submission at 2:13 of the second round. Go Yamamoto is now the GAMMA Featherweight champion.

Winner via submission Go Yamamoto

 

Go Yamamoto looked very impressive tonight to win his first title since 1997

 

 

Fight of the Night: Mason Archer vs Shane Gilchrist

KO of the Night: Kenneth Simmons over McAllister

Submission of the Night: Zaco over Darby

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Pickem

 

UFC KING- 9-3

JJ Reid- 5-7

 

Congratulations UFC KING you win the pickem for the first event. You get to chose the opponent for two of the top guys.

 

Who would you most like to see fight Rav Kapur? He's coming off a split decision loss to number one HW contender Jonnie Durand.

 

James Foster- coming off a win over Rick Stanley they have fought once before and Kapur won via 1st round KO.

 

Wilson Franklyn- coming off of a loss over Daniel Hornsby last time out he has never fought Kapur.

 

Stratos Papaioannou- He's riding a 5 fight losing streak but what makes this fight interesting is the fact that he holds a unavenged TKO win over Kapur from all the way back in 1997.

 

Dave Lennon- He is coming off a win his record is 11-11 but he owns two KO wins over Shane Gilchrist, a submission over current HW champ Raul Hughes, and a KO over number two ranked HW Aleksander Ivanov so even though he doesnt win often when he does it's usually over a big name and Kapur certainly fits the bill.

 

 

Adam White is fighting for the MW belt this event and Kendall Tracey gets the first crack after that but Bill Brown and 3 other guys are only a win away from being 3rd in line to get the shot so who would you like to see Bill Brown fight?

 

 

Kramer Mayweather- he's won two straight since losing at LHW to Petey Mack.

 

Datuk Ong Ka Ting- he's coming off a nice win over Joshua Hope and has won 3 of his last 4.

 

Tucker Plumm- He hasnt fought in GAMMA yet but he's riding a big win streak outside of GAMMA and is coming off a win over former top ten GAMMA middleweight Ethan Sutton. ( I lost Sutton because I forgot to resign him :()

 

 

JJ since you were nice enough to do the pickem you get to choose between which of these three fights will go down.

 

Nate MacReary vs Elgar LHW

Eli Harris vs Ricardo Fernandes LW

Sukarno vs Ricky Heath MW

 

 

Thanks to both of you guys for picking for this event I hope you continue to participate in the future.

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GAMMA: White vs Yenkini

 

Adam White vs Casim Yenkini MW

 

White is quite possibly the best fighter of the last decade he's knocked out just about every big name who has fought at 185 Buddy Garner, Neil Naiper, Maarten De Vires, Kramer Mayweather, JJ Reid, and the list goes on his only loss was a 35 second KO to Uwe Maier. 13 of his 17 wins are by KO or TKO so if this stays standing Yenkini will have a bad night. The only good path to victory for Yenkini is to put White on his back and work some gnp....good luck with that.

 

Anthony LeToussier vs Soulmane Ya Konan LHW

 

Two of the top 5 LHW's in the world battling here this fight is a contender elimination fight Expect LeToussier to win if it stays standing and like wise expect Konan to win if it goes to the ground.

 

Washichi Kobayashi vs Stuart Strange LHW

Kobyashi isnt the best fighter at LHW but he's very popular and if it stays standing he can KO anybody with that said Strange looks like the better fighter in this one.

 

Elgar vs Nate MacReary LHW- Elgar is a poor fighter with one big win in the last 5 years over former pfp best fighter in the world Curt Kitson. Nate is a up coming fighter with big KO wins in BCF over Bambang Sriyanto and Mick Curran expect him to win this one unless Elgar can take him down and pull off a unexpected submission.

 

Bill Brown vs Kramer Mayweather MW

A very good fight that could go either way if it stays standing but if it hits the ground Brown will have the advantage.

 

 

Rav Kapur vs James Foster II

Foster is a legend in this sport who is trying to get back into title contention at HW after going 1-3 at 205. He beat Rick Stanley in Stanley's retirement match but in Kapur he's fighting a entire diffrent animal. Kapur is one of the most dominating HW's in the world he's coming off a close split decision loss to Jonnie Durand so he's very hungry for a win. In thier first fight Kapur destroyed Foster within two mintues with strikes on the ground but if Foster can put Kapur on his back it's very possible he could return the favor.

