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UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 12:05 PM
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Shocking Announcement in London

Today, Owner of Upstart British Promotion "British Cage Fighting" Jerome T McCallum, has announced the Firing of Charlie Knight as President, whereas now he will only be in the announcing booth. Now, PJ Ouellet, will be taking the presidential position, and many hope that he is twice the president that Knight was. Ouellet had this to say :

"I'm President ? Wow, that's something new... Well, I guess I'll have to start taking better care of things than I used to."

BCF News !

Multiple fighters coming across their respective continents to come fight with BCF, fighters from Canada, America, Mexico, South America, Europe, Africa, Japan, Asia, Australia and More ! To find out who, watch our on-line events at BCF.co.uk

Clarity
01-18-2009, 12:12 PM
I was just thinking of doing a wmma diary as well..

Hope this last longer than most of them on here. They seem to fizzle out fast

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 12:57 PM
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BCF Media Guide

BCF Heavyweight Championship
Garry McSweegan (12-2) vs. Aleksei Chekhov (8-2)

Chekhov, one of our first new signings, is immediately going to try his hand at one of our most prized fighters in the company, Heavyweight Champion Garry McSweegan. McSweegan, Winner of 3 straight fights, 2 of which by KO, has been on a hot streak, taking the vacant title from Perry Barr last November. Chekhov, will hope to stop McSweegan, but has a stiff test ahead of him.

My Prediction : Aleksei Chekhov via TKO in Round 2

Co-Main Event
Davis Spyrou (11-4) vs. Korekiyo Anzai (6-1)

Davis Spyrou and Korekiyo Anzai, two of BCF's Brightest Prospects in the Middleweight Division. The winner of this fight has been publicly told that they are next in-line for the Middleweight Title against Champion Andrew Rush. Anzai and Spyrou are both ground specialists, which should make for a technical back and forth battle.

My Prediction : Davis Spyrou via Submission in Round 3

Also On The Card

Doug Hansen vs. Rodophe Gygax
My Prediction : Hansen via Decision

Thorbjorn Rekdal vs. Bixente Fontaine
My Prediction : Rekdal via KO in Round 2

Manol Sirakov vs. Randall Donnelly
My Prediction : Sirakov via TKO in Round 1

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Quick Picks

Garry McSweegan vs. Aleksei Chekhov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Davis Spyrou
Rodolphe Gygax vs. Doug Hansen
Bixente Fontaine vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Manol Sirakov vs. Randall Donnelly

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 01:00 PM
Garry McSweegan vs. Aleksei Chekhov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Davis Spyrou
Rodolphe Gygax vs. Doug Hansen
Bixente Fontaine vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Manol Sirakov vs. Randall Donnelly

Just so I can keep track better :p

Clarity
01-18-2009, 01:03 PM
You may have competion.. Im thinking of doing one with BCF as well

Garry McSweegan vs. Aleksei Chekhov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Davis Spyrou
Rodolphe Gygax vs. Doug Hansen
Bixente Fontaine vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Manol Sirakov vs. Randall Donnelly

!Blaze!
01-18-2009, 01:08 PM
DOUG HANSAN IS A BEAST, easily he could be the champion

anyways I pick

Garry McSweegan vs. Aleksei Chekhov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Davis Spyrou
Rodolphe Gygax vs. Doug Hansen
Bixente Fontaine vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Manol Sirakov vs. Randall Donnelly

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 01:15 PM
You may have competion.. Im thinking of doing one with BCF as well

Garry McSweegan vs. Aleksei Chekhov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Davis Spyrou
Rodolphe Gygax vs. Doug Hansen
Bixente Fontaine vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Manol Sirakov vs. Randall Donnelly

Well, you have priority, you are legitimately British :p

Clarity
01-18-2009, 01:19 PM
Well, you have priority, you are legitimately British :pEnglish first.. then british

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 01:35 PM
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Manol Sirakov (4-6) vs. Randall Donnelly (3-1)

Round 1
An exchange of jabs doesn't go anywhere. Sirakov fakes a kick, then darts in to score with a straight left before backing out fast to avoid a left-right combination from Donnelly. They clinch, and Donnelly winds up backed against the cage. A couple of minor blows get exchanged, but it's turned into a bit of a stalemate. Sirakov tries to push Donnelly back, but can't. The referee waits a while, then separates them and gets them to resume. Donnelly forces Sirakov back against the cage and comes in close to try and unload. Sirakov pushes him away with a shove, palm across the face, and Donnelly loses his balance and is dumped onto the ground. Sirakov leaps into action to follow up. Sirakov starts raining down punches, and Donnelly is forced to cover up and simply try to weather the storm. Sirakov traps Donnelly's left arm between his legs, and has him in crucifix position. Donnelly is wide open. Sirakov starts smashing down on him with elbows and fists, using his left arm to keep Donnelly from bringing his own right arm in to cover up. More punches connect, and Donnelly can't do anything at all. The referee tells him to defend himself, but Donnelly simply can't. Sirakov fires off a brutal elbow with venom, and Donnelly took it full on the chin. He's out like a light, the referee pulls Sirakov off, the match is over. Sirakov wins via 1st round knock out with the official time being 4:53.

Manol Sirakov via KO (4:53, Round 1)

Thorbjorn Rekdal (3-1-1) vs. Bixente Fontaine (9-3)

Round 1
Dull first sixty seconds to the round, as neither fighter looks willing to commit much to attack. They're both looking for angles to come in from, but they're constantly countering each other. A crisp jab from Fontaine that almost found its way through the guard is the sole highlight as we reach the minute mark. Fontaine looks to be working an angle. Rekdal ducks out of the way of a punch, then back steps quickly, just in time to avoid the uppercut that was coming. Better from Fontaine, although no damage has actually been done yet. Rekdal steps back to avoid a straight left. Fontaine comes in to try it again, and gets caught with a lovely hook. Fontaine goes down hard, but isn't out, just stunned. Rekdal quickly mounts him before he can shake it off, and unloads with punches. The referee is very quickly in there and pulls Rekdal off, giving him the win. Replays show the referee was right to do so, Fontaine took three nasty looking shots in a row from the mount. The official time of the TKO is 2:43 of round 1.


Thorbjorn Rekdal via TKO (2:43, Round 1)

Doug Hansen (14-3) vs. Rodolphe Gygax (16-7)

Round 1
Hansen hits a nice left hook. Gygax felt it, and throws a ragged punch in response, missing by a mile. Hansen comes in close and hits a couple of big body shots, bobbing out of the way of the jabs that were aimed for his jaw. Gygax clinches up, but gets pushed all the way back to the cage, where Hansen uses a trip to send them both down to the ground. Gygax tries to push free, but Hansen forces him to go back to guard by raining down some jabs. Hansen reaches over and tries to apply some sort of neck vice, but Gygax breaks it by bringing his arms up. Hansen steps through in an effort to mount Gygax, but can only get to half guard as one of his legs gets trapped. Hansen throws some strikes, then tries to work an armbar on the closest arm. Gygax rolls over and uses his free arm to keep that from happening. That goes on for quite a long time, with Hansen determined to try and work the arm free and get an armbar, while Gygax uses everything at his disposal to block it. The round ends without Hansen having made the breakthrough, although he clearly ran away with the round in terms of points. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Hansen.

