March 8, 2018

BAMMA 34 – Final Fight Card & Broadcast Details

BAMMA can now confirm the BAMMA 34: Lohore Vs. Brazier Final Fightcard and broadcast times for Friday nights event that will take place at the SSE Arena, Wembley, London, UK on Friday 9th March 2018. Headlined by the BAMMA World Welterweight Title fight Alex ‘Da Kid’ Lohore (c) Vs. Terry ‘The Dominator’ Brazier (RDX Champion), the event is set to be broadcast on ITV4 and around the world LIVE. The BAMMA 34 Prelims will broadcast live and for free globally via the UNILAD Facebook Page from 7.00pm – 9.30pm The BAMMA 34: Lohore Vs. Brazier Main card will broadcast in the UK on ITV4 from 9 pm.  For international channels please check local listings.   Changes to the fight card that are listed below. With 3 huge World Title fights and 10 preliminary bouts featuring some of the UK and Europes finest MMA Talent, BAMMA 34: Lohore Vs. Brazier is set to be the most exciting night of fights in the nation’s capital.  Doors open from 5pmand limited tickets will be available on the night from the SSE Arena Box Office. BAMMA 34: Lohore Vs. Brazier takes place on Friday 9th March at the SSE Arena, Wembley, London. Tickets are on sale now from bamma.com     BAMMA 34: Lohore Vs. Brazier Fight Card SSE Arena, Wembley, London Friday 9th March 2018. MAIN CARD (ITV4 9.30pm) Main Event – Welterweight World Title Alex ‘Da Kid’ Lohore (c) Vs. Terry ‘The Dominator’ Brazier Co-Main Event – BAMMA World Interim Heavyweight Title ‘Chopper’ Chi Lewis-Parry Vs. Stav ‘Crazy Bear’ Economou BAMMA World Lightweight Title Tim Barnett Vs. Rhys ‘Skeletor’ McKee II PRELIMS (UNILAD Facebook 7pm) Middleweight Bout Kent ‘Hammer Horn’ Kauppinen Vs. Fabian ‘The Assassin’ Edwards Welterweight Bout Colin ‘The Freakshow’ Fletcher Vs. Walter ‘The Sniper’ Gahadza II Lightweight Bout Martyn ‘The Beast’ Harris Vs. Steve ‘The Spartan’ O’Keeffe Featherweight Bout Dominic Dillon Vs. Dominique ‘The Black Panther’ Wooding . Featherweight Bout Nathan ‘The Black’ Rose Vs. David ‘Demolition Man’ Khalsa Welterweight Bout Jahreau ‘The Nightmare’ Shepherd Vs. James ‘Monkey Boy’ Reedman Welterweight Bout Tommy ‘KO’ King Vs. Justin Burlinson Welterweight Bout John ‘No Mercy’ Nicholls Vs. Josh ‘Power’ Plant. Welterweight Bout Marcin ‘The Mauler’ Zywica Vs. Karl ‘Shifty’ Donaldson Catchweight 64kgs Bout Jonas ‘Shark’ Magard  Vs. Diego ‘The Barbarian’ Barbosa

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Tommy Morrison: What Could Have Been?

Boxing history is littered with stories of what might have been, the story of heavyweight Tommy Morrison is one such tale. Morrison turned pro in 1988 and very quickly built up a long winning record, fighting the usual blend of journeyman and past their prime fighters. The likes of Pinklon Thomas and James Tillis were effortlessly dispatched, the win against the former World heavyweight champion Thomas in 1991 improved his record to 26-0. In between rising through the heavyweight ranks, Morrison took a leading role in the much-maligned Rocky V, playing the protégé of Rocky Balboa in the latest instalment of the Rocky franchise. The role of Tommy Gunn in Rocky helped further promote the profile of Morrison. Nicknamed The Duke, Team Morrison claimed their man was a distant relative of John Wayne, he wasn’t but the claim did its job. Morrison had fast hands and a big left hook and was already being talked about as a serious contender in the heavyweight division. But there were problems behind the scenes, Morrison liked to party, he had a big entourage, and when you live life and not a fighter’s life, it was never going to end well. After the Thomas fight, Morrison fought Yuri Vaulin, and he had a real struggle in the opening 4 rounds, before finding the punches to finish the fight in the 5th. Two fights later in 1991 Morrison got his big opportunity against Ray Mercer for the WBO heavyweight championship of the world. Morrison fought well for 4 rounds, but he was starting to gas and Mercer had taken his best punches. Mercer finished it in the next round, it was a brutal finish and Morrison took far too many unanswered and unnecessary punches. After losing his unbeaten record, Morrison tried to rebuild his career and a series of wins including a win over Carl Williams, earned him another chance at the WBO title this time against George Foreman in 1993. Morrison boxed largely on the retreat, landing his combinations and not staying in the pocket long enough for Foreman to get his own heavy artillery off. Morrison got the decision and there was now talk of a multi-million fight with Lennox Lewis. Before the proposed Lewis fight, he took a fight with the lightly regarded Michael Bentt. In simple terms Morrison blew it, he hardly trained, thinking a win was a formality, and he got stopped in one round in a monumental upset. Morrison fought on and he got some more wins including a thriller with Donovan ‘Razor’ Ruddock, but a one-sided loss to Lennox Lewis when they finally did meet in 1995 and the Morrison story looked over. Signing with Don King and talk of a fight with Mike Tyson was his last chance but Morrison failed a pre-fight blood test in 1996 and his life took a dark turn. The lifestyle of Morrison had finally caught up with, he was diagnosed with the HIV virus and his life went on a downward spiral after that. Somehow he had two more fights over the years, and he still talked of being the world heavyweight champion again, but his career was effectively over. Stints in prison, DUI arrests and other legal problems, even denial he had HIV, formed the majority of his final years. In September 2013, it was announced that Morrison had died aged just 44. There is an excellent ESPN documentary on Morrison called Tommy currently on BT Sport. Morrison had talent but lacked the dedication to match, his lifestyle cost him his boxing career and so much more. Morrison finished with a 48-3-1 record.

