Category: News

  • Premier Boxing Championships on NBC report – James DeGale vs. Andre Dirrell as British gold medalist goes for world title

    By Jeremy Wall

    James DeGale defeated Andre Dirrell by unanimous decision on Saturday, May 23rd to become the first British boxer to win both an Olympic gold medal and a major world championship, in this case the vacant IBF Super World Middleweight title (168 pounds). The fight took place at Agganis Arena in Boston and aired in the late afternoon as the main event of a Premier Boxing Champions broadcast on NBC. Scores were 114-112, 117-109, and 114-112.

    “I am world champ. I made history – the first British Olympic gold medalist to become world champion,” DeGale told Skysports.com. “I am back now and injury free. I will take on any super-middleweight in the world. I am hard to beat when I am at my best.”

    DeGale (21-1, 14 KOs) went into the fight having won ten fights in a row. The only loss of his career was by majority decision to George Groves in May 2011 in a fight that one judge scored 115-115 and the other two scored 115-114 for Groves. Dirrell (24-2, 16 KOs), on the other hand, went into the bout riding a six-fight winning streak. Before facing DeGale, the only loss of Dirrell’s career was by split-decision to Carl Froch in October 2009. Both DeGale and Dirrell were making their debut for Al Haymon’s PBC and it was also DeGale’s debut in the United States. Both also prefer fighting southpaw, although DeGale switched between stances late in the fight.

    It was a close fight. Dirrell began solid in the first round and was also winning the second round when DeGale scored a flash knockdown with a left hook. Dirrell immediately got back up, but DeGale dropped him again with another hook. It was a strange round because Dirrell was winning the round until he got knocked down twice. Dirrell’s poor defense, though, allowed DeGale to get ahead on the scorecards early in the fight.

    Degale, however, faded somewhat as the fight went on. Dirrell never had DeGale in any real danger in the later rounds, but appeared to win a serious of close rounds late in the match. DeGale was cut above his right eye about halfway through the bout from big left hands by Dirrell.

    There were a number of close rounds late in the bout that could have gone either way, which explains how two judges saw the fight as 114-112 for DeGale, but another saw it as 117-109. If DeGale hadn’t scored those two knockdowns in the second, though, the result may have been completely different as the rest of the fight was much closer.

    “They said I ran from Carl Froch and they took that fight from me. He ran tonight and they gave it to him. All he did was run, no way I lost this fight,” said Dirrell.

    The win establishes DeGale as one of the best boxers at 168 pounds. Of the four major boxing titles, PBC now has control over two as DeGale holds the IBF version and Badou Jack holds the WBC version, which he won by defeating Dirrell’s brother Anthony on a PBC show in April.

    It was recently announced that terms have been reached for Jack to defend his belt against George Groves, one of Britain’s top boxers. The fight will take place in the US, likely as part of a PBC broadcast. The agreement between both sides prevented a purse bid from happening on Friday, which likely would have been won by PBC since Haymon (through intermediary promotions) uses his hedge fund money to win every purse bid by a wide margin.

    The other super middleweight champions are Art Abraham (WBO), Fedor Chudinov (WBA regular), and Andre Ward (WBA super). Abraham defends his title against Robert Stieglitz in Germany on July 18th. Ward is facing Paul Smith in a non-title bout on June 20th as part of a time buy on BET by Jay Z’s boxing promotion Roc Nation. Chudinov just won the vacant WBA regular title against Felix Sturm in Germany on May 9th.

    The biggest names that DeGale could face at super middleweight are either Carl Froch or Andre Ward and neither fight is likely to happen. Froch is talking about retiring, or possibly fighting Gennady Golovkin and then retiring. He already holds a win over Dirrell.  Ward, on the other hand, is promoted by Jay Z, who is a rival to Haymon’s PBC.

    The winner of Jack-Groves is a possible opponent for DeGale. This would be especially interesting if Jack won because both Jack and DeGale are under contract to Haymon (Groves isn’t) and that would give Haymon two of the five major champions at super middleweight. There has been a rumour since PBC began that the promotion is looking to create its own titles, much in the same way as the UFC. If PBC did a champion versus champion fight with Jack and DeGale, it would be interesting to see if they used that fight as a springboard to create their own promotional titles.

    PBC is careful on all of its broadcasts not to refer to the alphabet name of whatever belt is being fought for. For instance, commentator Kenny Rice only referred to DeGale as the new Super Middleweight champion, rather than specifying that he was the IBF champion. Ring announcer Michael C. Williams also announced DeGale as the new Super Middleweight champion and never specified which alphabet title DeGale won. PBC has been vague about these titles since the promotion began in March.

    I personally like the idea of one major boxing promotion handling its own titles. The UFC title situation isn’t perfect, but it is significantly less confusing than the title situation in boxing. To paraphrase John L. Sullivan, most boxing titles aren’t worth hanging around the neck of a goddam dog. Boxing has way too many titles in way too many weight divisions, including things like Super titles, Diamond titles, Silver titles, and so on. Having too many confusing titles and no real linear champions in most weight divisions means that these titles are worthless in the eyes of the casual fan, which is the opposite of what world titles are meant to accomplish.

    The fight between Dirrell and DeGale was promoted by Warriors Boxing promoter Leon Margules on behalf of Al Haymon’s PBC. On March 10th Margules won the purse bid for the fight, using Haymon’s hedge fund money to outbid DeGale’s promoter Eddie Hearn of Matchroom Boxing. If Hearn had won then the fight likely would have taken place in Britain. DeGale and Dirrell each received $1.55 million.

    The NBC broadcast of PBC also featured the first two rounds of a bout between Edwin Rodriguez (26-1, 17 KOs) and Craig Baker (16-1, 12 KOs). Neither round was particularly exciting. The NBC broadcast ended at 6pm ET sharp and the bout between Rodriguez, 30, and Baker, 31, continued on NBC Sports Network. Rodriguez was the hometown favourite. Rodriguez stopped Baker in the third round. The stoppage was premature, as Rodriguez had Baker against the ropes and was pummeling him, but Baker still seemed in the fight when the referee stepped in and called the match.

    PBC made changes to the broadcast team for the third show. Many of the big name sports broadcasters from the first two PBC shows on NBC weren’t back, probably because this was an afternoon show and the other two PBC shows on NBC were in prime time. Kenny Rice of Inside MMA provided play-by-play. Rice had previously worked as a backstage interviewer on the first two PBC shows on NBC. He has also worked as a play-by-play broadcaster for WSOF on NBC Sports Network. Rice is often criticized for his work on Inside MMA, but he does a good job as a play-by-play man and did well on this show. Sugar Ray Leonard was back as a colour commentator and the third man was BJ Flores.