Round 2
Good start from Hansen, taking Gygax down almost immediately! Gygax scrambles though, and gets back to his feet without taking any damage at all. Hansen will be disappointed with that. Gygax comes in and throws two big right hands, but neither connects, and they put him off balance, allowing Hansen to score with a nice right hook to the side of the head, crunching into the top of the ear. Gygax felt that one for sure. He stalks Hansen, trying to back him up against the cage. It doesn't work though, Hansen keeps out of the way. Gygax tries a kick, but Hansen catches the foot and uses it for a trip. Hansen gets Gygax down for the second time, and this time is right on top of him in guard position. Hansen throws some punches, then tries to pass. Gygax doesn't allow it, and tries to grab an armbar in response. Hansen easily stops that, and throws some more punches. That becomes the pattern, as the fight falls into a predictable pattern; punches from Hansen followed by a pass attempt, with Gygax blocking the pass and throwing the occasional punch in response. The round ends like that, just as the referee was about to stand them back up. The round ends. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Hansen.

Round 3
Slow start to the round, they're both circling, looking for an opening. Gygax tries a looping punch from way back, but Hansen side steps with ease. Jab from Hansen, gets one back in response. Gygax comes in, looking for the right hand lead, but Hansen shoots in and uses a double-leg takedown. He winds up in a closed guard. Gygax tries to push free, but Hansen forces him to go back to guard by raining down some jabs. Hansen reaches over and tries to apply some sort of neck vice, but Gygax breaks it by bringing his arms up. Hansen steps through in an effort to mount Gygax, but can only get to half guard as one of his legs gets trapped. Hansen throws some strikes, then tries to work an armbar on the closest arm. Gygax rolls over and uses his free arm to keep that from happening. That goes on for quite a long time, with Hansen determined to try and work the arm free and get an armbar, while Gygax uses everything at his disposal to block it. The round ends without Hansen having made the breakthrough, although he clearly ran away with the round in terms of points. The round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Hansen. The three judges all give the match as 30-27 to Doug Hansen.

Doug Hansen via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

Korekiyo Anzai (6-1) vs. Davis Spyrou (11-4)

Round 1
A touch of gloves to start the round, and we're underway. Spyrou lets rip with a vicious straight right almost immediately, but it's easily avoided. Anzai sneaks a jab through the guard and catches Spyrou on the left cheek, but the follow up right hook only finds gloves. They get close to each other and end up in a clinch, from which Anzai manages to get the better position, pushing Spyrou up against the cage. Right hand to the ribs from Anzai. Spyrou hits a couple of knees to the side. There's a struggle for supremacy going on, it's difficult to see who is winning it. Anzai tries a knee of his own, but that is the opportunity that Spyrou was waiting for and he sweeps the standing leg to take Anzai down to the ground, in side control. Excellent takedown. Anzai covers up to defend against a pair of back-hand blows, and even manages to sneak a knee strike in. Spyrou hits a big elbow to the ribs, Anzai definitely felt that. Spyrou drives a knee to the near side, then attempts to float-over into a mount. Anzai brought his legs in though, and manages to pull guard. Spyrou will be disappointed with that. He tries to get a big punch in, but Anzai defends it well and gets a hold of both arms. The fight grinds to a halt, with Spyrou unable to generate any attacks, and Anzai unwilling to give up a good defensive position. The referee stands them up. Spyrou will likely be very angry that he didn't make more of that takedown. They exchange half-hearted jabs as the round draws to an end. The first round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Spyrou.

Round 2
Anzai leads with the right hand to set up a low kick, Spyrou deals with it well. They clinch, but only for a few seconds before it gets broken. Both throw stiff jabs at the same time, neither connects properly. Back to the clinch. It has been a disjointed start to the round, the flow hasn't quite developed properly. Spyrou uses a knee to the ribs before backing Anzai up against the cage. Right hand from Anzai connects though, that was well timed. Spyrou breaks the clinch and backs off. That was sloppy on his part, Anzai was basically gifted a free shot. Three quick jabs from Spyrou sting the gloves, then a crashing hook to the body finds its mark. Good recovery. Anzai fires off a low kick again, but it's well wide. Anzai misses with a straight right. Spyrou hits a standing kick, and Anzai is rocked, stumbling backwards and falling to the floor. Spyrou leaps into action and fires off a barrage of right hands. The referee dives in and protects Anzai, bringing the fight to an end. The kick didn't knock Anzai out, but it left him stunned, and that was all that Spyrou needed to finish the job. Spyrou wins via 2nd round TKO with the official time being 4:22.

Davis Spyrou via TKO (4:22, Round 2)

BCF Heavyweight Championship
Garry McSweegan (12-2) vs. Aleksei Chekhov (8-2)

Round 1
Chekhov starts with a high kick, but McSweegan was well out of range. About thirty seconds pass without any contact, and the crowd become a little restless. Chekhov steps in and exchanges strikes with McSweegan, neither fighter gets a particular advantage from it. McSweegan parries away a nice right hand and gets in a crisp counter punch that catches Chekhov on the shoulder. The round has been a little flat so far, neither of them is really forcing the issue. They enter into a clinch, which doesn't help matters, and that seems to last for an eternity before the referee separates them and tells them to get on with it. Chekhov finally shows some fire, putting together a combination of two jabs, a cross, and an uppercut. McSweegan did well to defend it, bobbing and weaving out of the way and using his gloves to parry away anything that was too close. He uses a low kick to the thigh as a response, then steps in and unloads with two fine punches, although Chekhov blocked them. Chekhov scores the best punch of the round so far, coming in fast, ducking under a dangerous right hand, and catching McSweegan square in the face with a lunging overhand right. McSweegan backs off and covers up, clearly having felt that one, and unfortunately Chekhov's attempts to follow up and thwarted as he gets tied up in a clinch near the cage. The time expires, with Chekhov probably having stolen that round thanks to that one big punch. The first round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Chekhov by 10-9.

Round 2
Exchange of punches to start, nothing really hit though. They go into a clinch, and the pace disappears as both fighters try and get the advantage. Eventually the referee separates them. Jab from Chekhov, who then has to react quickly to avoid a right hook that was aimed right at the chin. Chekhov puts on a burst of energy and fires off a big sequence of punches, maybe twelve or thirteen in a row, although not many actually connected. McSweegan covered up well, and gets in a couple of shots of his own before moving out of range again. Both fighters circle. Low kick from McSweegan, almost to the groin, although it didn't look intentional. They come together in a clinch again, and it returns to a stalemate. Not a great round by anyone's standard, but that flurry should mean that Chekhov will take the round on points. The 2nd round ends. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Chekhov.