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A Boxing Memory: Marvin Hagler v Sugar Ray Leonard

On April 6th, 1987, I had finished work and made my way to the local train station. A couple of stops later I was in Manchester, I found an Indian restaurant and sat there as a naïve 19-year-old intrigued that on a Monday night at just after seven in the evening, some of the punters were already worse for wear as a result of excessive amounts of alcohol. I paid my bill and set off on some uncharted expedition to try and find the Apollo Theatre. The purpose of my visit to Manchester was to see the Superfight on a closed circuit, Marvellous Marvin Hagler defending the World middleweight title against the returning Sugar Ray Leonard. 1987 was of course before the days of Sky and this was the only option to witness the fight live, ITV would show the fight on delay the following night. The hope was I could stay awake all night to see the fight. Leonard the former undisputed welterweight champion and for a brief time the WBA light middleweight king had only boxed once in 5 years, and that was an uninspiring win over the journeyman Kevin Howard in 1984, where Leonard suffered the first knockdown of his professional career. Leonard was given little hope and was a big underdog against the long-reigning Hagler. Leonard was considered too small and too inactive to give Hagler any real problems. Hagler had ripped the middleweight titles from Alan Minter on an unsavoury night in London when crowd trouble ruined Hagler’s moment, and he had held the title for 7 years and had made successful 12 defences, he hadn’t lost a fight since 1976. Two years earlier Hagler had destroyed Thomas Hearns in 3 sensational rounds and was coming off a hard-fought win over John Mugabi. Leonard was ringside for the Mugabi fight, and seeing Hagler struggle had convinced him that he could beat Hagler. Leonard and Hagler had met at social gatherings prior, and Hagler had confessed to Leonard privately that he was losing motivation and was thinking of retiring. Leonard sensed an opportunity and also that it was a case of now or never, he publically challenged the feared Hagler. It was a fight Hagler always badly wanted when Leonard was active in the early 80’s, but due to the numerous retirements of Leonard, it had never happened. Hagler had always resented the way he had been played and teased in the past by Leonard when the fight had been talked about before, Hagler made Leonard wait several months before accepting the fight, but eventually, he agreed to fight Leonard, but only after 109 days of making Leonard wait for his decision. Before the fight could be signed sealed and delivered the complex negotiations had to take place, Hagler received the higher end of a then-record purse of $23. But Hagler’s team made several vital concessions, he gave Leonard a 20-foot ring and agreed to a 12 round fight instead of a 15 rounder. In camp Leonard thought he could go toe to toe with Hagler and slash open his opponents fragile skin, but at a public workout close to the fight a sparring partner Quincy Taylor badly hurt Leonard, “He hit me so hard I was out cold” Leonard said, he hid it and the session was quickly wrapped up, but that convinced Leonard to change tactics for Hagler. Over 15,000 were packed in the Las Vegas outdoor arena to witness the fight and I took my seat hoping for a miracle that my man Leonard would somehow pull off the seismic shock. Leonard had told reporters pre-fight “The reason I will win is that you don’t think I can” very few believed him. Hagler perhaps by a combination of overconfidence, and a willingness to prove he could outbox the master boxer chose to fight orthodox and try to outbox Leonard. Despite the layoff, Leonard looked on point, fighting in flurries, landed crisp combinations and then getting out of range. Leonard’s corner had been instructed to shout out when there were 30 seconds left in the round, so Leonard could flurry and try to impress the judges into giving him the rounds. Some called it an illusion of victory, the judges giving Leonard rounds because he was doing better than was expected, or stealing the rounds with a few flashy combinations as the rounds close. But Hagler gave away most of the early rounds, he had Leonard badly hurt in the 5th when Leonard decided to stop moving, but Leonard came back brilliantly in the 6th. Hagler marched forward for the remainder of the bout, but couldn’t quite close the gap on the scorecards, giving away the early rounds cost him dearly. The 9th was the best round of the fight, Leonard was hurt and forced on the ropes but a series of at times breathtaking exchanges brought the Vegas crowd to its feet. Leonard looked exhausted during the last 3 rounds, but bravely he saw the bell out and still having his moments in the process. The crowd in the Manchester theatre all cheered convinced Leonard had won, and he had by virtue of a split decision. The judges had it 115-113, 118-110 for Leonard and the other judge had it 115-113 for Hagler. The scoring was highly controversial and still is to this day, Hagler remains convinced he was robbed. On a little side note regarding the scoring, Harry Gibbs was scheduled to be a judge for the fight but was removed because Hagler wanted a Mexican judge. Jo Jo Guerra the replacement for Gibbs scored it 118-110 for Leonard, Gibbs watching from home scored it for Hagler. Despite talk of a rematch Hagler never fought again, and it would have been a good time for Leonard to finally quit for good, to go out a winner on perhaps his most memorable night, he didn’t and came back again numerous times. It was a truly special night and the fight justified the