 

 

Carl Ratcliffe vs Korekiyo Anzai WW

 

 

Undercard fights

Brandon Blake vs Heikichi Shimizu FW

Andrew Rush vs Ikku Funaki WW

Fjodor Kanchelskis vs Hans-Peter Schneider

Charles Stiles vs Omar Buhari FW

 

 

 

Adam White vs Casim Yenkini

Rav Kapur vs James Foster

Anthony LeToussier vs Soulmane Ya Konan

Bill Brown vs Kramer Mayweather

Washichi Kobayashi vs Stuart Strange

Elgar vs Nate MacReary

Carl Ratcliffe vs Korekiyo Anzai

Brandon Blake vs Heikichi Shimizu FW

Andrew Rush vs Ikku Funaki WW

Fjodor Kanchelskis vs Hans-Peter Schneider MW

Charles Stiles vs Omar Buhari FW

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Adam White vs Casim Yenkini

Rav Kapur vs James Foster

Anthony LeToussier vs Soulmane Ya Konan

Bill Brown vs Kramer Mayweather

Washichi Kobayashi vs Stuart Strange

Elgar vs Nate MacReary

Carl Ratcliffe vs Korekiyo Anzai

Brandon Blake vs Heikichi Shimizu FW

Andrew Rush vs Ikku Funaki WW

Fjodor Kanchelskis vs Hans-Peter Schneider MW

Charles Stiles vs Omar Buhari FW

 

Im going to predict also but mine isnt offical or anything im just doing it for fun. The show will be posted up by 8:00 PM so get those predictions in guys.

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Adam White vs Casim Yenkini

Rav Kapur vs James Foster

Anthony LeToussier vs Soulmane Ya Konan

Bill Brown vs Kramer Mayweather

Washichi Kobayashi vs Stuart Strange

Elgar vs Nate MacReary

Carl Ratcliffe vs Korekiyo Anzai

Brandon Blake vs Heikichi Shimizu FW

Andrew Rush vs Ikku Funaki WW

Fjodor Kanchelskis vs Hans-Peter Schneider MW

Charles Stiles vs Omar Buhari FW

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Adam White vs Casim Yenkini

Rav Kapur vs James Foster

Anthony LeToussier vs Soulmane Ya Konan

Bill Brown vs Kramer Mayweather

Washichi Kobayashi vs Stuart Strange

Elgar vs Nate MacReary

Carl Ratcliffe vs Korekiyo Anzai

Brandon Blake vs Heikichi Shimizu FW

Andrew Rush vs Ikku Funaki WW

Fjodor Kanchelskis vs Hans-Peter Schneider MW

Charles Stiles vs Omar Buhari FW

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GAMMA: White vs Yenkini

 

Hey guys I had the play by play ready but my girl got on the computer and accidently closed the window and ive already passed the event in my game so im going to do a write up on how each fight went. I'll go back to play by play for the next event sorry about this.

 

Omar Buhari 16-8-1 vs Charles Stiles 14-9-1

Buhari clearly showed in this fight why many think he could one day be the FW champion if he could mange to consitantly preform to his full potential. He out classed Stiles standing and on the ground for 5 rounds on his way to a unanimous decision.

Winner via Unanimous decision Omar Buhari

 

Fjodor Kanchelskis 4-0 vs Hans-Peter Schneider 14-10

Schneider came out looking for the takedown right away Fjodor wasnt going to have any of it though. He keeps Hans at a distace with powerful straight rights and 1:34 into the first a big right cross put the lights out for Mr. Schneider.

Winner via KO Fjodor Kanchelskis

 

Andrew Rush 21-7 vs Ikku Funaki 12-11

Rush comes out looking much more confident he use's good foot work and a great jab to control the action for the first three minutes. Rush goes to step in on Funaki only to get his head taking off by a high kick at 3:30.

Winner via KO Ikku Funaki

 

Brandon Blake 13-8-1 vs Heikichi Shimizu 7-5

Both come out cautious early circling only willing to throw the occasional punch. Shimizu shoots in on Blake about two minutes into the fight Blake escapes back to circling for another 30 seconds until Blake throws up a huge head kick that smacks Shimizu right in the side of the head putting him to sleep.