Round 3
Tentative circling to begin with. They meet in the center, but quickly fall into a clinch. Chekhov gets a nice shot in to the ribs. McSweegan gets a pair of punches to the side of the head, but they lacked power. The referee breaks them up eventually. Chekhov presses forward, flicking out straight rights. McSweegan leans in to throw a looping left hand. Chekhov avoids it, and it allows him to throw a powerful counter punch that catches McSweegan right above the ear. Great punch. Chekhov moves in and throws a devastating right hand. McSweegan just about manages to parry it, but it still caught him on the shoulder. McSweegan throws a right hand counter, but Chekhov swats it aside and lands a big left to the chest. McSweegan clinches up again. So far, Chekhov's power is allowing him to control this round, McSweegan is simply being out-gunned thus far. They end up next to the cage. McSweegan gets in a couple of nasty right hands to the chest. That's the first time this round that he looks to have actually hurt Chekhov. Chekhov pushes McSweegan up against the cage and unloads with three big right hands. One got through and caught McSweegan above the left eye, the other two hit home across the chest. McSweegan clinches up again to avoid getting obliterated, and the round ends before they are broken up. End of the round. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Chekhov.

Round 4
Chekhov starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and McSweegan manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. McSweegan uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and Chekhov is forced back against the cage. McSweegan picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. Chekhov uses a couple of looping punches to make McSweegan keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as McSweegan bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. Chekhov scores with a low kick. An exchange of punches goes nowhere, and they fall into a clinch. The referee separates them when nothing happens. McSweegan unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. End of the round. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 McSweegan. The official scores are: 39-37 (twice), 40-36 for Aleksei Chekhov. Aleksei Chekhov is now the BCF Heavyweight champion.


Aleksei Chekhov via Unanimous Decision (39-37, 39-37, 40-36)


Awards (Fighters Will Receive a 50,000 $ Bonus)

KO Of the Night : Thorbjorn Rekdal
Submission of the Night : N/A
Fight of the Night : Doug Hansen vs. Rodolphe Gygax

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 02:19 PM
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BCF Press Conference

Ouellet : Alright, everybody, so our first show was a success, and now, I've got a plan, to really spice up the division. As you all know, Aleksei Chekhov, just won the Heavyweight Title. Now, there would be the easy way to give him a challenge. Give him Alois or Kapur, or some other guy. But, that would be to easy.

Our New Plan, is to hold a 8 man tournament in each division. This will determine the best fitting challenger to the title.

The tournaments will start in the Heavyweight Division, as The Title has already been challenged once. As soon as Spyrou and Hansen challenge the titles in their respective divisions, the tournaments will start !

Potential Participants :

Stjepan Andric
Stafford Alois
Shane Gilchrist
Russell McPhee
Rav Kapur
Perry Barr
Percy Catcher
Norman Pike
Noah Musch
Nicolai Mickiewicz
Murray Darby
Mugur Boc
Michael Bannon
Mark Bicknell
Lachlan Bowen
Juozas Skerla
Jesse Singh
Jerry Bogdonovich
Harvey Loeb
Graham Goodbody
Eddie Whelan
Derek South
Dave Lennon
Daniel Hornsby
Curt Kitson
Brian Barnes
Bob Dozier

These Fighters will Be Randomly Seeded, and the top 8 will participate in the tournament.

That's all for today folks, and I hope to see you at the Next BCF event.

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 02:28 PM
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BCF : Heavyweight Challenge

Heavyweight Challenge

Stafford Alois vs. Shane Gilchrist
Rav Kapur vs. Dave Lennon
Eddie Whelan vs. Perry Barr
Russell McPhee vs. Nicolai Mickiewicz

Non-Tournament Match-Ups

Nigel Malley vs. Uwe Maier
Juozas Skerla vs. Percy Cather

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Quick Picks

Stafford Alois vs. Shane Gilchrist
Rav Kapur vs. Dave Lennon
Eddie Whelan vs. Perry Barr
Russell McPhee vs. Nicolai Mickiewicz
Nigel Malley vs. Uwe Maier
Juozas Skerla vs. Percy Catcher

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 02:34 PM
Stafford Alois vs. Shane Gilchrist
Rav Kapur vs. Dave Lennon
Eddie Whelan vs. Perry Barr
Russell McPhee vs. Nicolai Mickiewicz
Nigel Malley vs. Uwe Maier
Juozas Skerla vs. Percy Catcher

Clarity
01-18-2009, 02:39 PM
[I]Today, Owner of Upstart British Promotion "British Cage Fighting" Jerome T McCallum, has announced the Firing of Charlie Knight as President, whereas now he will only be in the announcing booth. Now, PJ Ouellet, will be taking the presidential position, and many hope that he is twice the president that Knight was. Ouellet had this to say

Avatar : Alright, everybody, so our first show was a success, and now, I've got a plan, to really spice up the division. As you all know, Aleksei Chekhov, just won the Heavyweight Title. Now, there would be the easy way to give him a challenge. Give him Alois or Kapur, or some other guy. But, that would be to easy.

Erm.. Is it Ouellet or Avatar???

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 02:44 PM
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BCF HQ

George Laurent Walks In

Ouellet : Hey George, What's Up ?

Laurent : I got to talk to you man.

Ouellet : Sure Come into the office.

Ouellet : So What's on your mind ?

Laurent : Ok, I'm just going to come out with this right away...

I'm Retiring.

Ouellet : But, why ? Dude, you're one of the biggest stars in Britain, and you're only 33 years old man, Why are you retiring now ?

Laurent : I just can't do this anymore, it's just not what it used to be for me anymore. So I'm gonna finish out my last fight, and then I want you to terminate my contract.

Ouellet : Ok, that's fine, but you're going to have to be the one that answer's to McCallum, Cause it's not going to be me.

Laurent : All Right, I'm off then...

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 02:46 PM
Erm.. Is it Ouellet or Avatar???

Yeah, I screwed up there, just edited it now :p

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 03:52 PM
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British Cage Fighting and Bishop Tires Present

BCF : Heavyweight Challenge

Nigel Malley (8-9-1) vs. Uwe Maier (5-1)

Round 1
They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Malley, providing the first moment of real action. Maier hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Malley side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. Maier is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. End of round 1. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Maier.

Round 2
The two competitors start slowly, circling and looking for an opening. Malley fakes shooting in for a takedown, but Maier didn't buy it for a second. In comes Malley from an angle to the right, but Maier had it covered all the way, and not only easily steps out of the way of the attempted right hand, but manages to score with a solid right hand to the side of the head. Malley felt that, and is forced to cover up quickly as Maier steps in quickly and unloads with a flurry of powerful blows, looking to capitalise on the earlier strike. Malley is forced back against the cage, but to his credit, he did a good job defending those strikes and didn't seem to take any significant damage. Maier doesn't get in too close, realising that it would likely mean getting caught in a clinch, so he stands slightly back instead and throws some low kicks and looping punches. Malley responds by throwing out some straight jabs, but neither fighter is really doing any damage to their opponent. Maier clearly grows tired of the wait, and moves in to hit a body blow. It connects, but Malley is quick to tie him up in a clinch. That lasts quite a while, until the referee gets in there and breaks them up, telling them to fight. They both seem to be looking for an opening, and it's creating a stalemate at the moment. Maier scores with a stiff jab, and bobs and weaves to avoid all three of the rapid-fire punches that come back from Malley. Nicely done. Malley, realising that he is losing this round, comes forward with a sense of urgency, throwing right hands to put Maier on the back foot. Maier handles it well though, refusing to let Malley get an angle, and using some nice counter punches to the body to further cement the fact that this round is going to him on points. Time expires with Malley throwing increasingly desperate punches. The second round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Maier by 10-9.