    It was PBC’s third broadcast on NBC, but the first on NBC that aired on a Saturday afternoon rather than Saturday night. The show started at 4:30pm ET and ran until 6. At that point, the bout between Rodriguez and Baker continued on NBC Sports Network. It was a strange time slot, not just the late afternoon start, but also airing at half past the hour rather than at the top of the hour.

    This was only PBC’s second broadcast after the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight on May 2nd. The first PBC broadcaster after the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight was the Figueora-Burns match on May 9th, which was an afternoon broadcast on CBS. That means PBC has yet to air a show in prime time since the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight. PBC probably dropped the ball, because this show took place 21 days after Mayweather-Pacquiao. PBC should have had a prime time broadcast within a week of Mayweather-Pacquiao to take advantage of the short amount of time that boxing had a higher profile in mainstream media.

    HBO has aired a couple of fights since Mayweather-Pacquiao that have drawn well. Canelo Alvarez’s fight against James Kirkland a week after Mayweather-Pacquiao drew 2.146 million viewers on average, the highest rated fight on HBO since 2006. The week after, HBO drew 1.338 million viewers on average for Gennady Golovkin putting on drama show against Willie Monroe Jr. That was the third highest rated fight on HBO of the year, behind the Wladimir Klitschko heavyweight title defense that took place at Madison Square Garden a week before Mayweather-Pacquiao.

    PBC’s third broadcast on NBC was an important show to determine the longevity of ratings for PBC on network television. The first PBC show on NBC drew 3.4 million viewers on average in March, peaking at 4.2 million. The second PBC show on NBC drew 2.9 million viewers on average, peaking at 3.4 million. The second show had a drop in average viewership of approximately 15-percent.

    The afternoon timeslot prevented PBC from going up against the prelims for UFC 187 on Fox Sports 1, as well as the UFC pay per view broadcast. The show was over well before UFC began. Also, Saturday night is a major night for both the NHL and NBA playoffs, as well as MLB.

    The change in time slot, however, will make it difficult to compare the ratings for this show with the ratings for the two previous PBC shows on NBC. A better comparison might be the ratings PBC drew for its two Saturday afternoon shows on CBS. The debut of PBC on CBS drew 1.4 million viewers on average for a 1.0 rating. The second PBC show on CBS drew 1.3 million viewers on average for a 0.9 rating, down 8-percent from the debut.

    PBC has also run two shows on Spike on Friday nights. The first drew 869,000 viewers on average and the second drew 569,000 viewers on average. That was a 35-percent drop in viewership.

    If I were to guess as to why the viewership on Spike dropped more sharply than the viewership on NBC or CBS, I would say that it is because Spike‘s audience consists of males 18-34 in higher concentration than either NBC or CBS, the latter two of which probably have a higher cross-section of different people in their respective audiences. Boxing viewership skews older, so maintaining ratings with males 18-34 is going to be much harder for PBC and the sharp decline in ratings on Spike is an example of that. Getting young men to watch boxing is one of the major obstacles PBC has to overcome in order to be successful because males 18-34 are highly coveted by advertisers because that demographic has such high disposable income. PBC needs to make money by selling ad space and the more males 18-34 that watch PBC, the more money PBC can make off ads.

    There will be a major decline in ratings from the second PBC show on NBC compared to the third show that aired this past weekend because of the change in timeslot. A show that airs Saturday night is obviously going to draw better ratings than a show that airs Saturday afternoon. The real comparison will be whether this Saturday’s show sees a substantial drop from the ratings PBC has garnered for their two Saturday afternoon shows on CBS. Another comparison would be the 0.8 rating that NBC average for boxing that aired on Saturday afternoons from 2012 to 2014. So, this weekend’s show should see an average viewership of about 1.3 million people, or so. Anything significantly under that number would be a failure.

    A few major television executives have recently been interviewed in regards to Haymon’s promotion of PBC. In a private media conference, Sean McManus, Chairman of CBS Sports, and Mark Lazarus, Chairman of NBC Sports, were asked about the success of PBC by Richard Sandomir of The New York Times.

    “I think Al looks at what’s happened with UFC and the explosive growth in that product and says to himself, ‘Why can’t I create that kind of excitement around the boxing world? Why can’t I take unknown boxers, put them on NBC and CBS and Spike and as many networks as I possibly can, and why can’t I create the kind of stars that boxing used to see in the 70s and 80s’,” said McManus. “The other obstacle I think he’s got to overcome is that the advertising support for boxing has been pretty weak throughout the years and I think he’s got to sell his case to the advertising community that the demographics are good and that the sale makes sense because the way it’s now being structured to a large extent on advertiser supported networks he’s counting on that as being the major part of his revenue and I think that’s one of the obstacles he has to overcome.”

    “The roadblock he’s got to come over is building some names and getting them to fight regularly to continue to heighten their exposure and fan appeal,” said Lazarus. “For us, being involved with it, as well as Sean is, I admire his courage and business planning. In success, it’s going to be good for the sport and good for sports in general.”

    Stephen Espinoza of Showtime was also recently interviewed by R. Thomas Umstead of Multichannel News in regards to the future of Floyd Mayweather and the possibility of a rematch between Mayweather and Pacquiao.

    “It far exceeded our expectations, even what we were expecting late in the week. We were monitoring pre-buys all week but there was nothing in the ballpark to compare it to … they were so high we couldn’t use it to extrapolate any numbers. We were largely flying blind,” Espinoza said in regards to the buy rate for Mayweather-Pacquiao.

    “One of the elements that made it hard to predict was that we did message so heavily on early buying by the viewer to avoid technical difficulties, so we weren’t sure how much of the early activity was in response to that messaging and how much was genuine overall excitement and enthusiasm for the fight,” Espinoza continued. “I guess our first real indication that there was a huge expansion of the audience was during the telecast itself when we starting getting some reports that some operators were experiencing technical difficulties processing the huge volume of orders that were coming in on Saturday evening. Ultimately we were able to buy some time by stalling the main event and that hopefully that allowed everything to get cleared up in time for a successful main event telecast.”

    Espinoza continued by discussing the future of boxing’s popularity in mainstream media. “What it means for the fight and the sport is sort of a new measuring stick for mainstream appeal of boxing. It’s been decades since the sport has received this level of attention and maybe not even then,” he said. “To be able to capture the imagination and attention of the mainstream audience in such a short period of time on a very, very busy sports weekend speaks volumes about the continued appeal of this sport. Having said that, not every fight is going to be Mayweather/Pacquiao, but for the right matchups there’s still tremendous appeal and demand for boxing.

