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Thread: Ronda Rousey

  1. #196
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    Ronda Rousey Is Ready for Her Next Fight

    Gene Ching
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  2. #197
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    UFC 207 tomorrow

    Anyone here going to tune in?

    Ronda Rousey returns but it’s no easy task to recapture bantamweight belt
    Updated December 29, 2016 8:36 AM
    By Mark La Monica mark.lamonica@newsday.com


    UFC Women's Bantamweight Champion Amanda Nunes faces off with Ronda Rousey after UFC 205 Weigh-ins in preparation for their UFC 207 fight that will take place on December 30, 2016 at Madison Square Garden on November 11, 2016 in New York City. Photo Credit: Getty Images / Michael Reaves

    Only six UFC fighters reclaimed title in the same weight class they lost it.

    When that first guitar riff from Joan Jett’s “Bad Reputation” envelops the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas for UFC 207, a comeback 412 days in the making will be official as Ronda Rousey makes her walk to the octagon.

    Rousey, the former women’s bantamweight champion was last seen sitting on the floor of the octagon in Australia at UFC 193 with her face swollen and bloodied from the fists and feet of Holly Holm. Holm went home with the title that night as Rousey sat in a hospital contemplating, for a brief moment, ending her life. Her title was gone, her aura of invincibility shattered, her world crumbled in less than six minutes.

    When Rousey fights against reigning champion Amanda Nunes, will her return, the one social media hashtags indicate we should “fear,” be made complete by Rousey again having that championship belt strapped around her waist? This suspense, of course, is what sells tickets and pay-per-views.

    “All the greats throughout history, they’ve all lost,” UFC president Dana White said at a UFC 207 media scrum on Wednesday.

    Ali lost, Tyson lost. You go through the list of all the greatest fighters that have ever lived, everybody has a loss. It’s always interesting and exciting to see if they can overcome and come back from a devastating loss like hers was.”

    What Rousey, an Olympic bronze medalist in judo, is attempting at UFC 207 is no easy task, regardless of who she is and who she is fighting. In the 23-year history of the UFC, excluding interim titles, only six fighters won back their title in the same weight class they lost it.

    Randy Couture first won the UFC heavyweight title in 1997, then left the UFC the next month and was stripped of his title. He won it back in 2000, lost it in his next fight, then reclaimed the belt in 2007. Couture also won the UFC light heavyweight title in 2003, lost it to Vitor Belfort four months later, then won it back from him in August 2004.

    Tim Sylvia first won the heavyweight title in 2003, was stripped of it after testing positive for steroids, then won the title for a second time in 2006.

    Matt Hughes lost his welterweight title to BJ Penn at UFC 46 in 2004, then became champion again after beating Georges St-Pierre 10 months later.

    Georges St-Pierre lost his welterweight title to Long Island’s Matt Serra in April 2007, won an interim title against Hughes eight months later, then won the real title back from Serra in April 2008.

    Cain Velasquez was knocked out by Junior Dos Santos on national television Nov. 11, 2012, then returned 13 months later to beat Dos Santos by unanimous decision to reclaim his heavyweight title.

    Dominick Cruz was stripped of his bantamweight title in January 2014 after being out more than two years with various injuries. On Jan. 17, 2016, after another 16 months sidelined by injury, Cruz won a split decision over T.J. Dillashaw to be re-crowned champion.

    A seventh fighter, Jose Aldo, lost his featherweight title to Conor McGregor in December 2015, won the interim title in July 2016, then was promoted to undisputed champion after McGregor was stripped of his featherweight title in November 2016.
    So why is it such a difficult task for fighters to re-climb the championship mountain?

    “I don’t know,” said Frankie Edgar, who defended his lightweight crown three times before losing the title and then the rematch to Benson Henderson. “It’s hard to get it in the first place.”

    Many factors go into matchmaking for title fights. Marketability has become more important in recent years. Can the UFC promote the fighters in a title fight well enough to draw fans into spending their money on tickets and pay-per-view buys? Some title contenders earn their shot based on what they’ve done in the cage, while others can dictate things more so based on how their work in the cage translates financially.

