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Pride: Shockwave '06
Saturday, December 30, 2006
Saitama Super Arena
Tokyo, Japan
By Stephen Quadros, “The
Fight Professor”
This is a good card but somehow it doesn’t have the spark of
some past Pride shows. A number of big name stars are missing, most notably
personalities, champions and proven draws like Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic,
Wanderlei Silva, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua and Hidehiko Yoshida are all absent for
one “reason” or another. But any show that features Fedor Emelianenko, along
with a rematch of two top-level heavyweights like Rodrigo Nogueira and Josh
Barnett, is one the worldwide audiences have to take seriously.
One note: There are at least three rematches here. I guess the UFC is not the
only company who sees this, the rematch, as a marketing strategy.
Fedor Emelianenko (Champion)
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Mark Hunt (Challenger) |
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Pride Heavyweight Championship Mark Hunt is
the kind of guy that people want to root for. He’s not a body builder,
not cocky, not a showman. What he is though is a natural, born with the
will and tenacity to scrap. As a matter of fact he may have so much God
given ability and courage that it is to his detriment as far as growth
as an athlete/fighter. If he truly feels that an opponent cannot hurt
him then he will have less motivation to train and improve. Therefore
his inherent mental and physical toughness can be a sort of pitfall.
I am sure that he realizes he is facing the best fighter in the game in
Fedor (pronounced fyord-door) Emelianenko. But Hunt is used to the
destruction derby of K-1 style kickboxing and may deep down inside not
have the kind of respect (a.k.a. fear) for the grappling game yet…or
ever, simply because it is a more painless solution/ending to a fight
than the bone crunching action of K-1. But machismo does not always
dictate the smartest gameplan.
So why is Hunt being given a title shot at Fedor? Well for one, he is
popular in Japan (he was a K-1 World Grand Prix champion a few years
back), two, he can hit like a truck and three he can withstand being hit
BY a truck and just stand there smiling (check his split-decision win
one year ago over Cro Cop for evidence of this last point).
But didn’t he lose his last fight by submission to Josh Barnett (July
2006)? Hmm…apparently that doesn’t matter in Pride’s order of
“qualifying” for a title match. Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic, who lost to
Fedor by decision on August 28, 2005, is the obvious challenger to the
throne after his 2006 tournament victories over Wanderlei Silva and
Barnett. But apparently Cro Cop is out with an injury. Barnett would
seem to be the logical next choice because he beat Hunt. Problem is Big
Josh lost to Mirko three times. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, who lost twice
to Emelianenko, is the other choice…but he lost his last match to
Barnett. So…Hunt drew the lucky straw and with a 5-2 record, coming off
a loss, he gets a title shot. Get it?
Fedor will submit Hunt, most likely but armbar. |
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Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira
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Josh Barnett |
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These boys are very familiar with each other…since they
JUST fought each other in the semi-finals of the Pride Absolute tournament
in September of this year. The decision was split and it landed in favor of
Barnett. And many people felt it should have gone the other way. Thus, I
guess, this relatively quick second meeting.
“Minotauro” (Nogueira) once ruled the division. Then along came a guy named
Fedor, who the Brazilian has been in the shadow of ever since (Rodrigo lost
two decisions to the Russian). But Big Nog wasn’t dead in the water. Not
even close: he decisioned Fabricio Werdum and Sergei Kharitonov and
submitted a guy named Mirko (Cro Cop).
“The Baby Face Assassin” (Barnett), in addition to beating Nogueira,
submitted both Mark Hunt and Fedor’s brother Aleksander. This forces the
question “Then why isn’t Josh fighting Fedor here?” If only we knew…
Barnett/Nogueira II will be a titanic battle, a fight that matters and one I
cannot pick. But the winner HAS to be next in line for a title shot. |
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Tatsuya Kawajiri
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Gilbert Melendez |
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Now THIS is an incredible match. Gilbert Menendez and
Tatsuya Kawajiri are both strong top ten competitors who have their eyes
on the number one spot. And I’m sure they both want a shot at current
Pride lightweight champion Takanori Gomi. Kawajiri already lost to Gomi
by submission (rear naked choke) a year ago but has wins over Vitor
“Shaolin” Ribeiro (TKO) and Yves Edwards (unanimous decision).