Winner via KO Bradon Blake

 

Edilberto vs Simon Vine

1. Edilberto comes out looking good in the first scoring good soild punches while Vine winged out sloppy bombs for the first 3 and a half minutes until Vine clinched up for the remainder of the round. 10-9 Edilberto

 

2. This round is very diffrent than the first Edilberto comes out and continues to out strike Vine for the first minute until Vine scores a takedown. Vine comes close to getting a kimura on Edilberto but nothing else of note really happens in the round. 10-9 Vine

 

3. Vine comes out and clinchs up right away and attempts to trip Edilberto to the ground but Edilberto manages to avoid it and circles out. The remainder of the round turns into a striking match up which Edilberto wins. 10-9 Edilberto

 

4. Vine comes out of the corner looking pretty tired to start the round. Edilberto contiues to pepper away at Vine with his superior stand up but Vine manges to clinch up and score a takedown 1:30 into the round he works some gnp from the top postion until Edilberto manages to get to his feet but time runs out before anything happens. 10-9 Vine

 

5. Vine looks veryy tired and Edilberto sees it almost immeditly putting heavy pressure on Vine scoring a big flurry of rights and lefts. Vine manages to get a much needed clinch and holds Edilberto there for much of the round. Edilberto finishes the last minute of the round strong scoring some nice shots on the exhausted Vine. 10-9 Edilberto

Winner via Unanimous decision Edilberto

 

Stuart Strange 15-9 vs Washichi Kobayashi 10-13

1. They both feel each other out for the first couple minutes of the fight throwing jabs and the occasional leg kick. Strange begins to pick it up at 3:30 scoreing some nice body shots at 3:59 Strange slams a huge right hook into the jaw of Kobayashi earning the KO.

Winner by KO Stuart Strange

 

Carl Ratcliffe 15-11 vs Korekiyo Anzai 14-6

Ratcliffe scores a takedown just seconds into the fight he works his way into half guard he's scoring some nice shots from there he gets side control. Big elbows are starting to rain down now hammer fists....this one is over at 1:34.

Winner via TKO Carl Ratcliffe

 

Nate MacReary 5-1 vs Elgar 11-12

Just seconds into the fight Elgar eats a tasty right hand he backs away looking nervous about the punching power of MacReary. MacReary stays clam down stalking Elgar waiting for his opening at 1:39 finds it Elgar let his hands drop and MacReary smashes a huge bomb into Elgars temple and Elgar goes stumbling back against the cage the ref stops at 1:44 it looks like Elgar might have a concussion from that incredible punch.

Winner via TKO Nate MacReary

 

Bill Brown 11-6 vs Kramer Mayweather 10-5

1. Brown and Mayweather come out looking to trade right away. Both mean swing big combinations at each other for the first 2 mintues until Mayweather stumbles and falls to the floor. It looks like he just lost his balance more than anything Brown tries to pounce on him but Mayweather is up before he can get there. The pace slows down at the end of the round with both men being fairly cautious. 10-9 Brown

 

2. Mayweather comes out looking to land big bombs but Brown's movement is making it very hard for Mayweather to land anything. For most of the round Mayweather continues to headhunt that one big shot and Brown continues to pick him apart with superior technique and footwork. 10-9 Brown

 

3. Both men come out and circle for most of the round throwing the occasional combination. Brown continues to tag Mayweather with the better shots though Mayweather is really having trouble dealing with Brown's hand speed and foot work. 10-9 Brown

 

4. Both men trade for the first two mintues Mayweather finally decides he cant win the fight doing this shot he shoots in on Brown but the shot was sloppy and Brown manages to reverse it so that he winds up on top. Brown works gnp for a while until he comes very close to getting a armbar but Mayeweather escapes and the round ends. 10-9 Brown

 

5. Mayweather looks like he knows he cant win this one he doesnt seem very motivated to fight right now. Brown hits some nice jabs and a hard left hook that rocks Mayweather. Mayweather manages to clinch away most of the round. 10-9 Brown

Winner via Unanimous decision Bill Brown

 

Anthony Letoussier 26-12 vs Soulmane Ya Konan 17-6

 

Letoussier comes out looking good scoreing a nice combination early. He looks very confident Konan isnt throwing very much early he seems to be feeling Letoussier out maybe looking to take the fight down. Huge right hand by Konan! Letoussier is out cold. Letoussier was coming in the hit a hook and Konan was ready he nearly knocked Letoussier head into the 6th row.