Round 3
Two jabs from the left hand of Maier set up a hard waist-high kick, but Malley steps back to avoid it. Nice attempt though. Maier moves in closer, bobbing and weaving, and looks to score with a looping right hand, but Malley uses the gloves to parry it away, then counter-strikes with a crisp jab and a kick to the knee. Good opening to the round, both fighters are looking lively. Maier finds himself backed up against the cage briefly, and has to scramble to safety to avoid a flurry of strikes. Malley is working for position, and is currently looking the more composed of the two. They come together, both throwing punches. Malley gets a nice clean shot in, and Maier stumbles backwards and falls to the floor. Malley is on top of him quickly, and unloads with two more big punches, both connect solidly. The referee jumps in and pulls him away before a third is thrown, this match is over by TKO. Replays show the referee may have been slightly early. Malley wins via 3rd round TKO with the official time being 2:21.

Nigel Malley via TKO (2:21, Round 3)

Juozas Skerla (1-0) vs. Percy Catcher (6-2)

Round 1
Right hand from Skerla was thrown with power, but bounced off the gloves of Catcher. Skerla follows up by coming in close, but Catcher is ready with a straight right hand that glances off the side of the head. Skerla hits a stinging right hand, Catcher felt it too. Skerla moves in to follow up, but Catcher anticipated it well and scores with a massive kick. Skerla is stunned, and stumbles to the ground. Catcher is on top of him almost right away, and fires off a series of punches. Skerla covers up, barely, but a lot of shots are getting through. The referee decides that enough is enough, and pulls Catcher off, it's a TKO victory. Official time of the TKO is 1:17 of the first round.

Percy Catcher via TKO (1:17, Round 1)

HEAVYWEIGHT CHALLENGE MATCH-UPS

Russell McPhee (3-0) vs. Nicolai Mickiewicz (9-1)

Round 1
Slow start, both fighters are throwing tentative punches without threatening anything more powerful. Mickiewicz puts together the first exciting moment, stringing together four punches in quick succession, but McPhee defended well. Straight right from McPhee in response, but it caught nothing but gloves. They start circling. The referee tells them to fight, the lack of action so far is worrying. They get in close and exchange body shots, Mickiewicz probably getting the slightly better punches in, and then fall into a clinch. That goes nowhere, and the referee separates them. McPhee gets a nice kick in just before the time expires, but it's unlikely that is going to stop the judges giving that round to Mickiewicz. End of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Mickiewicz by 10-9.

Round 2
McPhee doesn't waste any time and throws two jabs to the face, but Mickiewicz easily side-steps both and circles to the left. Mickiewicz throws a head fake, then comes in fast from an angle with a looping punch, but misses and takes a glancing shot to the shoulder from a left hand counter. Mickiewicz throws a nice combination of punches, but McPhee was out of range and untroubled. Mickiewicz comes in quick, just as McPhee throws a wild high kick. The kick connects, crunching into the temple, and Mickiewicz is out cold, falling painfully face-first to the floor. McPhee's wild kick wins the match with a knock out. The official time is 1:41.

Russell McPhee via KO (1:41, Round 2)

Eddie Whelan (10-2) vs. Perry Barr (13-4)

Round 1
The two fighters circle. Barr flicks out a couple of jabs, then an unconventinal looping right hand. Whelan easily side-steps it, but trips and falls to the ground! He is up quickly, before Barr could get in. Replays confirm that it was purely a stumble, the punch was well wide of the mark. Whelan moves in, ducks under a big right hand, and gets two crisp jabs in before getting smothered into a clinch. One of those jabs landed hard, Barr is a little rattled. They struggle in the clinch, both throwing small punches to the back and ribs. The referee separates them. Barr forces Whelan back up against the cage, and starts throwing jabs. He looks to be keeping Whelan in position, waiting to unload a big punch. Barr does, lunging in with a huge right cross, but Whelan saw it coming and goes underneath it, scoring with a right hand to the gut on the way past. Barr turns and tries to follow up immediately, but gets tagged with a wicked left hook that drops him to one knee. Barr is up quickly, causing Whelan, who was about to dive in, to back off. Replays show that the punch connected, but Barr was already going downward to duck the punch, so it wasn't as powerful as first thought. Barr throws a high kick, but it doesn't do anything but cause Whelan to step back. The time expires without anything further of note happening. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Whelan.

Round 2
The round starts slowly, with both fighters circling, tentatively throwing out the occasional jab. Barr is the first to make a positive move, stepping in to throw a right hand, although he probably wishes that he hadn't, as Whelan picks him off with a crisp jab to the cheek. Barr throws a wild punch as a counter, but Whelan ducks and backs off out of range. They meet again in the center for an exchange of punches. Barr gets a clubbing blow to the side of the head in, but takes a hard shot to the stomach in return. The early pattern seems to be that Barr is looking for big punches, Whelan is happy to avoid them and use quick counter punches instead. They clinch up, and Barr manages to back Whelan up against the cage. Barr takes a half step backward and throws a big right hand to the head, but Whelan ducks under at the last second, scores with a pair of punches to the gut, then darts out of trouble before Barr can unload. Barr may need to think about changing tactics, Whelan is looking far sharper in these striking battles, and is beginning to control the pace and tempo of the round. Barr fakes a right hand, then shoots out a low kick, catching Whelan on the thigh. Whelan presses forward for the first time, getting in close and using a couple of jabs to the body. Barr gets a nice left hook in, glancing off the gloves, and then clinches up. Time ticks away and the round ends just a few seconds after the referee separates them. End of round 2. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Whelan.

Round 3
Whelan starts brightly by throwing some looping punches. Defended well by Barr. They circle, throwing tentative jabs. Barr goes for a single leg and puts Whelan on the floor, but he is up very quickly, preventing Barr from getting on top. Whelan definitely seems to want to keep this standing. Barr hits a nice jab, avoids a counter left hook, then comes in low and takes down Whelan again. This time Whelan isn't able to get up, and has to pull guard. Times ticking away though, Barr will have to hurry to finish. He goes for an armbar, but Whelan defends. Barr tries to slip past to get side control, but Whelan just about manages to keep guard. A second attempt works though, and Barr has the side. Two big elbows land, and Whelan seems in trouble. Barr goes for the kimura, but can't quite get it. The time expires before he can try again, and the referee separates them. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Barr. All three judges give a score of 29-28 in favour of Eddie Whelan.