    Regarding Mayweather’s next fight in September, Espinoza said “Floyd has continued to tell us that he intends to fight Sept. 12 and that it will be the last fight of his career. So we are beginning the very preliminary preparations for exactly that. We will be getting into discussions about an opponent for him very quickly. We will look to ride the momentum of this event and capitalize on the fact that Floyd has now distinguished himself as the fighter of his era.”

    Regarding a rematch between Mayweather and Pacquiao, Espinoza sounded more optimistic about its possibility compared with Mayweather in the latter’s interview with Showtime a week after the fight took place. “I think we have to remain open to it,” said Espinoza. “There’s a lot of chatter on both sides about the possibility – once Manny successfully recovers from [shoulder] surgery, if there a demand and if Floyd is still active or would consider coming back to being active then it would be a topic of conversation. But it will be driven by demand.”

    Next week, PBC returns to Spike with Amir Khan versus Chris Algieri on Friday night from New York. If Khan gets past Algieri (likely to happen), then he is rumoured to be on the short list of possible opponents for Mayweather in September.

    On June 6th, Miguel Cotto faces Daniel Geale on HBO in New York in a fight that should setup Cotto vs Canelo Alvarez later this year on pay per view. PBC also has another Saturday afternoon show on June 6th in Carson, CA, with Robert Guerrero vs Aron Martinez. Guerrero is coming off a loss to Keith Thurman in the debut of PBC back in March.

    June 12h PBC is back on Spike again with Erislandy Lara versus Delvin Rodriguez for the WBA regular Junior Middleweight title. June 13th HBO has Nicholas Walters versus Miguel Marriaga for the WBA Featherweight title in New York and the same night Showtime has Deontay Wilder defending the WBC Heavyweight title against Eric Molina. Wilder is a Haymon fighter and is super charismatic and they are making a mistake by putting him on premium cable instead of network TV, although maybe Wilder has a contract with Showtime and they have to do it that way.

    On June 20th PBC returns to prime time on NBC with Adrian Broner versus Shawn Porter. That will be the most important PBC show during the promotion’s first few months because it will be the fifth show on NBC, but the third on NBC in prime time. Also, Broner and Porter are both coming off wins on previous PBC shows with Broner beating John Molina Jr on PBC’s debut on NBC back in March and Porter beating Erick  Bone on PBC’s debut on Spike, also in March. When Broner and Porter meet in prime time on NBC we will see if PBC was able to turn the two into stars with their high profile wins on American television, as the rating for that fight will be an important indicator of PBC’s success going forward.

    The Broner-Porter fight goes up against Andre Ward debuting on BET against Paul Smith. Ward is promoted by Jay-Z, who has terrible bad blood with Al Haymon dating back to Haymon’s days as the preeminent R&B promoter in the US. The Ward fight is part of a time buy that Jay-Z is doing on BET and that he is putting Ward’s fight against an important PBC fight is not an accident.

    And if that isn’t all, on June 20th David Lemieux faces Hassan N’Dam in Montreal for the vacant IBF Middleweight title. The fight is being promoted by Golden Boy. It will air on pay per view in Quebec, but Golden Boy doesn’t have a broadcaster in the US yet. De La Hoya said he is trying to work something out and that the fight will air in the US, which will make for three major boxing matches in one night on American TV. I would say it probably ends up on HBO, since De La Hoya has been working with HBO recently and Haymon works with Showtime and probably wouldn’t be pleased with Showtime putting a major fight against his important PBC show on NBC that night.

    Then, believe it or not, the next day on June 21st PBC is back for another CBS show, this time on a Sunday afternoon with Rances Barthelemy versus Antonio DeMarco. That means PBC has back-to-back network television shows on June 20th and June 21st.

    On Friday, June 26th is another boxing ratings war with four different broadcasters airing boxing the same night. Showtime has Dominic Wade vs Sam Soliman on ShoBox (their show for featuring up-and-coming fighters) as part of a triple header on that station that I believe is promoted by Haymon. TruTV has a Top Rank broadcast. Fox Sports 1 has a Golden Boy broadcast. And CBS Sports Net has minor league boxing. Then, the next night on June 27th HBO has Timothy Bradley versus Jessie Vargas for the vacant WBO Welterweight title.

    On July 11th, PBC debuts on ESPN, replacing Friday Night Fights, which recently had its final broadcast.

  • Another WWE house show detailed report 5/23 Utica

    By Steve Wameling

    First time in a few years that WWE has run a show in Utica. It was a pretty fun night.

    1. Ziggler pinned Sheamus in a very good opening match that went about 12 minutes. The crowd chanted ‘you look stupid’ at Sheamus. Sheamus got on the mike and said that he didn’t look stupid. The crowd was hot to start and was super into the near falls, but I’m afraid they went on series of them too many. 

    2. Jimmy Uso pinned Brad Maddox. Brad Maddox came out on the mic and asked the crowd if anyone knew who he was. Not many people seemed to recognize him. Maddox said he was recently one of the greatest GMs in Raw history. Jimmy Uso came out to some cheers. There was a lot of hot-dogging in this match, which should be expected.

    Stardust came out and started promoting the network, the WWE twitter, and wwe.com. He said that if we followed the WWE twitter we would have known already the big announcement that Survivor Series was coming to Utica this fall. Stardust then said he was lying and that everyone in Utica was a fat pig. R Truth came out.

    3. R Truth pinned Stardust. Both guys were really entertaining in this match. It was a lot of fun to watch.

    4. Lucha Dragons pinned Los Matadors. There was heavy teasing of Torrito joining the Lucha Dragons. The crowd wasn’t as into this match. Many people left their seats to go do something else. The match itself was fine.

    5. Roman Reigns pinned Big Show in a Steel Cage Match. Roman Reigns got a mixed reaction upon his entrance. The highlight of the night was an older woman fan that got too close to Reigns and got speared by a security guard during his entrance. The steel cage match was what you would expect it to be. Reigns got cheered more during the match. He was not, however, the most over guy on the show.

    Intermission. 

    6. Emma and Charlotte beat Alicia Fox and Layla via submission by way of the figure four leg-lock. Having Charlotte on the show was cool. This match was nothing special, but it was not horrible by any means.

    7. Ryback pinned Bray Wyatt. Both guys got decent pops from the crowd. In the words of Vinny V; “It was a match”.

    8. Randy Orton defeated Seth Rollins via DQ by way of interference by J and J security for the WWE World Heavyweight Title. This match was great. The ending was a letdown to the crowd after all of the near falls. At one point during the match Rollins grabbed a mic and said that he was the greatest champion that Utica has ever seen, better than both Bruno Samartino, Hulk Hogan and Randy Orton. Randy Orton was the most over guy on the show. Rollins was an awesome heel. I wish the Authority (HHH, Stephanie, and Kane) would get the hell out of the spotlight and let Rollins do his own thing more often with J and J. 