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Upcoming challenge ignites Bibiano Fernandes’ drive to extend reign as bantamweight king

ONE Bantamweight World Champion Bibiano “The Flash” Fernandes has certainly proven himself to be the world’s best bantamweight martial artist. Holding a black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and a five-time world champion in the discipline known as “The Gentle Art,” Fernandes showcased tremendous striking and grappling ability inside the ONE Championship cage for years. Fernandes has been the ONE Bantamweight World Champion since becoming the promotion’s official 65.8-kilogram kingpin in October 2013 when he outpointed Soo Chul Kim in a title unification bout. The 37-year-old native of Manaus, Brazil is currently riding high on an impressive 13-match winning streak and has not been beaten yet in ONE Championship since joining Asia’s premier martial arts organization in 2012. A gallant cage warrior who has not lost a single match in almost seven years, Fernandes has answered a promotional record seven title challenges with victory and is looking to extend his winning roll. Fernandes puts his ONE Bantamweight World Championship title on the line for the eighth time on 24 March as he collides with two-division world champion Martin “The Situ-Asian” Nguyen in the main event of ONE: IRON WILL, which takes place at the Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand. Known by the moniker “The Flash” due to his finesse on the mat and his savvy for swift submission triumphs. Fernandes has the opportunity to put the bar up for most successful title defences as a bantamweight and in ONE Championship history. However, it will not be a walk in the park for Fernandes as he shares the global stage with Nguyen, who has scored five knockouts in his last six outings. “When Chatri Sityodtong (Chairman and CEO of ONE Championship) called me and asked me what I thought about facing Martin Nguyen. I said it would be great. If that is what he wants, I will do it because that is my job. I have to defend my belt. It does not matter who it is. I am willing to face anyone,” he mentioned. “I have already beaten everybody in the weight class, so when Chatri said Nguyen wanted to come for my belt, I was open to the idea. Now, I do not have to face anybody that I have already beaten. I think this is a very good opportunity. It is not only good for me, but it is also good for the organization and good for the business,” Fernandes added. Although success has been synonymous with his name as he has been cleaning out the rest of the division, Fernandes does not still give a room for complacency against Nguyen. “I am a motivated guy. I do not need someone to motivate me to face him. I do not work like that. I am just here to do my job as a professional martial artist. It is not about motivation, but it is about the challenge,” he explained. “For me, Nguyen is a challenge, Let’s see how good he is, let’s see how tough he is, and let’s see how good his skills are. I want to see that,” Fernandes further stated. The 28-year-old Vietnamese-Australian dual titleholder is one of the most talked about martial artists in the world today after notching a scintillating knockout victory over the Philippines’ Eduard Folayang in November 2017 to become the first man in ONE Championship history to hold two world titles simultaneously in two different weight divisions. Nguyen seeks to make history again as he squares off with Fernandes, putting all the stops as he attempts to snare a third world title. “His main strength is that he is a one-punch guy. If you watch his matches, he has one-punch power. He waits to throw that punch,” Fernandes said of Nguyen. Despite coming into the scheduled five-round championship contest as the heavy favourite, many cage side observers believe that a tough test awaits Fernandes in the stand-up exchanges due to his opponent’s knockout power. However, Fernandes asserted that he has a fair share of knowledge in terms of delivering blows from a toe-to-toe stance. “I faced so many guys in my career with hard punches, and I handled those guys. He has good power, but I have good power as well. People think I am a Jiu-Jitsu guy, but if you look back at my matches, I have dropped people and I finish people. I do everything,” he warned. While his list of preys includes talented bantamweights like Toni Tauru, Kevin Belingon, Reece McLaren and Andrew Leone, Fernandes credits all of his accomplishment to hard work and in-depth preparation. “I train hard. Confidence in my training is more important. Training makes me win. I always say that. I am confident that I will bring a good fight. That is how I am. That is always what I do. I can bring the victory, for sure,” he shared. Fernandes makes sure that the title tilt versus Nguyen will live up to its hype and promises that he will push the action from bell to bell. “I push the fight. If he won’t fight, I’ll make him fight. It’s always the same for everybody,” he assured.  

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