Eddie Whelan via Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Rav Kapur (5-0) vs. Dave Lennon (6-1)

Round 1
An exchange of jabs doesn't go anywhere. Lennon fakes a kick, then darts in to score with a straight left before backing out fast to avoid a left-right combination from Kapur. They clinch, and Kapur winds up backed against the cage. A couple of minor blows get exchanged, but it's turned into a bit of a stalemate. Lennon tries to push Kapur back, but can't. The referee waits a while, then separates them and gets them to resume. They circle. Lennon tries to work inside, but leaves himself open and gets taken down. Guard. Kapur hits a few tentative punches, but doesn't have anything on them. Lennon manages to turn the tables and ends up in the guard, Kapur let his dominant position slip too easily. Lennon rains down punches, but Kapur defends them well. Lennon gets out of the guard and into side control. Big elbow to the face. Kapur caught that flush. Another big elbow, followed by a third. Kapur is looking groggy. Lennon hits a fourth huge elbow, and the referee has seen enough, the match is over. Kapur might have some complaints about that, but the elbows were clearly connecting, and he didn't manage to do anything to stop any of them. Lennon wins via first round TKO at 3:16.

Dave Lennon via TKO (3:16, Round 1)

Stafford Alois (18-7) vs. Shane Gilchrist (11-2)

Round 1
Alois starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Gilchrist manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Gilchrist uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and Alois is forced back against the cage. Gilchrist picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. Alois uses a couple of looping punches to make Gilchrist keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Gilchrist bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. Alois scores with a low kick. Gilchrist looks to be working an angle. Gilchrist unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. The first round is over. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Gilchrist.

Round 2
The fighters touch gloves, then circle. Gilchrist throws a low kick, but it was without any conviction, it seemed designed more to keep Alois from coming inside. Gilchrist works an angle, then comes in with a one-two combination, Alois responds with a crisp uppercut that wasn't far off from connecting. Gilchrist backs off slightly, maybe a bit relieved not to have taken that one on the chin. Neither fighter appears to be looking for any sort of takedown or grapple, this is all about the striking. Alois circles and throws a series of high jabs, but Gilchrist blocked them with ease, using the gloves. Gilchrist fakes a high kick, then storms in with a wild looking right hand and a series of body shots. Alois covers up and rides out the storm, clinching to stop any further blows. It was a nice attack from Gilchrist though, best action of the round. They stay clinched for a while, exchanging occasional punches to the ribs, then are separated by the referee. It looks like this round is going to the judges though, as there's only a few seconds remaining. Gilchrist throws a leg kick that connects, albeit without too much force, and the round is done. The second round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Gilchrist.

Round 3
The two fighters circle. A series of looping punches from Alois forces Gilchrist back up against the cage, and he has to cover up to withstand the three strikes that follow. No real damage caused, but Alois is aggressively chasing this match. A hook finds the body and Gilchrist clinches. They almost lose their balance as they jockey for position, Gilchrist gets in a couple of knees when they regain their footing. Alois seems to be trying to break the clinch, it's Gilchrist who is holding it tight, perhaps hoping to calm the energetic start that Alois had. The referee finally does break them up, after nearly a full minute of inactivity. Gilchrist gets caught with a solid right hand out of nowhere, and is rocked. Alois follows up with another one, and Gilchrist looks in trouble all of a sudden. He is backed up against the cage and Alois is unloading. The punches are raining down, Gilchrist is covering up. The referee has seen enough and stops the fight, clearly feeling that Gilchrist was unable to defend himself intelligently. Alois wins. Alois wins via third round TKO at 3:25.

Stafford Alois via TKO (3:25, Round 3)



Awards (Fighters Will Receive a 50,000 $ Bonus)

KO Of the Night : Russell McPhee
Submission of the Night : N/A
Fight of the Night : Stafford Alois vs. Shane Gilchrist

Clarity
01-18-2009, 04:05 PM
Whats your finances like?

BFC start with only 100k. You've given 300k away as rewards

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 04:11 PM
Whats your finances like?

BFC start with only 100k. You've given 300k away as rewards

The Bonuses are just to make it more like the UFC, I don't actually give them away :p, but I jacked up marketing And I've got a pay-per-view carrier so I make like 3 Million a show.

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 04:12 PM
But My finances are at 7 Million

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 04:14 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

BCF : Hansen vs. Dalglish

Doug Hansen vs. Jason Dalglish (c)
Davis Spyrou vs. Andrew Rush (c)
George Laurent vs. Will Kane
Petey Mack vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Pat Troy vs. Agustin Gonzalez
Derek South vs. Noah Musch
Bae Yoon vs. Scott Gillespie
Tucker Plumm vs. Jemaine McKenzie

Clarity
01-18-2009, 04:14 PM
Ah.. Im just about balancing the books in mine

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 04:14 PM
Doug Hansen vs. Jason Dalglish (c)
Davis Spyrou vs. Andrew Rush (c)
George Laurent vs. Will Kane
Petey Mack vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Pat Troy vs. Agustin Gonzalez
Derek South vs. Noah Musch
Jemaine McKenzie vs. Tucker Plumm
Bae Yoon vs. Scott Gillespie

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 05:09 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg
British Cage Fighting and DailyFight.com Present...

BCF : Hansen vs. Dalglish

Derek South (1-0) vs. Noah Musch (0-0)

Round 1
Two jabs from the left hand of South set up a hard waist-high kick, but Musch steps back to avoid it. Nice attempt though. South moves in closer, bobbing and weaving, and looks to score with a looping right hand, but Musch uses the gloves to parry it away, then counter-strikes with a crisp jab and a kick to the knee. Good opening to the round, both fighters are looking lively. South finds himself backed up against the cage briefly, and has to scramble to safety to avoid a flurry of strikes. Musch is working for position, and is currently looking the more composed of the two. South throws a big right hand, but misses and is wide open, allowing Musch to take him down with ease. South scrambles, Musch tries to stay with him , and a battle for ground supremacy happens. South manages to sweep Musch, and the frenetic grappling ends with South in Musch's guard. South stands up, breaking the guard. Musch remains down, throwing the occasional up-kick whenever South looks to come in. South throws a couple of tentative kicks to the legs. South comes in quickly, avoiding another up-kick, and gets side control. Musch tries to bring his legs around to pull guard, but it isn't happening. South hits a couple of strong punches to the face. Musch is having trouble blocking them. South moves into a full mount, and things have gone from bad to worse for Musch. This is a really bad position to be in. South starts throwing punches down, and Musch can only try and deflect them. He keeps trying to use his hips or legs to push South off, but it isn't working at all. South drops a hammer fist, then throws a right hand bomb that lands perfectly. Musch takes it on the point of the chin, and is out like a light! South wins by knock out. The official time is 2:46.

Derek South via KO (2:46, Round 1)

Scott Gillespie (2-0) vs. Bae Yoon (0-1)

Round 1
The round starts slowly, with both fighters circling, tentatively throwing out the occasional jab. Yoon is the first to make a positive move, stepping in to throw a right hand, although he probably wishes that he hadn't, as Gillespie picks him off with a crisp jab to the cheek. Yoon throws a wild punch as a counter, but Gillespie ducks and backs off out of range. They meet again in the center for an exchange of punches. Yoon gets a clubbing blow to the side of the head in, but takes a hard shot to the stomach in return. The early pattern seems to be that Yoon is looking for big punches, Gillespie is happy to avoid them and use quick counter punches instead. They clinch up, and Yoon manages to back Gillespie up against the cage. Yoon takes a half step backward and throws a big right hand to the head, but Gillespie ducks under at the last second, scores with a pair of punches to the gut, then darts out of trouble before Yoon can unload. Yoon may need to think about changing tactics, Gillespie is looking far sharper in these striking battles, and is beginning to control the pace and tempo of the round. Yoon fakes a right hand, then shoots out a low kick, catching Gillespie on the thigh. Gillespie presses forward for the first time, getting in close and using a couple of jabs to the body. Yoon gets a nice left hook in, glancing off the gloves, and then clinches up. Time ticks away and the round ends just a few seconds after the referee separates them. End of round 1. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Gillespie.