    All in all, a fun night. Thanks 

  • NJPW Best of the Super Juniors Saitama report 5-23-15: Kushida vs. Nick Jackson

    By Bryan Rose, WrestlingObserver.com

    Day 2 of the Best of the Super Juniors has been uploaded on New Japan World’s website. The full show didn’t air; rather it was just the three BOTSJ matches that took place on the show. It was a hard camera, no frills sort of setup.

    Alex Shelley was scheduled to face Rocky Romero on this card, but suffered what appears to be an injury to his heel during his bout with David Finlay and thus wasn’t able to compete here. It seems like they’re postponing the match until they can determine if Shelley will be able to compete or not.

    Gedo vs. Yohei Komatsu

    This was fine, nothing noteworthy. Gedo took control of most of the match and threw Komatsu around the outside. Komatsu made a comeback, including sinking in the rolling boston crab, but Gedo was able to escape. Gedo caught Komatsu off guard with the complete shot out of nowhere and pinned him with the Gedo clutch. This got enough time and the pacing was good enough for it to be the best match on the card, though it wasn’t anything blow away.

    Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Barbaro Cavernario

    Comedy spots start this one out, with Taguchi coming to the ring wearing Cavernario’s bone on his head and both of them doing Taguchi’s poses. Cavernario took out one of the turnbuckles and did Sami Zayn’s suicide dive through the corner. Taguchi comes back with a big tope con hilo. Then he just picked up a win out of nowhere with a seated butt attack. You heard me right. Not that good, just goofy comedy with one or two good spots.

    Nick Jackson vs. Kushida

    Decent back and forth match. Nothing wrong with it all, but wasn’t there much in terms of heat, though eventually they got into Kushida. He was in control until Jackson kicked him and landed a 450 splash for the win. Not much else to it and the finish felt pretty anticlimatic.

  • WWE Utica, NY, 5-24-15 house show report: Seth Rollins vs. Randy Orton, Roman Reigns vs. Big Show steel cage match

    From Utica, NY:

    – Dolph Ziggler pinned Sheamus
    – Jimmy Uso pinned Brad Maddox
    – R-Truth beat Stardust
    – The Lucha Dragons defeated Los Matadores when Sin Cara pinned Diego
    – Roman Reigns pinned The Big Show in a Steel Cage Match
    – Charlotte & Emma beat Alicia Fox & Layla when Charlotte submitted Fox
    – Ryback pinned Bray Wyatt
    – Randy Orton beat WWE World Champion Seth Rollins by DQ in a World Title Match when J & J Security interfered. Rollins kicked out of the RKO

  • UFC 187 live results & recap: Daniel Cormier vs. Anthony Johnson, Chris Weidman vs. Vitor Belfort

    By Dave Meltzer & Ryan Frederick, WrestlingObserver.com

    Welcome to WrestlingObserver.com’s live coverage of UFC 187: Johnson vs. Cormier from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The event, headlined by two title fights, airs on pay-per-view, with preliminary card action on FOX Sports 1 and UFC Fight Pass. We have a preview for the event HERE and coverage of the weigh-ins HERE. We’re looking for your thoughts on tonight’s fight card, so you can send a thumbs up, a thumbs down or a thumbs in the middle as well as a best fight and worst fight to dave@wrestlingobserver.com.

    As noted, a women’s strawweight bout between Rose Namajunas and Nina Ansaroff has been scratched from the card due to Ansaroff falling ill.

    PRELIMS:

    JUSTIN SCOGGINS VS. JOSH SAMPO, FLYWEIGHTS

    First round: Nice spinning head kick by Scoggins.  Front kick by Scoggins.  Nice left landed by Scoggins and a spin kick to the body.  Nice spin kick to the head by Scoggins.  Sampo tried for a takedown but couldn’t get it.  Left by Scoggins.  Body kick by Scoggins.  Body kick back by Sampo.  Another body kick by Scoggins.  Knee by Scoggins 10-9 Scoggins. Pretty one-sided.

    Second round: More kicks by Scoggins.  Spin kick by Scoggins.  Hook kick by Scoggins.  Front kick by Scoggins.  Right by Sampo.  Sampo got the takedown.  Scoggins right back up.  Hard body kick by Scoggins.  Left jab put Sampo down momentarily.  Body kick by Scoggins.  Sampo with a right.  Sampo tried for a takedown but didn’t get it.  20-18 Scoggins.

    Third round: Spin kick to the body.  Sampo took him down.  Scoggins back up.  Body kick by Scoggins.  Scoggins got the takedown late in the round.  Close round, Scoggins won the fight easily.  Scoggins, this round was close and you could almost give it to Sampo.  30-27 Scoggins.

    Official Result: Justin Scoggins def. Josh Sampo by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

    ISLAM MAKHACHEV VS. LEO KUNTZ LIGHTWEIGHTS

    First round: Makhachev with a judo throw and now has his back.  He’s working for a choke.  Kuntz out and got back to his feet.  Makhachev with short range uppercuts.  Head kick by Makhachev.  Makhachv with uppercuts and got a hip toss into side control.  Makhachev 10-9

    Second round: Right by Makhahev.  Makhachev gt his back afer a takedown and is agin working for a choke.  He’s got the choke now and it’s over.  2:38

    Official Result: Islam Makhachev def. Leo Kuntz by submission (rear-naked choke) at 2:38 of Round 2

    MIKE PYLE VS. COLBY COVINGTON, WELTERWEIGHTS

    Round 1: Covington is undefeated and was a college roommate of Jon Jones. Pyle is a big-time veteran. Covington took this fight on short notice. Pyle misses a front kick to start. Covington misses a left hand but lands a combo and shoots in for a takedown against the fence. They battle against the fence as Covington works to take it to the mat but Pyle has solid defense. They battle for the underhooks and Pyle spins out and makes a takedown attempt. They remain clinched against the fence and Covington lands a low knee that gets a little too low and we have a break. We get back to action. Covington with a head kick. Covington lands a nice left hand and then a combo. Pyle lands a right hand counter and Covington shoots for the takedown and they battle against the fence.

    Covington with some short right hands but Pyle breaks it. Covington lands a left and clinches back up with Pyle. Knee to the body from Pyle against the fence. Covington grabs a leg as Pyle rolls for a kimura and they go to the mat for a second but get right back up. Covington grabs the back and Pyle grabs the fence to defend. Covington gets the takedown and goes into half-guard. Pyle looking to throw his legs up and looks for the neck. Covington with a left elbow. Covington with some left hands from the top. Covington postures up and goes back into Pyle’s guard. Covington with more left hands to the body from the top and then some right hands to the body. Pyle looks to set up a triangle but abandons it. Covington rides the round out on top with left hands to the body. 10-9 Covington.