Winner via KO Soulmane Ya Konan

 

Rav Kapur 20-5 vs James Foster 24-8

 

round 1

Kapur comes out looking for the takedown on Foster and he gets it. This is bad for Foster Kapur finished him early in the first with brutal gnp in the first fight. Foster stays focused on keeping his guard tight and it seems to have Kapur netrualized for now. Kapur seems content to work some elbows from the guard until times runs down. 10-9 Kapur

 

round 2

Kapur takes the center of the cage and uses his jab to keep Foster back it looks like he's trying to postion him for a big head kick. Kapur throws a body kick....Foster catches it and takes him down! Foster gets to half guard and settles in to use the gnp he made famous on Kapur for the rest of the round. 10-9 Foster

 

round 3

Kapur comes out and lands a nice straight left to the eye of Foster it looks like his eye is closing up right away. Kapur comes in throwing a big overhand right but Foster ducks and shoots in with a big double and takes the big beast down hard. Foster looks to be trying to pass to side control....he gets it he smashes a big elbow into Kapur's nose but Kapur manages to get him back to half guard. Foster contiues to hit him from there until time runs out. 10-9 Foster

 

round 4

Foster looks confident coming forward and hitting Kapur with a big right hook but Kapur shakes in off. Foster continues to hit some nice shots standing until Kapur lands a big right hook that drops him. Kapur jumps to side control attempting to finish. Foster is eating some hard shots but he's doing a good job of staying alive he manges to get Kapur into his guard. Kapur works some gnp and then attempts to get mount but Foster wont let that happen. The round comes to a close. 10-9 Kapur

 

round 5

Both men come out and touch gloves both are beat up Kapur looks to have a broken nose and Foster's left eye is almost shut. Foster comes out looking for the takedown but Kapur is able to fight out of it. Foster looks to be a little to tired to take the huge man down. Kapur hits a nice high kick but Foster blocks most of it. Kapur is controling this round completly with the power in his hands and feet. Foster shoots in one more time for a takedown but Kapur throws him off against the cage and lands a nice combo. Both men come together and throw shots as the round ends the crowd is on thier feet giving both men a standing ovation. 10-9 Kapur

The winner via Unanimous Decision Rav Kapur

 

 

MAIN EVENT

GAMMA MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP

 

Adam White 17-1 vs Casim Yenkini 19-8

round 1

Both men are cautious for the first three mintues of the round feeling each other out. White shoots in and takes Yenkini down without much effort. Yenkini pulls guard. White lands some shots from the top but Yenkini almost slaps a armbar on him but he powers out of it. White gets mount and lands soem nice shots as the round comes to a end. 10-9 White

 

round 2

White stalks Yenkini to start the round waiting for Casim to make a mistake. Casim throws a big head kick but White avoids it Yenkini comes forward looking to throw a combo and White lands a bomb right on the jaw of Yenkini. It was a huge over handright that Casim never saw coming. The time is 1:58

Winner via KO and NEW middleweight champion Adam White

 

 

Fight of the Night- James Foster vs Rav Kapur

KO of the Night- Adam White over Yenkini

There were no submissions

 

Sorry about not being able to post the Play by Play guys I hope you enjoyed my write up I tried to keep it interesting. I also forgot to post the Edilberto vs Simon Vine fight for you to pick so i'll count that one right for both of you.

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UFC KING 5/7

JJ Reid 6/6

 

congrats JJ you win the pickem

 

You get to choose the main event for the next event between

 

Brandon Sugar vs Roger Nights

Jason Dalglish vs Kojuro Ijichi II

Juro Fukazawa vs Julio Reguerio

 

and you choose who fights John Rivero in his HW debut

 

Wilson Franklyn

Thomas Smith

Mugur Boc

Dave Lennon

 

 

UFC King for picking you get to choose who fights Luis Basora

 

Fernando Amaro

Floyd Haywood

Thorbjorn Rekdal

Milenko Rudonja

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