Round 2
Gillespie starts fast, firing off several crisp jabs that keep Yoon on the back foot. A solid left hits gloves, but it's really just a set-up for Gillespie to step in and use an uppercut. Not sure how much of it caught Yoon, but certainly enough to to make him grab a clinch to stop any further punishment. Great start to the round from Gillespie, it has been total domination so far. The clinch is broken, and the two fighters exchange some long range jabs that are easily avoided. Yoon is looking a little lost so far, Gillespie is controlling this round by virtue of his crisp accurate punches and higher aggression levels. Yoon with a body shot. Gillespie leads with the left, then moves in and gets in a wicked right hand that grazes the cheek. Yoon was fortunate there, if that had landed properly it would have been over. Yoon comes back with a leg kick to set up a one-two combination, but the round is coming to a close and it's going to be too little too late. The one bright spot for Yoon is that although Gillespie clearly won the round, he didn't actually turn that dominance into any sort of real damage. The second round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Gillespie by 10-9.

Round 3
Yoon starts strongly, immediately rushing in for a takedown. Gillespie got taken by surprise a little, but wrestles his way free of the grapple and pulls to safety. Gillespie doesn't hang around for a second attempt, he uses a looping left to set himself up to come in close and score with a series of strikes, two or three nice body shots included. Yoon covers up, throwing the occasional jab as a counter. Gillespie goes for a vicious uppercut, but gets pulled into a clinch. Yoon goes for a takedown via a trip, but Gillespie defends it. Another trip attempt, another failure. Yoon pushes Gillespie up against the cage and tries to wrestle him to the ground, but Gillespie keeps his balance and sprawls to stop it. Gillespie gets in a hard right hand to the side of the face, taking advantage of the fact that Yoon was leaning in too far. Gillespie reverses so that Yoon is against the cage. They remain clinched, with nothing more than minor strikes being thrown, for a long time. The referee finally breaks them apart and gets them back to the center. Gillespie throws a kick, waist-high, but Yoon avoids it. That could have been used for a takedown attempt if Yoon had been quicker and caught it. Gillespie hits two or three punches in a row, stinging the gloves of Yoon. The round draws to a close. It'll be interesting to see where the judges go with this, as Gillespie clearly got the better strikes in throughout the round, but Yoon did probably show more aggression by virtue of his almost constant attempts to get the takedown. The round is over. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Gillespie. All three judges give a score of 30-27 in favour of Scott Gillespie.

Scott Gillespie via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

Agustin Gonzalez (3-0) vs. Pat Troy (0-0)

Round 1
Troy is forced onto the backfoot almost immediately, having to retreat to avoid a series of sharp jabs. He ends up with his back to the cage, with Gonzalez advancing. A sharp right misses, and Troy takes the opportunity to pull Gonzalez in to a tight clinch against the cage. Gonzalez tries to break free, but cannot. It looks like we know the strategies for this round already; Gonzalez wants to stand and bang, Troy wants to keep things at close quarters. Gonzalez tries for an elbow, but only succeeds in getting turned around so that he is now the one against the cage. Trip from Troy, and we're down to the ground. Troy has side control, but Gonzalez has landed with his left hand side against the cage, so that side of the body is basically safe for now. Troy will have to try to work the right-hand side, and starts by ramming a knee into the ribs. Gonzalez tries to squirm into a better position, but Troy puts a stop to that with a stiff elbow to the stomach. Troy tries to work a kimura on the right arm, but Gonzalez defends it. Gonzalez manages to bring a knee up and catch Troy in the side, something of a cheeky move given his position. Troy responds with five or six rapid-fire right hands to the face, but Gonzalez covers up and doesn't take any serious damage at all. Time is ticking away though, and so far Troy may be easily winning the round, but he is not taking full advantage of this great position. Troy tries to float over into a mount, but Gonzalez uses the cage to push away and manages to unbalance Troy enough to get to a kneeling position, then standing, albeit back into a clinch. A knee from Troy is the last action of the round. End of round 1. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Troy.

Round 2
Gonzalez starts fast, firing off several crisp jabs that keep Troy on the back foot. A solid left hits gloves, but it's really just a set-up for Gonzalez to step in and use an uppercut. Not sure how much of it caught Troy, but certainly enough to to make him grab a clinch to stop any further punishment. Great start to the round from Gonzalez, it has been total domination so far. The clinch is broken, and the two fighters exchange some long range jabs that are easily avoided. Troy is looking a little lost so far, Gonzalez is controlling this round by virtue of his crisp accurate punches and higher aggression levels. Gonzalez looks to be working an angle. Gonzalez leads with the left, then moves in and gets in a wicked right hand that grazes the cheek. Troy was fortunate there, if that had landed properly it would have been over. Troy comes back with a leg kick to set up a one-two combination, but the round is coming to a close and it's going to be too little too late. The one bright spot for Troy is that although Gonzalez clearly won the round, he didn't actually turn that dominance into any sort of real damage. The round ends. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Gonzalez.

Round 3
The fighters come together right in the center. Troy throws out a jab, but Gonzalez bobs out of the way and uses a right hand to glance a blow off the side of the ribs in response. Gonzalez works an angle and storms in suddenly with three crisp jabs and a looping overhand punch, Troy covered up quickly but at least one of the jabs hit home. Gonzalez is making Troy look sluggish in comparison, such is the speed and crispness with which he is delivering strikes. Troy hits a low kick before back-pedalling to avoid a clubbing blow. For a second it looked like Troy was about to go for a takedown, but nothing came from it. They meet in the center to exchange a flurry of strikes that gets the crowd on their feet. Gonzalez got slightly the better of it, he definitely snuck through a right hand that rocked Troy slightly. Troy initiates a clinch, and the action grinds to a halt. Troy looks out of ideas, he is being repeatedly lured into these exchange of strikes, but Gonzalez is clearly winning them. Troy needs to find some way to deal with them. Not much time left in this round. The referee separates them. Gonzalez tries a speculative high kick, but Troy saw it coming and was well out of range by the time it came. Troy tries to work an angle, but Gonzalez is having none of it and fires off a straight right hand to keep him from stepping in. Comfortable round for Gonzalez, he will probably be disappointed not to have done more damage given his dominance of the striking in this round. The 3rd round ends. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Gonzalez. The official scores are: 29-28 (twice), 30-27 for Agustín Gonzalez.