    Round 2: Covington goes right for the takedown against the fence but Pyle defends it and they break. Pyle with a front kick to the face. Covington lands a right hook but Pyle clips him coming forward. Covington lands a combo and then grabs the back of Pyle. Pyle grabs the wrist and looks to set a kimura up but lets go. Covington looks to take it down but Pyle grabs the fence again. Covington gets the fight to the ground and gets on top. Covington moves to side control against the fence. Pyle looks for the armbar but doesn’t have it and Covington goes into the guard. Pyle with an elbow from the bottom. Covington with a big elbow from the guard. Covington with body shots from the top. Covington with an elbow from the top as he postures up. Covington just dominant from the top position right now. Covington with two more short elbows and then another. Covington with a big left hand from the top. Covington with some punches. They are stood up by referee Herb Dean. Covington with a left hand. Covington misses badly on a high kick but lands a left hand and then lands another. Pyle is cut under his eye. Covington with a big overhand right. The round concludes. 10-9 Covington, 20-18 Covington.

    Round 3: Pyle probably needs a finish to win barring some weird judging scores. Pyle with a leg kick. Pyle with a flying knee and Covington grabs the legs looking for a takedown. Pyle grabs the neck and looks for the choke but Covington shakes him off and they scramble and Covington ends up on top. Pyle with an elbow from the bottom and then another. Covington with a big elbow from the top and then some body punches. Covington with a left hand from the top. More body punches from the top by Covington. Right hand from the top by Covington. Covington with more punches from the top. Covington is bleeding but dominant. Covington looks to transition to side control but remains in the guard. More body punches from Covington.

    Pyle tries to use the fence to wall walk to his feet but Covington has him grasped. Pyle looking for a kimura from the bottom. Covington defending and he gets out but Pyle reverses positions and is in full mount over Covington. Pyle tries to break the grip of Covington. Pyle transitions to the back and is looking for the choke as he lands punches. Pyle has the neck and the choke but Covington scrambles out and gets into the guard. That was close as Pyle went for the finish to win. Covington in top position and he will ride the fight out there and finish with punches. 10-9 Covington, 30-27 Covington.

    Official Result: Colby Covington def. Mike Pyle by unanimous decision (30-27, 29-28, 30-27)

    MIDDLEWEIGHTS: URIAH HALL VS. RAFAEL NATAL

    Round 1: These two got into it a little bit at the weigh-ins and Hall is anxious to get the fight started as he got in the face of Natal after entering the Octagon. Natal kicked Hall right in the groin as they got to action. It definitely looked intentional. Natal with a leg kick. Natal with a leg kick and then a combo. Natal lands a leg kick but Hall counters with a right hand. Hall with a spin kick to the body. Natal with a leg kick from the southpaw position. Natal with a right hand. Natal misses a right hand. Hall with a head kick. Hall with a leg kick and a left hook. Hall with a front kick to the body. Natal with an inside leg kick. Hall with a switch kick to the body. Natal with a combo and an inside leg kick. Natal with a right hand. Hall lands a solid jab. Natal with another leg kick and then a short left. Natal goes for a takedown but it is stuffed by Hall. Hall just misses a spinning wheel kick. Hall blocks a head kick from Natal. Natal misses an overhand right. Hall lands a big head kick and then another as he countered an inside leg kick from Natal. Hall with a spinning back kick to the body. Natal misses a spinning back fist. Natal with a body kick and then lands a combo. Hall with a straight left hand and then a head kick. Hall moving around nicely. Natal has a takedown stuffed and gets it for a moment against the fence and grabs the back and lands some knees. He fights for the takedown against the fence as the round ends. Close round. 10-9 Hall.

    Round 2: They trade punches. Hall with an inside leg kick. Natal is smiling at Hall as Hall is on the attack. Hall lands a jab. Natal with a leg kick. Hall with a body kick. Natal misses a big right hand. Natal with a leg kick and they exchange punches. Natal ducks under a punch from Hall and scores a takedown and is in half-guard. Natal looks to pin down the arm. Natal moves into the full guard of Hall. Natal with some short punches from the top. Natal with some body punches. Both with punches on the ground. Natal pushes Hall to the fence and steps over to half-guard. Hall gets to his feet and looks to break. Natal has Hall’s back against the fence and lands some knees to the thigh. Natal has the body lock and looks for the takedown but Hall gets free and they go to the center. Hall with a knee to the body and a head kick. Hall misses a head kick and Natal misses one. Natal with an inside leg kick. Hall shoots for the takedown against the fence but Natal defends. Hall picks Natal up and slams him but Natal gets right back up. Hall has the back. Hall with a suplex to the mat and they battle to end the round. 10-9 Natal, 19-19.

    Round 3: We have a close fight heading to the final round. Hall looks for a quick jab. Hall with an inside leg kick. Hall with a jab to the body. Natal with a leg kick. Hall with a leg kick. Hall just misses a wheel kick to the body. Hall with an inside leg kick. Natal with a jab. Hall with a knee to the body. Natal lands a nice right hand. Hall with a head kick and then stuffs a takedown attempt from Natal. Natal lands a right hand. Natal with a weak right hand. Hall with a leg kick and then a high kick. Natal lands a leg kick. Hall with a leg kick. Hall lands a nice jab and Natal misses a wild overhand right. Natal with a right hand as the pace has slowed down. Natal with a couple of right hands. Natal with a body kick. Natal grabs the leg and pushes Hall to the fence looking to get the fight down to the mat. They get warned to work. Natal just holding the leg. Hall defending well. They are broken up by the referee. They trade punches. Hall with a spin kick to the arms. Natal misses a takedown but lands a left on the break. Hall misses a high kick as the fight ends. 10-9 Hall, 29-28 Hall.

    Official Result: Rafael Natal def. Uriah Hall by split decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)

    WELTERWEIGHTS: DONG HYUN KIM VS. JOSH BURKMAN

    Round 1: Both men look to rebound from losses (though Burkman’s was later changed to a no contest). Burkman with a leg kick to start and he blocks a takedown attempt from Kim. Kim with a front kick. Burkman with a right hand and then a high kick. Burkman with a combo and then a leg kick and a right hand that follows. Burkman with a nice combo and they clinch against the fence. Kim looks to grab the neck against the fence but Burkman defends. They scramble against the fence and Kim has the body lock. Kim has the back and is trying to drag the fight to the ground.

