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Thread: How will Cung Le do in the Twilight of his career?

  1. #46
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    Off to Italy

    Cung Le Italy tour 2014


    Il grandissimo Cung Le, campione mondiale di Sanda, campione di MMA e attuale fighter UFC, sarà per la prima volta in ITALIA dal 19 al 21 Dicembre 2014 in varie città d'Italia, fra cui Roma Pescara, Cassino, per tutti i suoi fan di Sanda e MMA. Si terranno più stage di Sanda e Stage di MMA. Si consiglia una prenotazione anticipata per non rischiare di ultimare i posti!!

    The great Cung Le, world champion in Sanda, MMA champion and current UFC fighter, will be for the first time in ITALY 19 to 21 December 2014,in several Italian cities, including Rome, Pescara, Cassino, for all its Sanda and MMA fans. He will take more seminars for Sanda and for MMA. We recommend an early reservation to avoid the risk of completing the places !!
    I heard he'll do some exhibition fights.


    From www.uikt.it
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  2. #47
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    Too bad I've got so much on my plate right now...

    ...it would have been amusing to attend this press conference.

    Class-action lawsuit against UFC to be formally announced at press conference tomorrow (Tuesday, December 16)
    By Brent Brookhouse @brentbrookhouse on Dec 15 2014, 6:24p


    Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

    A press conference will be held to formally announce the class-action lawsuit against the UFC by fighters tomorrow afternoon in California.

    The previously reported class-action lawsuit to be filed against the UFC by fighters -- originally broken here at Bloody Elbow -- will be formally announced tomorrow afternoon.

    The information was released via an e-mail sent out to select media members earlier today.

    The announcement will be made at a press conference in San Jose tomorrow afternoon at 1 p.m. PT (4 p.m. ET). There was little by way of detail given in the e-mail beyond "A news conference to announce legal action by MMA professionals against the UFC. Plaintiffs’ names, news release and other details to be provided during the news conference. "

    It isn't likely that all plaintiff names will be released at the press conference, but details on some of the involved fighters will be released as will other details.

    Remember, you can read our original report on some of the details and initial reaction here.

    And we will have much, much more tomorrow and in the coming days.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  3. #48
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    The lawsuit

    I'm taking this topic up over here: UFC-lawsuits
    Gene Ching
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  4. #49
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    The wrath of Cung

    Dana White: UFC Abandons Plans for Out-of-Competition Drug Testing
    By Jeremy Botter , MMA Lead Writer
    Jan 1, 2015


    Alex Trautwig/Getty Images

    LAS VEGAS — The Ultimate Fighting Champion has abandoned the plans it once had for an in-house drug testing program that would see all of its contracted fighters tested randomly year-round.

    UFC president Dana White revealed the news during a media session attended by Bleacher Report on Thursday afternoon at the MGM Grand.

    White said that the UFC's experience with Cung Le's failed drug test after his loss to Michael Bisping in China was the impetus for recalling the program. White said Le was initially suspended for being "18 times the limit" and that the fighter agreed to a nine-month suspension.

    But after the suspension was agreed, UFC CEO Lorenzo Fertitta decided to add an additional three months to the suspension, feeling that nine months was not long enough.

    "When we went back to them with 12 months, that's when they fought it," White said.

    The snafu led to Le's suspension being overturned entirely. He is now part of a class-action lawsuit pending against the promotion.

    White said the experience made him realize the UFC cannot oversee its own program.

    "Our legal team completed screwed that up. We f----d it up, and we will f--k it up again. That's what the commission is there for," he said.

    White continued by saying that while they have come to the realization that the promotion cannot oversee its own drug testing program, Zuffa will instead give more money to athletic commissions to help fund additional testing.

    "What we'll do is we'll help fund it, so they can do more drug testing," he said. "Our legal department screwed that whole thing up. We've got no business handling the regulation."

    White also confirmed that he believed Le's participation in the class-action lawsuit stems directly from the botched test results.
    That last sentence is pretty obvious...
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
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  5. #50

    Retires From MMA

    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    This is 100% TCMA principle. It may be used in non-TCMA also. Since I did learn it from TCMA, I have to say it's TCMA principle.
    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    We should not use "TCMA is more than combat" as excuse for not "evolving".

    You can have Kung Fu in cooking, it really has nothing to do with fighting!

  6. #51
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    ****, Kellen beat me to the punch by half an hour

    But I'll c&p the text because I'm an archivist that way here (besides I already c-ed it)

    UFC vet, former Strikeforce champ Cung Le retires from MMA
    By: Steven Marrocco January 20, 2015 3:15 pm


    Cung Le

    After several months of weighing his options, middleweight Cung Le has decided to hang up his MMA gloves.

    Le’s longtime manager, Gary Ibarra, told MMAjunkie that the 42-year-old fighter’s retirement extends only to the cage, leaving open the possibility of a return to kickboxing, where he competed prior to his MMA debut in 2006 under the now-defunct Strikeforce banner.