Agustin Gonzalez via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 29-28, 29-28)

Tucker Plumm (13-7) vs. Jemaine McKenzie (7-2)

Round 1
McKenzie goes to the center, and immediately throws some jabs, looking to engage in a striking battle. Plumm doesn't commit though, instead circling and looking for an angle. Plumm comes in, ducks a right hand, then unleashes a flurry of punches. McKenzie covers up at first, then throws a scathing right hand, but Plumm is already out of range. Plumm repeats the trick, working a new angle, darting in, then firing off strikes while keeping out of the way of any counter punches. It happens a third time, and McKenzie is beginning to look frustrated. Plumm's footwork and general movement is looking good, McKenzie is being made to look very slow and lumbering in comparison. Furthermore, Plumm is being able to launch multiple short bursts of offense without really being in any danger, McKenzie has yet to hit any sort of meaningful punch, simply because Plumm is too quick. McKenzie finally gets in close enough to grapple with Plumm, clinching up. McKenzie scores a nice body punch, then steps back and goes for a vicious right hand, but Plumm bobs out of the way and hits a right hook of his own. Time is ticking away, and McKenzie is well behind in this round, he needs to do something special. McKenzie swings for the fences, but Plumm has no problem avoiding it. The round peters out. The round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to Plumm by 10-9.

Round 2
The round starts slowly, with both fighters circling, tentatively throwing out the occasional jab. McKenzie is the first to make a positive move, stepping in to throw a right hand, although he probably wishes that he hadn't, as Plumm picks him off with a crisp jab to the cheek. McKenzie throws a wild punch as a counter, but Plumm ducks and backs off out of range. They meet again in the center for an exchange of punches. McKenzie gets a clubbing blow to the side of the head in, but takes a hard shot to the stomach in return. The early pattern seems to be that McKenzie is looking for big punches, Plumm is happy to avoid them and use quick counter punches instead. They clinch up, and McKenzie manages to back Plumm up against the cage. McKenzie takes a half step backward and throws a big right hand to the head, but Plumm ducks under at the last second, scores with a pair of punches to the gut, then darts out of trouble before McKenzie can unload. McKenzie may need to think about changing tactics, Plumm is looking far sharper in these striking battles, and is beginning to control the pace and tempo of the round. McKenzie fakes a right hand, then shoots out a low kick, catching Plumm on the thigh. Plumm presses forward for the first time, getting in close and using a couple of jabs to the body. McKenzie gets a nice left hook in, glancing off the gloves, and then clinches up. Time ticks away and the round ends just a few seconds after the referee separates them. The round ends. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Plumm.

Round 3
They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Plumm, providing the first moment of real action. McKenzie hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Plumm side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. McKenzie is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. The round ends. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to McKenzie. The official scores are: 29-28 from all three judges for Tucker Plumm.

Tucker Plumm via Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)

Thorbjorn Rekdal (4-1-1) vs. Petey Mack (6-1)

Round 1
Mack and Rekdal circle to start. Rekdal throws a couple of looping punches, neither hitting, while Mack sits back, waiting for an opportunity to attack. Rekdal comes in closer, looking to unload with a right hand; that misses, and it allows Mack to slip a nice jab in, catching Rekdal just underneath the right eye. Mack comes in and scores with a straight left, then bounces a right hand off the body. Rekdal misses with a right cross, then backs off. Mack stalks him, forcing Rekdal back up against the cage. Mack doesn't rush in, instead standing back and throwing the occasional punch. Rekdal throws a big left hand in response, but it misses by quite a margin. Mack pounces, hitting lefts and rights. Rekdal covers up from the first two punches, then clinches up to prevent any more coming in. They're up against the cage, Mack in the dominant position. They remain that way as the time ticks down. Mack throws the occasional knee, but can't really do much with his arms tied up like that. The referee finally tells them to break, and they return to the center. That clinch ate up a lot of time though. Rekdal comes in hard and fast, bobbing and weaving, and throws a couple of big shots. Mack parries them with his gloves and scores with a well-executed counter punch, hitting just above the eye. They come in close again, throwing punches, but wind up clinched again. The time expires with them like that, and that round will definitely go down in Mack's favour. The round ends. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Mack.

Round 2
Mack starts strong, hitting a nice low kick and following in with a shot to the body. Rekdal backs off, but just gets pushed up against the cage. Mack presses the advantage and works a nice hook to the body. Rekdal responds with an attempted sweep, and when that doesn't work, a punch that lands behind the ear. Mack gets in a low kick as he backs off, and the fight returns towards the center. Mack throws an uppercut, Rekdal easily steps back to avoid it. Mack follows him but gets blasted with a right hand! Mack falls to the ground! Rekdal leaps into action, mounting him and raining down punches. The referee stops the match, seeing that Mack was getting overwhelmed. Replays show that the punch that originally dropped Mack was a complete swing for the fences by Rekdal, he even looks like he has his eyes closed when it was thrown! Official time of the TKO is 2:52 of the second round.

Thorbjorn Rekdal via TKO (2:52, Round 2)

George Laurent (12-1) vs. Will Kane (7-0)

Round 1
The fighters touch gloves, then circle. Laurent throws a low kick, but it was without any conviction, it seemed designed more to keep Kane from coming inside. Laurent works an angle, then comes in with a one-two combination, Kane responds with a crisp uppercut that wasn't far off from connecting. Laurent backs off slightly, maybe a bit relieved not to have taken that one on the chin. Neither fighter appears to be looking for any sort of takedown or grapple, this is all about the striking. Kane circles and throws a series of high jabs, but Laurent blocked them with ease, using the gloves. Laurent fakes a high kick, then storms in with a wild looking right hand and a series of body shots. Kane covers up and rides out the storm, clinching to stop any further blows. It was a nice attack from Laurent though, best action of the round. They stay clinched for a while, exchanging occasional punches to the ribs, then are separated by the referee. It looks like this round is going to the judges though, as there's only a few seconds remaining. Laurent throws a leg kick that connects, albeit without too much force, and the round is done. The round is over. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Laurent.

Round 2
Laurent isn't hanging around, right from the start Kane is forced onto the back foot by four hard shots, although none of them get through the gloves. Kane circles, steps in, then unloads a combination of punches, but Laurent weaves out of the way and scores with a beauty of a right hand, glancing above the right eye. That was some lovely counter punching from Laurent, the timing had to be perfect and it was. Kane is looking a bit frustrated, and uncorks a ragged-looking uppercut that missed by several inches. Laurent really should have taken advantage of that mistake, Kane was wide open for a moment there. Laurent hits a high kick, catching Kane on the shoulder. Jab from Kane finds the mark, but it didn't have much power behind it as he was leaning backward too much. Laurent fires off a couple of straight punches in response, but only finds gloves. They clinch, and the fight enters a lull. Kane scores with a knee from the clinch, it landed around the hip area of Laurent, who responds with a couple of shots to the ribs. The time runs out with them still clinched though. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Laurent.

Round 3
Laurent throws two high punches, then steps in for a hook to the body. Nice combination, but Kane defended with ease. They clinch up next to the cage, but a short struggle only ends with them separating and coming back in. A thunderous kick connects from Kane, catching Laurent hard across the chest. He staggers back up against the cage, looking stunned. Kane follows in and scores with several punches. Laurent tries to cover up, but falls down and becomes overwhelmed with more punches. The referee has seen enough and jumps in to stop the match. Official time of the TKO is 1:35 of the third.