    Kim with a knee and they go to the mat for a moment but get back up and Burkman has the body lock on Kim. Burkman with a knee to the body. Kim switches and lands a knee to the body and spins to the back. Kim climbs on the back of Burkman. Kim with some left hands as he has standing full back mount. Kim with more left hands from the back. Kim looks for the choke with just over a minute left. Burkman has a hand in the way and Kim gives it up. Kim looking to trip Burkman to the mat as he rides the back. Burkman with a back left hand and Kim lands a knee as the round ends. 10-9 Kim.

    Round 2: Kim with a body kick and a high kick. Burkman with a leg kick. Kim with a high kick and slips to the mat and Burkman lands a left. Burkman lands a series of punches to Kim against the fence but they separate. Kim with a right hand and a body punch and Burkman drags the fight to the mat. Kim with some elbows to the side of Burkman. They scramble and Kim looks for a takedown. Kim looking to set up a choke as he ties the legs up. Kim with some punches from the back. Kim tying up the arm and looking for the crucifix. Kim with some left hands. Kim with more left hands and Burkman isn’t doing much. Kim with lots of short punches. Burkman tries to sneak out but Kim still has the arm trapped. Fans booing as Kim continues to land a lot of punches. Kim switches to an elbow. Kim with more punches as he has the arm of Burkman trapped. Kim with more punches and hard elbows. Burkman looks to roll over. Kim with more punches and lands big shots. Kim gets up and lands a knee to the body as the round ends. Big round for Kim. 10-8 Kim, 20-17 Kim.

    Round 3: Burkman needs a finish in the final round. Burkman with a body kick and an uppercut and right hand a knee. Burkman with a flying knee and he has Kim hurt and is looking for a finish. Big combo from Burkman but he steps away and Kim is recovering. Kim with a front kick. Kim with a left hand and he grabs the body and drags the fight down. Burkman grabs the neck for a guillotine but Kim moves to side control. Burkman lets go of the neck. Kim in side control and looking for the arm-triangle. Kim has a knee to the belly and looks to step over and work for the choke. Kim has it locked a little but is still in the wrong position. He needs to hop over but has pressure on. Kim steps over and has it locked in and Burkman taps out! Kim winner by submission with the arm-triangle in a dominant performace.

    Official Result: Dong Hyun Kim def. Josh Burkman by submission (arm-triangle choke) at 2:13 of Round 3

    FLYWEIGHTS: JOHN DODSON VS. ZACH MAKOVSKY

    Round 1: Dodson returns from a knee injury and could get a title shot at Demetrious Johnson with a win here. They trade leg kicks. Dodson tags Makovsky with a short left hand as he circles around. They clinch for a moment. Dodson lands a left hand. Makovsky lands a left hand. Makovsky with a straight left hand that gets a smile from Dodson. Makovsky misses a takedown. They trade punches in the clinch. Dodson with a right hand to the body and they tie up for a moment. Both men fighting as southpaws. Makovsky goes for a takedown but it is defended. Makovsky misses a head kick. Makovsky lands a nice right hand. Makovsky lands a left and a knee as they clinch for a moment. They trade punches. Makovsky with an inside leg kick but Dodson returns a leg kick of his own. Makovsky misses a shoot at a takedown. Dodson with a leg kick and Makovsky lands a kick of his own. Dodson with a left hand. Dodson with a knee to the body in a brief clinch. The round ends with a clinch. 10-9 Makovsky.

    Round 2: Makovsky with a right hand to the body. Makovsky with a left hand and a leg kick. They tie up and Dodson lands a kick to the body and a knee. Makovsky has a high kick checked by Dodson. Makovsky lands a nice combination. Makovsky with an eye poke but they continue. Dodson with a leg kick and they scramble against the fence. They tie up but break. Makovski with a left hand. Makovsky with a leg kick. Dodson lands an overhand left and then a combo to the body as he misses a right hand over the top. Makovsky with an inside leg kick and misses a high kick. Makovsky goes for a takedown but it is defended and Dodson lands a combo.

    Makovsky with an inside leg kick. Dodson with a short uppercut. Both still somewhat tentative. Dodson misses a big left hand. Makovsky lands a head kick. They trade punches. They each land leg kicks and Makovsky takes Dodson down but gets right back up. Dodson gets a big slam and has Makovsky down and is on top. Makovsky grabs the leg but Dodson steps over and stays on top. Dodson helps Makovsky up and they go to the center to end the round. Close round. 10-9 Dodson, 19-19.

    Round 3: This round will decide it. They hug to start. Dodson just misses a big left hand and Makovsky just misses an inside leg kick. Makovsky with an inside leg kick. They trade punches. Makovsky with a body kick. Neither man is able to land and the crowd begins to boo. Makovsky misses a takedown attempt. Dodson has a combo that Makovsky ducks under. Dodson misses an uppercut. Makovsky shoots in and Dodson stuffs the takedown and they clinch. Dodson with some knees to the body in the clinch and they break. They trade punches and Dodson lands a short uppercut. Makovsky with a right hook. Dodson with a combination. Dodson lands a left hand and a knee to the body followed by a short left. Makovsky goes for a takedown but eats a knee from Dodson. Makovsky with a body kick and Dodson counters with a quick takedown. Back to their feet. Dodson with a knee to the body to defend a takedown. Makovsky misses a left hand. A late takedown attempt misses from Makovsky. They trade punches and the fight ends. Boring last round and close. 10-9 Dodson, 29-28 Dodson.

    Official Result: John Dodson def. Zach Makovsky by unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

    MAIN CARD (PPV- 10 PM ET/7 PM PT):

    FLYWEIGHTS: JOSEPH BENAVIDEZ VS. JOHN MORAGA

    Round 1: Both men have 2-fight win streaks and have fought for the flyweight title. Moraga with a right hand and they trade early. Moraga with a leg kick. Moraga with a head kick and Benavidez tags Moraga and he goes to the mat. Benavidez with a bunch of punches and he gets on top and in side control. They scramble and Benavidez has the neck of Moraga. Benavidez is looking for the guillotine choke but Moraga is trying to hip escape. Benavidez in side control and looking to mount. Benavidez went for the choke but Moraga scrambled out and looked for the neck as he dropped to the mat but Benavidez ends on top against the fence.

    Moraga gets to the feet against the fence and they are clinched. Moraga with knees to the body. Moraga looks for the takedown but it is defended. They trade knees against the fence as both look for the takedown in the clinch. They trade knees again. Benavidez with an elbow and Moraga drops down for a takedown and gets a takedown and Moraga takes the back in a wild scramble. Moraga has the body lock against the fence. Moraga with knee to the body and grabs the neck. Big slam from Benavidez and he is on top with 30 seconds left. Benavidez grabs the neck and looks for the choke but the round is going to end. 10-9 Benavidez.