    However, Le said in a prepared statement (available below) that he intends to focus on his acting career, which has led him to several major roles as an actor and fight choreographer in action movies.

    Several weeks ago, Ibarra said Le sent a letter to the UFC announcing his retirement. Prior to that, he was considered part of the promotion’s active roster.

    Typically, the UFC freezes a fighter’s contract upon retirement, so Le would be obligated to the industry-leader should he change his mind about competing in MMA.

    Le (9-3 MMA, 2-2 UFC) retires with a 9-3 record, which included a stint as the Strikeforce middleweight champion. He most recently fought this past August at UFC Fight Night 48, where he suffered a fourth-round TKO loss to Michael Bisping. One month later, the UFC announced he tested positive for elevated levels of human growth hormone and suspended him first for nine months. Then, Le’s suspension was extended to 12 months with the promotion citing an error on the term’s length.

    In a statement, Le denied any used of performance-enhancing drugs and said he was “completely surprised” by the UFC’s findings. He questioned the testing methods utilized by the promotion.

    After questions were subsequently raised about the testing protocols used for UFC Fight Night 48, which the UFC self-regulated in Macau, as well as Le’s ability to contest the findings against him, the promotion announced it would allow the fighter to have his case heard by a third-party arbitrator. Then, after receiving medical advice from an unknown party, it concluded that the test results were inconclusive and rescinded his suspension.

    Le subsequently said he no longer wished to fight for the UFC and contemplated retirement. After being cleared of wrongdoing, Le called the UFC to task for its handling of his case.

    “While I feel vindicated in this matter, the UFC’s press release does little in the way of an apology of which I believe I am rightly owed after unfairly enduring the public’s scrutiny,” Le wrote.

    Le subsequently requested his UFC release but was denied. In an interview, he said if he were to return to active MMA competition, it would be with his his former promoter, current Bellator MMA President Scott Coker, who ran Strikeforce before its acquisition by UFC parent company Zuffa in 2011.

    This past month, Le was named as a plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against the industry-leader alleging it engaged in anti-competitive business practices. He was the only active UFC fighter attached to the litigation, which the promotion has promised to vigorously contest.

    For more on the UFC’s upcoming schedule, check out the UFC Rumors section of the site.

    * * * *

    Le’s statement:

    After several months of thought and discussion with my wife and family we realize our future includes many things, but active competition in mixed martial arts is no longer one of them therefore I am officially announcing my retirement from active competition. Fighting will never be far from my heart and martial arts will always continue to be a part of my daily life. I have thoroughly enjoyed the career that I have been blessed with due in large part to all my fans and the many people who have helped me on my journey.

    I want to personally thank my wife, Suzanne, my three Little Ninjas, my Mother, Sister and the rest of my incredible family for their support, prayers and inspiration. I’d like to take this opportunity to personally thank Scott Coker for his long-time friendship and support of my career, Gary Ibarra for your tenacity, to Khoa Do for everything, Scott Sheeley, you know, and to Jane Estioko, thank you for your loyalty. I’d also like to thank all of my past and present USH Team Family members, I am grateful for every round.

    I’d like to recognize the UFC for the opportunity they have provided me, the sport of mixed martial arts, and more importantly the fans who love it, you will never be far from my heart. It has truly been my honor and my privilege to entertain you.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  7. #52
    I admit, I only posted it to try to beat you, I thought about copying and pasting it, but said, nah, if I don't Gene will anway.
    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    This is 100% TCMA principle. It may be used in non-TCMA also. Since I did learn it from TCMA, I have to say it's TCMA principle.
    Quote Originally Posted by YouKnowWho View Post
    We should not use "TCMA is more than combat" as excuse for not "evolving".

    You can have Kung Fu in cooking, it really has nothing to do with fighting!

  8. #53
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    I bow to your superior posting fu today....

    ...or maybe, as this is the MMA forum, I tap.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  9. #54
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    UFC's official statement on Cung's retirement

    How diplomatic.

    Cung Le Retires at 42
    By Thomas Gerbasi January 20, 2015



    The official record will only show four UFC bouts from 2011 to 2014, but the impact Cung Le had on fight fans over that period of time goes far beyond that, and they will certainly remember the middleweight action hero fondly in the future as he enjoys a retirement that he announced Tuesday.

    “After several months of thought and discussion with my wife and family we realize our future includes many things, but active competition in mixed martial arts is no longer one of them therefore I am officially announcing my retirement from active competition,” the 42-year-old Le wrote in a statement.

    Said UFC Chairman and CEO Lorenzo Fertitta, “Cung Le was a great ambassador of the sport for us in Asia and one of the most exciting middleweights to step foot in the Octagon. We wish him well in his retirement and future endeavors.”

    “Cung Le was awesome and would take any fight,” UFC President Dana White added. “He was such a huge piece of the success of The Ultimate Fighter China. I loved working with him and wish him well in the future.”

    Le's journey began on May 25, 1972 in Saigon. Three years later, in 1975, Le and his mother left the war-torn nation and started fresh in the United States. The transition wasn’t particularly easy on the youngster, as he noted in a 2003 interview.