    For example, McGregor is an immensely talented fighter. He won the featherweight title in December 2015 then fought three times since — none of which were at featherweight. Those four fights are among the seven largest gates in UFC history. He was allowed to challenge Rafael Dos Anjos last March for his lightweight title, which was scrapped when Dos Anjos was injured in training. In November, McGregor challenged Eddie Alvarez for his lightweight belt and won to become the UFC’s first two-weight champion. (He later was stripped of the featherweight title.)

    “I couldn’t even write it up or imagine it because I just don’t really know what’s on going on,” said Edgar, a top featherweight title contender, last month during UFC 205 week in Manhattan. “There’s really no rhyme or reason to who gets title shots lately. I just need to keep winning fights to put myself in the discussion and see what happens, really.”

    Fighter health and timing are critical, as well. Just ask Chris Weidman, the former middleweight champion who was forced to pull out of a June 2016 rematch with then champion Luke Rockhold because of a neck injury.

    “It was a rematch for the belt,” Weidman said at the time. “I don’t know when I’m going to get that opportunity again. Nothing’s guaranteed.”

    Michael Bisping replaced Weidman, knocked out Rockhold, then defended his title against No. 14 ranked Dan Henderson. Weidman lost to Yoel Romero at UFC 205 in Manhattan last month in what was presumed to be a fight to determine the next title shot.

    Beyond the physical and financial, there is the mental aspect. MMA is an individual sport. No matter how many instructors they train with, how many sparring partners they work with, all fighters understand the reality when the cage door closes. It’s one person against the other. One person will succeed. One person will fail.

    “The internal dialogue can be really quite negative, quite nasty,” said Kristen Dieffenbach, an executive board member of the Association for Applied Sport Psychology.

    Rousey said on Ellen DeGeneres’ talk show last February that she had suicidal thoughts the night she lost to Holm.

    “You don’t get to that level of athletics without a very high level of drive and some very high self-expectations,” Dieffenbach said. “You want to achieve, you’re driven to achieve. Even if it’s not the medals that you’re after. There has to be an intrinsic motivation that’s performance pride. When you’re in that immediate moment and post-moment of competition when you didn’t achieve, it’s very hard to separate that intrinsic ‘proud of my performance’ from the sting of losing very publicly.”

    Rousey’s loss came in front of the largest crowd ever for a UFC event — 56,214 fans at Etihad Stadium in Melbourne, Australia.

    Rousey has waged a UFC-sanctioned blackout of MMA media since her return was announced. She has appeared on Conan O’Brien’s and Ellen DeGeneres’ talk shows, was the subject of a featured article in ESPN The Magazine and cut various UFC promos. But there was no conference call with Rousey or Nunes, and Rousey was not at any media opportunities this week in Las Vegas.

    “Some see going after a second title as a huge challenge, bring it on, can’t wait to prove I can do it twice,” said Dieffenbach, who has never met or worked with Rousey. “For other athletes, it becomes very intimidating, what if I can’t do it again. The anxiety about ‘What if I can’t?’ can become pretty overwhelming. The fact that she’s coming back speaks potentially to some pretty great resiliency as an athlete.”
    Oh hold the phone...is Dana copping a little backhand underboob feel on Amanda?
    Gene Ching
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  3. #198
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    A good read, This is the Fight everyone has been waiting for whether she pulls it off or not !

  4. #199
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    48 seconds

    Well that was quick.
    Gene Ching
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  5. #200
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    One of those "I want my money back! fights". LOL. Ronda won't get another crack at it, her day is done. Not a flattering mug shot of her clocking out, either. http://www.latimes.com/sports/boxing...htmlstory.html

  6. #201
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    I've said it before: You cannot have one foot in the fight business and the other foot in Hollywood. Each pursuit alone requires tons of talent, hard work and commitment. One or the other (or both) will suffer. Most of the time it's the fighting that suffers.