    Round 2: Moraga with a body kick and Benavidez comes back with a leg kick. Moraga with an inside leg kick. They trade punches in an exchange. Benavidez lands a combo and a leg kick but Moraga comes back with an uppercut. Moraga with a leg kick. Benavidez comes back with a leg kick and Moraga counters with one. Benavidez with a leg kick and they exchange punches. Moraga with a big body kick and then another one. Moraga misses a big left hook but lands a right hand. Moraga with a straight right hand. They clinch and Benavidez looks for a takedown. Moraga is cut on the top of his head, likely as they collided heads. Benavidez gets the takedown against the fence and Moraga is looking for the guillotine. Moraga has the neck but Benavidez gets his head free. Benavidez gets into side control and grinds an elbow in the face of Moraga. Benavidez with a knee to the body and finishes the round in side control. 10-9 Benavidez, 20-18 Benavidez.

    Round 3: Benavidez misses a leg kick to start the final round. Moraga with a combo and they are trading big exchanges. Moraga lands a knee and just misses a right hand. Moraga backs Benavidez against the fence and tries for a flying knee but Benavidez stops it with a front kick. They change punches. Benavidez with a body kick. Benavidez gets the takedown and goes right back into side control. Benavidez with some short elbows. Moraga gets back to full guard. Benavidez with some punches from the top. Benavidez postures up and lands an elbow. Benavidez wth another elbow from the top. Benavidez with more punches from the top. Moraga not doing much from the bottom. Benavidez with more short punches from the top. More punches from the top by Benavidez. Benavidez with a big right hand from the top. Moraga has the body lock from the bottom and Benavidez rides the fight out with punches from the top. 10-9 Benavidez, 30-27 Benavidez.

    Official Result: Joseph Benavidez def. John Moraga by unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

    HEAVYWEIGHTS: TRAVIS BROWNE VS. ANDREI ARLOVSKI

    Round 1: These two have trained  and lived together in the past and are looking for a title shot. Arlovski with an inside leg kick. Arlovski with a combo. Browne with a right hand to the body. Browne with a right hand and Arlovski lands a right hand that rocks Browne and Browne is in trouble. Arlovski with a combo against the fence but Browne survives and they break. Arlovski with more punches and Browne is still in trouble. They separate and Browne has recovered for now. They trade right hands. Arlovski misses a big right hand. Browne with a left hook that lands. Arlovski with another big punch that rocks Browne.

    Arlovski rocks Browne again and Browne is in all sorts of trouble. Arlovski with more punches and he tags Browne again. Browne is still up. Browne with a leg kick. Browne with another leg kick. They trade punches. Arlovski with a combo and just misses a big right hand. Arlovski drops Browne with a right hand and Browne is in trouble again. Browne is on wobbly legs and Arlovski is landing again. Browne then lands a big right hand that drops Arlovski. They are both swinging for the fences and both are hurt. Arlovski with a big right hand and an elbow. They break. What an amazing right. They trade punches and Browne is wobbling bad. Arlovski with a big right hand and Browne is hurt and the referee stops it! Arlovski gets the TKO win after finishing it against the fence. Go out of your way to watch this fight, it was an amazing and crazy fight.

    Official Result: Andrei Arlovski def. Travis Browne by TKO (punches) at 4:41 of Round 1

    LIGHTWEIGHTS: DONALD CERRONE VS. JOHN MAKDESSI

    Round 1: Cerrone has seven straight wins and gets a title shot with another win here. Cerrone with a switch kick early and a big inside leg kick. Cerrone with a leg kick and then a body kick. Makdessi lands a left hand. Cerrone with a leg kick. They exchange punches. Cerrone rocks Makdessi with a head kick and then lands another head kick and a leg kick. Cerrone with a jab but misses a head kick. Cerrone with another head kick. Cerrone with a leg kick. Cerrone with a quick knee. Cerrone with a leg kick and then a big body kick. Makdessi with a right hand. Cerrone with a nice combo. Cerrone just misses a head kick. He misses another but lands a leg kick. Makdessi with a jab. Cerrone with a combo. Cerrone with a leg kick. Makdessi with a spin kick that lands. Cerrone with a leg kick. Both land right hands. 10-9 Cerrone.

    Round 2: They trade punches and leg kicks. Big knee from Cerrone followed by a solid combo has Makdessi in trouble and bleeding. Leg kick from Cerrone. Cerrone with a jab. Makdessi lands a combo. They trade punches again and Makdessi lands a left hook. Cerrone with a big uppercut and a combo. Cerrone with a combo and a leg kick but Makdessi lands a counter left hand. Cerrone with another combo. They trade punches. Cerrone misses a head kick. Cerrone with an elbow and a leg kick. Cerrone controlling the action here. Makdessi lands a punch. Cerrone a leg kick. Makdessi misses a spin kick. Cerrone lands a head kick and Makdessi quits! Makdessi verbally quits while standing. He looked to call timeout. He has a broken jaw and is done due to injury and Cerrone wins.

    Official Result: Donald Cerrone def. John Makdessi by TKO (kick) at 4:44 of Round 2

    UFC MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: CHRIS WEIDMAN (C) VS. VITOR BELFORT

    Round 1: The long-awaited title fight is here. Belfort looks noticeably smaller. Weidman with an early head kick. Weidman with another head kick that just misses. Weidman misses a right hand. Wediman misses a takedown. Belfort stumbles and Weidman goes after Belfort and Belfort has Weidman in trouble. Belfort with some big punches in the clinch but Weidman covers up. Belfort with the big flurry. Weidman gets the takedown and is on top and in half-guard. Weidman is cut open. Weidman with posture and big punches from the top. Weidman goes to the mount and is reigning down hammerfists. Belfort gives up his back but is in a lot of trouble. Big punches from the top as Weidman looks to finish. Lots of punches from Weidman and big elbows. Big trouble and this is over! Weidman finishes Belfort from the mount in the first round. Weidman remains the champion with a first-round TKO and a big statement win.