Gilbert “El Nino” Melendez has been on fire ever since his pro debut in
October 2002. Compiling an impressive undefeated 11-0 record Gilbert has
risen to the point where he needs a Kawajiri style match to deliver him
to that next level. His wrecking ball style has deposited many an
opponent to the canvas with over 60% of his matches ending by KO or TKO.
But Tatsuya has never been KO’d (or TKO’d).
Melendez is 24 and Kawajiri is 28 so age is not that much of a factor. I
feel that Gilbert with his spotless dossier will have the edge just
because of momentum but this might just go the distance. I pick Melendez
to win. |
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Takanori Gomi
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Mitsuhiro Ishida |
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And speaking of “The Fireball Kid”… Takanori Gomi has
been a marked man for a while and he narrowly escaped his rematch with
Marcus Aurelio with a split decision win to retain his title (previously
Aurelio submitted Gomi with a side choke in April 2006 in a non-title
fight).
And rest assured that Gomi’s opposition here, Mitsuhiro Ishida, brings a
serious threat. After all he decisioned Aurelio in June as well as lost
a decision to Vitor “Shaolin” Ribeiro. I mention the Ribeiro fight
because most people DO NOT go the distance with him and fall prey to his
beyond world-class sub skills.
This could end up being far less exciting than Gomi’s wars with Hayato
Sakurai and Kawajiri, simply because Ishida has that decision oriented
style. But I pick Gomi to be victorious…by decision. |
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Shinya Aoki
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Joachim Hansen |
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Shiya Aoki brings a very tenacious approach along with
an 8-2 record. But he is facing the “Hellboy” himself, Joachim Hansen.
Hansen is a methodical dissector who prefers the punch as his fight
ender. On the experience factor (Hansen is 14-4) Joachim may have an
edge, but Aoki will make things very difficult. |
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Kazuhiro Nakamura  |
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Mauricio"Shogun" Rua |
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Sheesh, these matches just don’t get any easier. Shogun
will get tested here, but so will Nakamura. And if the Brazilian is 100%
healthy he will crush Nakamura with his usual hailstorm of aggression.
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Hopefully this will not be the match that establishes
the great Yuki Kondo as a stepping-stone, or as they used to call “Big
Daddy” Gary Goodridge – a gatekeeper. Gono is hot right now and he needs
to be, because Kondo brings TONS of experience to the table, although
with 70 fights on his resume, Yuki may be hitting an early twilight to
his lengthy career.
A battle will ensue between these two veterans of the Pancrase
organization and the craftiest man will win. Because it is a rematch (Gono
lost when they met in 2001 when his corner threw in the towel) there is
a some anticipation and the spirited Gono will definitely want to erase
that bad memory in front of his home town crowd (Kondo is from Niigata). |
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Kiyoshi Tamura
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Ikuhisa Minowa |
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See, the UFC isn’t the only company who brings together
rematches. For entertainment value this all-Japan match of former
pro-wrestlers, turned “real” fighters, is explosive. They met three
years ago and Kiyoshi got the decision.
On paper Tamura is the more versatile and accomplished warrior, owning
victories over Renzo Gracie, Pat Miletich and Jeremy Horn. But, not that
it matters, Minowa is the king of the freak show match, with submission
wins against Kimo, Butterbean and the man himself, Giant Silva. And on a
serious note he submitted Gilbert Yvel, who did in fact pound Tamura
into a TKO loss.
But all these figures are irrelevant for the most part because this is
about “pride” (pun not intended). Kiyoshi Tamura is the more complete
fighter and if he is 100% healthy he will take this. |
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"Stephen Quadros,
"The Fight Professor", has worked as a host and play-by-play commentator for
some of the world's greatest fight organizations including: PRIDE, K-1 and Inoki
Bom Ba Ye. He currently balances his activities between acting, working as a
analyst/color commentator for the International Fight League (IFL) on Fox Sports
Net, choreographing fight scenes for feature films and playing drums for the
band, Sacred Cowboys. Visit Mr. Quadros on the world wide web at:
www.StephenQuadros.com"
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