    “I think the biggest adjustment was learning the language,” Le told me. “I was a skinny kid and when we first came over, everyone was mad at what happened in Vietnam so it wasn’t a great childhood growing up and being part of being with the regular kids. I was always being put down and I was just trying to be like every other kid.”

    Eventually, Le would find his niche in the wrestling room, where he won several titles and accolades.

    “I was really competitive in high school and college,” he said. “I was a high school and college All-American and after I was done with wrestling in junior college I had to help the family. My mom had a travel agency and it wasn’t doing too good so I had to back off from going full time at school or going to a University with a wrestling program just to help out the family. After about six months without any contact, I said, ‘since I can’t wrestle at a university, I’ll at least get into martial arts so there’s some kind of contact.’ I got into martial arts at the end of ’92 and I did some local tournaments. But I didn’t get serious about training until 93. In 94, I went on to the amateur San Shou circuit and just dominated.”

    The pro kickboxing circuit followed, with Le becoming one of the most exciting and successful fighters in that realm, compiling a 17-0 record with 12 knockouts. Needless to say, with his striking prowess – especially with his trademark scissor kick – and his wrestling background, Le was a natural for mixed martial arts, and after some convincing, he put the four-ounce gloves on for the first time in March of 2006, knocking out Mike Altman in a single round.

    Le became a star almost instantly in the San Jose-based Strikeforce promotion based in his adopted hometown on San Jose, California, winning six of seven bouts over the likes of Frank Shamrock, Jason Von Flue, Tony Fryklund and Scott Smith. Le also picked up the Strikeforce middleweight title in 2008, but in 2011, he began his quest for UFC gold, and he didn’t get an easy mark in his Octagon debut at UFC 139, as he squared off with former PRIDE great Wanderlei Silva.

    What resulted was a war that won Fight of the Night honors along with the headlining matchup between Dan Henderson and Mauricio “Shogun” Rua, a bout considered to be one of the greatest battles of all-time. And though Le lost to Silva via second-round TKO, he had made quite an entrance into the UFC. That was little consolation to such a competitor though.

    “For me, it’s really hard to lose,” Le said in 2012. “It hurt just as much as when I lost the first time against Scott Smith, but it happens, and you can’t change it, so you’ve just gotta take from it. What I took from it was that I definitely know what I’m made of, because even though when I felt my nose get broken, I thought ‘I’ve got a good nose doctor and I can continue.’ If the round would have ended and if they would have let it continue, I would have gone back to my corner and said I’m gonna finish it. I definitely would not want to stop, and I would go out on my shield or have one of the greatest comebacks. It’s not the first time I broke my nose. My second MMA fight was the first time I broke my nose, and actually the bone popped out, but I finished the fight and ended up knocking the guy out. So it is what it is, I learned from it, and it’s definitely character building.”

    Le bounced back in July of 2012, earning his first UFC victory with a decision win over Patrick Cote. Four months later he added another clip to his highlight reel with a first round knockout of former middleweight champion Rich Franklin in the UFC’s first visit to China. It was an important time for Le, as he became an ambassador of the sport in Asia, and someone pivotal in the filming of the first season of The Ultimate Fighter. It wasn’t easy to expose new fans to the sport, but with Le’s background not just as a martial artist but as an action film star, it made the transition a bit smoother.

    “Before I fought Rich (Franklin), we went on the press tour, and our first stop was Hong Kong,” Le recalled. “Ninety percent of the questions were ‘how was it to do this amazing fight scene with Donnie Yen.’ (Laughs) I had to push everyone to talk about the fight with me and Rich instead of talking about the movies I’m doing in Asia. I was popular in Asia more from what I did in that movie (Bodyguards and Assassins) with Donnie Yen, but then when people put one and one together, they’re like ‘hey, you’re fighting too?’”

    Returning to the Octagon in August of 2014, Le gave a courageous effort before losing to Michael Bisping, and while martial arts will remain a part of his life, he decided that his active career in MMA is now something for the history books.

    “Fighting will never be far from my heart and martial arts will always continue to be a part of my daily life,” Le wrote in Tuesday’s statement. “I have thoroughly enjoyed the career that I have been blessed with due in large part to all my fans and the many people who have helped me on my journey.

    “I want to personally thank my wife, Suzanne, my three Little Ninjas, my Mother, Sister and the rest of my incredible family for their support, prayers and inspiration. I’d like to take this opportunity to personally thank Scott Coker for his long-time friendship and support of my career, Gary Ibarra for your tenacity, to Khoa Do for everything, Scott Sheeley, you know, and to Jane Estioko, thank you for your loyalty. I’d also like to thank all of my past and present USH Team Family members, I am grateful for every round.

    “I'd like to recognize the UFC for the opportunity they have provided me, the sport of mixed martial arts, and more importantly the fans who love it, you will never be far from my heart. It has truly been my honor and my privilege to entertain you.”

    Le retires from MMA with a 9-3 record.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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