  7. #202
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    Rousey just was not in the fight frame of mind and she is ready to move on to other ventures in her life!
    I am sure someone told her to big up her strike/punch/hit game on the Holms bout but last night showed she is on her way to Hollywood. Her Furious 7 part was small and she has a small group behind her for less macho stuff and more Hollywood/ Sports Illistrated venues if she does not gain weight or get fat (a relative term here). A high waist/hip ratio (WHR)s not good for any sport as she seems to be prone to that in her stage of age!

  8. #203
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    Sad to see her go out like that.

    But my 'take away' was that Amanda has a massive right, especially when you let her wind up like that. BOOM!

    Moving on...
    Gene Ching
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  9. #204
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    Lioness is one of the few female MMArtists with true knockout power to complement her BJJ blackbelt. And she's probably the best female fighter at phase transition. Since she retired Tate, she's the most complete female fighter active. People need to stop talking about what Rousey has done to lose, and more about what Nunes does to brutalize her opponents, including Rousey.

  10. #205
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Well that was quick.
    Between this and Trump, I made 500 bucks, LOL !
    Too bad I can't pick the lottery numbers as easily.
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  11. #206
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    As any fighter will tell you, once you have been tagged hard, it is far easier for it to happen again.
    As such, leading with your face is not a good idea.
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  12. #207
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    Quote Originally Posted by sanjuro_ronin View Post
    As any fighter will tell you, once you have been tagged hard, it is far easier for it to happen again.
    As such, leading with your face is not a good idea.
    I was expecting Amanda Nunes to win, though not necessarily that quickly. It's happened time and again; a fighter comes up undefeated, totally dominating his/her opponents. He/she has an air of invincibility around him/her. Until he/she finally meets that one fighter who beats them, almost always by KO it seems. Then overnight the 'invincible' fighter suddenly becomes 'vincible'. Not to mention that Amanda's entire focus has been on fighting and winning in devastating fashion. She is NOT someone to make a comeback fight against.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 01-06-2017 at 01:30 PM.

  13. #208
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    Blindspot

    I watched a few episodes of Blindspot when it first started. Then I lost interest. Maybe I'll tune back in for this.

    Dueling cheek beauty marks?

    Blindspot taps Ronda Rousey for guest spot
    NATALIE ABRAMS@NATALIEABRAMS
    POSTED ON FEBRUARY 21, 2017 AT 2:00PM EST


    DAN STEINBERG/INVISION/AP; VIRGINIA SHERWOOD/NBC

    Ronda Rousey is bringing her particular set of skills to the small screen.

    The MMA fighter will guest-star in an upcoming episode of Blindspot, EW has learned.

    Rousey will play Devon Penberthy, a female prison inmate who grew up in a working-class family from the White Mountains of New Hampshire and is serving time for transporting weapons across state lines. She is a tough, athletic woman who knows how to fight and handle a weapon.

    Rousey, who will appear in an episode slated for early May, is no stranger to using her skills for entertainment, having roles in Furious 7, the Entourage movie, and on Drunk History.

    Blindspot airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. ET on NBC.
    I wonder when Ronda will become just another supporting actress like Gina.
    Gene Ching
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  14. #209
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    Ronda cameo on Blindspot tonight

    What’s on TV Wednesday: Ronda Rousey in ‘Blindspot’
    By KATHRYN SHATTUCKMAY 3, 2017


    Ronda Rousey in “Blindspot.” Credit David Giesbrecht/Warner Bros., via NBC

    BLINDSPOT 8 p.m. on NBC. Ronda Rousey, the mixed-martial-arts fighter, guest stars as Devon Penberthy, a weapons smuggler and Sandstorm asset with a wicked kick who is now in jail alongside Zapata (Audrey Esparza). In “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” at 9, James Waterston — visiting the franchise his father, Sam, helped make famous — plays a congressman whose appeal for help after being falsely accused of soliciting underage girls leads Benson and her crew to a sex-trafficking ring.
    Like I said above, I watched the first few eps of Blindspot. It started with some Chinatown gang thing, but I didn't keep up with it.
    Gene Ching
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  15. #210
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    Ronda Rousey on Her Engagement and Her House Being Robbed

    Gene Ching
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