Griffin,
Sanchez are the Ultimate Fighters; Franklin Defeats Shamrock in Main Event
Bonnar granted UFC contract after close decision
LAS VEGAS, April 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Forrest Griffin out-pointed Stephan
Bonnar to win a unanimous decision in the light heavyweight division,
while Diego Sanchez registered a convincing technical knockout over Kenny
Florian in the middleweight class as a sold-out Cox Pavilion saw both
Griffin and Sanchez claim the title of 'The Ultimate Fighter' in
Saturday's live final episode of the Spike TV reality show, The Ultimate
Fighter(TM). Both fights were preludes to the main event, in which rising
star Rich Franklin defeated UFC legend Ken Shamrock by technical knockout
to move his overall mixed martial arts record to 19-1. After their wins,
Griffin and Sanchez were awarded six-figure UFC contracts and various
prizes. A post-fight consultation among UFC officials resulted in a
contract for Bonnar as well. Twelve other fighters comprised the undercard,
as Sam Hoger, Chris Leben, Josh Koscheck, Nate Quarry and Mike Swick came
away from the Octagon as winners. The telecast -- the first-ever UFC event
on cable television -- will be shown again on Spike TV on Sunday, April 10
at 10 PM EDT and on Monday, April 11 at 11 PM EDT. The UFC's next event
will be UFC 52: Couture vs. Liddell 2 LIVE on pay-per-view at 10 p.m. EDT,
Saturday, April 16, at the MGM Grand Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas,
Nev., when the TUF coaches meet in the main event for Couture's light
heavyweight title.
FIGHT RE-CAPS:
Light Heavyweight Main Event It was a big night for Franklin (19-1-0)
from Cincinnati, Ohio, who defeated UFC legend Shamrock (26-9-2) from San
Diego, Ca., by technical knockout at the 2:44 mark of the first round.
Franklin escaped an arm bar and an ankle lock before Shamrock attempted a
right kick. He slipped and Franklin pounced in Shamrock's guard and
finished the fight with a flurry of strikes. Shamrock could not defend
himself and referee John McCarthy stopped the fight. "It was an honor
to fight him (Shamrock)," said Franklin. "I plan on staying at
185 pounds, in the middleweight division." "It was great to be
here on network TV," said Shamrock. "If I had won, I go on. If I
lose, then you build another star off me. But I was happy to step in
against Rich. He's got a great attitude."
The Ultimate Fighter(TM) Light Heavyweight Final In what the UFC's top
executives, officials, fighters and fans agreed was one of the best fights
in UFC history, Griffin (10-2-0) from Athens, Ga., out pointed Bonnar
(9-2-0) from Chicago, Ill., to win a unanimous decision and the title of
The Ultimate Fighter(TM) in the light heavyweight division. But both
fighters became winners when Zuffa, LLC awarded each a six-figure fight
contract with the UFC. The action in the Octagon was non-stop as both
fighters scored in all three rounds with strikes, kicks and ground action.
But all three judges scored it 29-28 in Griffin's favor. "I had no
idea what I did to pull this out," said Griffin. "I like to
fight just like that-swinging for the fences. I thought he would shoot and
take me down, but he's a Golden Glove boxer and he stayed up. We had a
great fight." "This fight was like I predicted," said
Bonnar. "I worked a lot on my footwork. I know a couple of times I
really caught him. I thought he was done, but he wouldn't drop."
The Ultimate Fighter(TM) Middleweight Final Sanchez (15-0-0) from
Albuquerque, N.M., became The Ultimate Fighter(TM) in the middleweight
division with a convincing technical knockout over Florian (4-2-0) from
Boston, Mass. Sanchez, a submission wrestler and boxer, took Florian to
the ground after the first minute and dominated with powerful strikes. He
opened a cut over Florian's nose and referee John McCarthy stopped it at
the 2:49 mark of the first round. "My coach really got me mentally
strong for this fight," said Sanchez. "I felt it was my destiny
to win. I know I caught him with one really good shot and broke his nose.
Whether I fight at 170 or 185, this is my life."
In preliminary fights: Hoger (5-0-0), a light heavyweight from
Davenport, Iowa, won a three-round unanimous decision over Bobby
Southworth (8-4-0) from Santa Cruz, Ca., with a well-rounded attack. Both
fighters scored in the first round with strikes, kicks and ground and
pound, but Hoger got the upper hand throughout and continued to dominate
the last two rounds. He clinched it in the third with a strong ground and
pound attack. Bad blood from the TV show played a big role in the Leben-Jason
Thacker middleweight match. Leben had ridiculed Thacker during the show,
especially when he was eliminated and Thacker was looking for payback. He
came out fast and hit Leben (17-1-0) from Portland, Ore, with a solid
right that stopped him in his tracks. But Leben, a Couture protigi,
quickly used his Team Quest ground and pound experience to win a TKO.
Thacker's record fell to 4-2-0. Leben then apologized to Thacker for his
behavior in the show's second episode. In a middleweight bout, Koscheck
(5-0-0) from Buffalo, NY, escaped a strong leg lock from Chris Sanford
(5-1-0) from San Francisco, Ca., then went to work with elbow strikes and
punches to win a TKO at the 4:21 mark of the first round. "I knew he
had good leg locks and he almost had me. But, I got going and finally got
it done," said Koscheck, who wants to fight as a welterweight (170
pounds in the UFC). Quarry (12-1-0) from Gresham, Ore., who did not fight
in the TV show due to an ankle injury, went to work fast and won a TKO
over Lodune Sincaid (15-3-0) from N. Hollywood, Ca., at the 3:17 mark of
round one. Both middleweights exchanged strikes and kicks before Quarry
landed a hard right to the body followed by a left hook and another
powerful kick to end it. In light heavyweight action, Swick (7-1-0) from
San Jose, Ca., did exactly as he predicted. "I will knock him out
fast," he said of Alex Schoenauer (10-1-0) from Las Vegas, Nev., and
Swick did it in just 20 seconds of the first round with a flurry of
powerful left and right-hand strikes. In the show's first bout, a strong
right-hand strike from Karalexis knocked out Josh Rafferty at the 1:40
mark of the first round. Karalexis (5-0-0) from Las Vegas, Nev., got into
Rafferty's (7-4-0) from Cincinnati, Ohio, guard and rained down strikes.
"His eyes rolled back and I knew he was out," Karalexis said.
The Ultimate Fighting Championship(R) brand is the world's leading
professional mixed martial arts sports association and offers the premier
series of MMA sports events. Owned and operated by Zuffa, LLC and
headquartered in Las Vegas, Nev., UFC(R) fight programs feature six live
pay-per-view events annually through cable and satellite providers. In
addition to its U.S. distribution, UFC(R) fight programs are distributed
internationally throughout the world, including broadcast on WOWOW, Inc.
in Japan and Globosat in Brazil. Zuffa, LLC licenses the distribution of
UFC video games through Crave Entertainment and Take Two TDK Mediactive
and its fight show DVDs through StudioWorks Entertainment, a Ventura
Distribution company. "Ultimate Fighting Championship,"
"Ultimate Fighting," "UFC," "Submission,"
"As Real As It Gets" and the Octagon cage design are registered
trade marks or trademarks owned exclusively by Zuffa, LLC in the U.S.,
Japan and other jurisdictions. All other marks that may be referenced
herein belong to their respective holders.