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CBS TV & FEDOR DELIVER MMA ACTION

November 8th, 2009 By Matthew Grizzle

FEDOR’S AMERICAN DEBUT NOT AN EASY ONE

Chicago, IL- Fedor Emelianenko, St. Petersburg, Russia (31-1, 8 KOs, 16 SUBs) TKO 2 Brett Rogers, St. Paul, MN (10-1, 9 KOs, 1 SUB)-The U.S. public got their first taste of Fedor Saturday night as he was able to overcome the size, strength and age disparities to hand Brett Rogers his first loss by knocking him out in the second round. Emelianenko had to survive a rough start and was battered up pretty good in the first round by the heavy hands of Rogers.

Both men had their moments in the first and for those who don’t know Fedor, probably felt like he might lose his major American debut. However, we have seen Fedor in vulnerable positions before, and part of his genius is his ability to adapt and survive-and that he did. In round two, Fedor unloaded a perfectly timed right hand that sent his massive foe crashing to the canvas.

A couple of follow up punches later and referee John McCarthy stepped in to save Rogers from further punishment. Honestly, as good as Rogers is, I was less concerned about him and more concerned about the cage. Fedor had never fought in a cage before, having always fought in organizations that used a standard ring. I was worried he may have trouble adapting to the new environment, and he did appear to have issues when pressed up against the cage. However, he used his savvy to overcome this hurdle and leave the cage for the first time as the victor.

OTHER STRIKEFORCE RESULTS

Jake Shields, San Francisco, CA (24-4-1, 3 KOs, 10 SUBs) UD 5 Jason Miller, Las Vegas, NV (22-7, 4 KOs, 13 SUBs)-Shields had to work really hard for this one! An Excellent display of skill by both men. Gegard Mousasi, The Netherlands by way of Armenia (27-2-1, 16 KOs, 9 SUBs) TKO 2 Rameau Thierry Sokoudjou, San Diego, CA by way of Cameroon (7-5, 6 KOs) Sokoudjou did better than expected and used solid Judo throws and sweeps to keep the fight competitive, but Mousasi stayed poised and overcame his foe impressively. Fabricio Werdum, Curitiba, Brazil (13-4-1, 4 KOs, 7 SUBs) UD 3 Antonio Silva, Brasilia, Brazil (13-2, 9 KOs, 3 SUBs)-Werdum survived the early onslaught and came back to win rounds two and three to take the decision-good fight by both men.

Matthew Grizzle

COMMENTS

  1. as I was watching it it seemed a touch too quick a stoppage…though only by a couple of seconds, assuming rogers didn’t pull out of it…but rogers didn’t protest and he appeared to be rolling in defeat…so good job on big john’s part I guess…I wonder how much these guys make compared to the klitchkos or if they think of trying to cross-over…

    Bozo on November 8th, 2009 at 5:31 PM
  2. Very good card and better than many UFC PPV shows. I was surprised at Rogers submission defense. And I’ve never seen Rogers fight that way, he was tenative and backing up.

    Jerome on November 8th, 2009 at 10:24 PM
  3. Rogers just like Arreola did not give himself the best chance to win. I fully expected Fedor and Vitali to win those bouts, but if either Rodgers or Arreola had used their strengths (aggressiveness and punching power) they may have pulled off an upset? Both guys have knockout power, but their strategy to not employ it “balls to the wall” cost them any chance of winning. I know they are concerned about running out of gas and getting stopped, but they both got stopped anyway. They didn’t do what made them successful to that point and it cost them any chance of winning. I fault their corners for not having a strategy in place to maximze their fighters strengths, although sometimes your guy just doesn’t listen or perform at gametime. I know from working with fighters, it’s not always the physical aspect but the mental aspect where you come up short. “The Best Laid Plans” They should both do better the next time if they can learn from their mistakes. LOL

    Jack Freney on November 9th, 2009 at 1:03 PM

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