    Official Result: Chris Weidman def. Vitor Belfort by TKO (strikes) at 2:53 of Round 1 to remain UFC Middleweight Champion

    UFC LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: ANTHONY JOHNSON VS. DANIEL CORMIER 

    Round 1: This decides the new champion at 205 pounds. Johnson with a leg kick after an eye poke. Johnson drops Cormier with a right hand right away but Cormier gets right back up after Johnson misses a right hand and Cormier has the back. Cormier with a slam on Johnson and looks to grab the neck as he has the back. Cormier looking for the takedown against the fence. Johnson with big punches as Cormier has his leg. Johnson spins out but Cormier still has the neck. Cormier with the pressure. They are on the feet but Cormier still has Johnson’s head trapped. Johnson with a head kick on the break. They swing wildly. Johnson with a head kick. Cormier with the jab. Cormier initiates a clinch against the fence. Johnson with a but punch and they have a wild exchange to end the round. 10-9 Johnson

    Round 2: Johnson with a leg kick and then a big right hand. Johnson with a head kick and an overhand right. Johnson with a kick but Cormier grabs the leg and looks for the takedown. Cormier picks Johnson up and slams him down and goes into half-guard. Cormier with punches from the top. Cormier with a hard elbow. Cormier grabbing the arm and looking for the kimura from the side. Cormier grabs it again and is going for it. He lets go. Cormier with more left hands from the half-guard. Cormier going for the kimura again. He lets go again. Cormier with punches from the top. Johnson tries to hip escape out from the bottom but can’t get out from under Cormier. They trade punches on the mat. Cormier with short elbows from the top. Johnson is cut open and gives up the back. He survives the round. Dominant round from Cormier. 10-8 Cormier, 19-18 Cormier. 

    Round 3: Cormier with a leg kick. They exchange wildly and Johnson lands a head kick. Johnson goes for a takedown but Cormier stuffs it. Cormier with hammerfists against the fence. Johnson gets Cormier down for a moment but Cormier gets back up. They switch and Johnson is breathing heavily. Cormier gets the back of Johnson against the fence. Johnson reverses and grabs the leg but isn’t doing much with it. Cormier spins around and takes the back and starts to land punches. Cormier gets the full back and has the neck and looks for the choke. Cormier gets the rear-naked choke in and Johnson taps out! Cormier is the new light heavyweight champion as he submits a gassed out Johnson.

    Official Result: Daniel Cormier def. Anthony Johnson by submission (rear-naked choke) at 2:39 of Round 3 to become the new UFC Light Heavyweight Champion

    The main card was one heck of a show and worth seeing. 

  • Final Inductee into 2015 UFC Hall Of Fame

    By Ryan Frederick, WrestlingObserver.com

    B.J. Penn will be the fourth and final member of the 2015 Class being inducted into the UFC Hall Of Fame. He joins pioneer wing inductee Bas Rutten, contributor winginductee Jeff Blatnick, and fight wing inductees Matt Hughes and Frank Trigg, who will be inducted on July 11 at the UFC Fan Expo during International Fight Week in Las Vegas. Penn’s induction was announced during the preliminary card of UFC 187 on FOX Sports 1 on Saturday.

    Penn is being inducted into the modern era wing, joining Forrest Griffin as just the second fighter to be inducted into that wing of the UFC Hall Of Fame. 

    Penn is a former UFC Lightweight and Welterweight Champion and was one of the most dominant fighters during the peak of his career. He defeated Matt Hughes to win the UFC Welterweight Championship at UFC 46 in January 2004, and then defeated Joe Stevenson at UFC 80 in January 2008 to win the vacant UFC Lightweight Championship.

    Penn retired following a loss to Frankie Edgar in July. 

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (May 23): Antonio Inoki vs. Hulk Hogan, Andre vs. Sakaguchi, Frank Gotch in 57-minute match

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1906 – Frank Gotch defeated Tom Jenkins to regain the American Heavyweight Championship in a three fall match that lasted 57 minutes.

    1961 – Wilbur Snyder & Leo Nomellini defeated Hard Boiled Haggerty & Gene Kinisky in Minneapolis, Minnesota for the AWA World Tag Team Championship.

    1963 – At Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas; World Tag Team Champions The Medics defeated Steve Bolus & Steve Kovacs and United States Heavyweight Champion Bob Geigel deafeated Joe Scarpello

    1967- In Duluth, Minnesota; AWA Tag Team Champions Harley Race & Larry Hennig beat Verne Gagne & The Crusher via dq and Blackjack Lanza went to a draw with Bob Geigel.

    1978 – In Omaha, Nebraska; AWA Tag Team Champions Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell beat Blackjack Lanza & Bob Orton Jr

    1980 – In Hasma, Japan; Andre the Giant defeated Seiji Sakaguchi via countout, WWF World Champion Bob Backlund & Tatsumi Fujinami fought Dusty Rhodes & Stan Hansen to a no contest and Antonio Inoki defeated Hulk Hogan via disqualification.

    1981 – In Chicago, Illinois; AWA Tag Team Champions Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura beat Dick the Bruiser & the Crusher via dq,
    Jerry Blackwell beat Baron Von Raschke and Tito Santana defeated Big John Studd.

    1985 – In Winnipeg, AWA Champion Rick Martel beat Larry Zbyszko; Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat Larry Hennig & Curt Hennig and
    Fabulous Freebirds Michael Hayes & Buddy Roberts beat Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell.

    1988 – In Memphis at the Mid South Coliseum; Robert Fuller beat Jeff Jarrett by countout; Brickhouse Brown beat Max Pain via forfeit for CWA title and AWA Tag Team Champions Badd Company Pat Tanaka & Paul Diamond beat Bob Holly & Pat Rose.

    1992 – Steve Austin defeated Barry Windham for the WCW Television Title in Atlanta, Georgia.

    1996 – Mitsuharu Misawa & Jun Akiyama defeated Toshiaki Kawada & Akira Taue for the All Japan Tag Titles in Sapporo, Japan

  • Fight pulled from tonight’s UFC show two hours befoehand

    The strawweight bout with Nina Ansaroff vs. Rose Namajunas has been pulled from tonight’s show due to Ansaroff suffering from the flu and being medically unfit to compete.  Ansaroff missed weight by four pounds yesterday.

    The fight was scheduled to open the FS 1 show at 8 p.m.  This moves start time of the live show from 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.

  • WWE News: Note on the Elimination Chamber match with John Cena vs. Kevin Owens

    As of his point, U.S. Champion John Cena vs. NXT Champion Kevin Owens on the 5/31 WWE Elimination Chamber special on the WWE Network in Corpus Christi, TX, is a non-title match.

  • UFC News: Preliminary bout removed from tonight’s UFC 187 event

    By Ryan Frederick, WrestlingObserver.com

    A preliminary bout between women’s strawweight fighters Rose Namajunas and Nina Ansaroff has been scratched from tonight’s UFC 187 event. Ansaroff fell ill with the flu during fight week and doctors have deemed her medically unable to compete at tonight’s event, confirmed by UFC officials in a statement.

    Ansaroff missed weight by four pounds, coming in at 120 pounds for the bout.

    The card will continue with eleven bouts, and a welterweight bout between Mike Pyle and Colby Covington will be bumped up to the FOX Sports 1 portion of the preliminary card. The fights will now kick off 30 minutes later at 7 PM ET on Fight Pass.