Will Kane via TKO (1:35, Round 3)

BCF Middleweight Championship
Andrew Rush (12-0) vs. Davis Spyrou (12-4)

Round 1
Rush starts fast, unleashing a bomb of a right hand, but Spyrou avoids it without too much trouble. Rush isn't disheartened though, swinging two more huge punches, with Spyrou getting out the way each time, but being forced all over the place. Rush finally backs off a little, breathing hard. That was quite a frantic start. Spyrou opts to use that, and comes in to throw some jabs. Rush is backed up against the cage, covering up. Spyrou clinches. They struggle, and the fight enters a lull. Rush hits a knee strike to the hip. Spyrou slips one leg behind Rush and uses that as leverage for a big trip. Rush landed hard, with Spyrou on top. They're in half guard. It's to Rush's advantage that they're right next to the cage, that is blocking Spyrou from attacking the left hand side of the body. Rush is forced into action to defend a kimura attempt. Spyrou tries to step over to mount, but Rush keeps his legs in position and ends up almost rolled into a ball. Spyrou fires some stiff punches to the back, then one to the face. He reaches through and tries to secure an armbar, but has to be careful as he is in danger of getting picked off with a counter armbar too. Rush doesn't appear to be trying that though, instead trying to shift his weight so that he can get back up. Spyrou isn't allowing it though, and gets a couple more punches in before settling back into half guard. Rush ties him up in a snug clinch. The action halts, and time expires before Spyrou can get free. End of round 1. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Spyrou.

Round 2
Good start from Spyrou, taking Rush down almost immediately! Rush scrambles though, and gets back to his feet without taking any damage at all. Spyrou will be disappointed with that. Rush comes in and throws two big right hands, but neither connects, and they put him off balance, allowing Spyrou to score with a nice right hook to the side of the head, crunching into the top of the ear. Rush felt that one for sure. He stalks Spyrou, trying to back him up against the cage. It doesn't work though, Spyrou keeps out of the way. Rush tries a kick, but Spyrou catches the foot and uses it for a trip. Spyrou gets Rush down for the second time, and this time is right on top of him in guard position. Spyrou throws some punches, then tries to pass. Rush doesn't allow it, and tries to grab an armbar in response. Spyrou easily stops that, and throws some more punches. That becomes the pattern, as the fight falls into a predictable pattern; punches from Spyrou followed by a pass attempt, with Rush blocking the pass and throwing the occasional punch in response. The round ends like that, just as the referee was about to stand them back up. The round ends. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Spyrou.

Round 3
Spyrou starts the round by throwing some low kicks. Rush checks them, then comes in and clearly wants to trade punches. Spyrou doesn't seem too bothered by that, and they enter into the first exchange of punches of the round. Difficult to say who came out on top, neither of them did a great deal of damage, most of the shots hit the opponent's gloves. Spyrou cleverly head-fakes, allowing him the time and angle that he needed to catch Rush with a beauty of a right hook. Rush stumbles backward, but doesn't go down. Spyrou presses the advantage by following in with a kick, then a right hand. Rush clinches. They remain clinched for a while. Rush scores with a nice knee, it appeared to catch Spyrou in the gut. Spyrou uses a single leg trip and takes the fight to the ground. Spyrou gets to side control upon impact, and immediately goes for an armbar. Rush reacts quickly, but is in real danger. Spyrou has his left arm straightened out, fortunately Rush has managed to roll and get a good position that is stopping Spyrou from getting the leverage needed to apply an armlock. Spyrou tries to step over and fully apply it, but Rush breaks free and gets him to back off with a couple of up-kicks. Spyrou steps back and motions for him to stand up. They go back to circling in the center. Rush hits a nice right hand, but takes one back too. The time runs down; Spyrou will probably get that round on points, he hit the best punch of the round, and got the only takedown, plus was the one who was working toward a submission. End of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Spyrou by 10-9.

Round 4
Rush works an angle and comes in from the side of Spyrou, getting two good jabs in before a ragged left misses by quite a margin. Spyrou hits a low kick to back Rush against the cage, then works the body with a series of short punches. Rush fights out and the action returns to the center. Spyrou looks to be working an angle. Rush steps in to throw a right hand, but doesn't get a chance to pull the trigger as Spyrou is already in with a takedown. Rush hits the floor hard, and Spyrou winds up in his guard. Spyrou gets past the guard, but only just, one leg is trapped by Rush. A couple of right hands by Spyrou leave ugly red marks where they hit the unprotected stomach of Rush. Spyrou gets both legs free and transitions higher up the body, putting Rush in huge trouble. Spyrou manages to get a forearm firmly across the throat of Rush and he pushes down. Rush, with no way of getting out, has no alternative but to tap out. The official time is 2:49. Davis Spyrou is the new BCF Middleweight champion.

Davis Spyrou via Submission (2:49, Round 4)

BCF Lightweight Championship
Doug Hansen (15-3) vs. Jason Dalglish (9-2)

Round 1
Dalglish starts tentatively, and scores with a few sharp leg kicks. A straight left connects, and Hansen is forced backward to avoid an uppercut. Good start from Dalglish. Hansen tries to come inside, but eats a kick to the thigh. They clinch briefly, but it goes nowhere. Looping right hand from Hansen, but it only caught Dalglish on the shoulder. Another kick connects from Dalglish, and that sets up a nice combination to the body. The accuracy of his kicks has been excellent so far, and is keeping Hansen from doing very much. Hansen looks for an opening. Right hand from Hansen, that one definitely registered, but I don't think it had much power behind it. The time ticks away without anything further of interest happening. The round is over. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Dalglish.

Round 2
Dalglish doesn't waste any time, scoring with a big right hook almost immediately. Hansen was caught sleeping, and that really landed hard, if it had been more accurate it might have been a knock out blow. Hansen hits two sharp body shots in return, but it's clear that he is rattled. Dalglish looks to be working an angle. They get in close and exchange punches, it's not clear who got the better of that. Dalglish hits a good looping punch to the side of the head, that's another one that's rattled Hansen. Dalglish is getting more force behind his punches at the moment, and that's the key difference. Dalglish looks to be working an angle. Time ticks away, and Hansen offers nothing that would make you think that he has any chance of winning this round on points. The round ends. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Dalglish.

Round 3
Exchange of punches to start, nothing really hit though. They go into a clinch, and the pace disappears as both fighters try and get the advantage. Eventually the referee separates them. Jab from Dalglish, who then has to react quickly to avoid a right hook that was aimed right at the chin. Dalglish puts on a burst of energy and fires off a big sequence of punches, maybe twelve or thirteen in a row, although not many actually connected. Hansen covered up well, and gets in a couple of shots of his own before moving out of range again. An exchange of punches goes nowhere, and they fall into a clinch. The referee separates them when nothing happens. Low kick from Hansen, almost to the groin, although it didn't look intentional. They come together in a clinch again, and it returns to a stalemate. Not a great round by anyone's standard, but that flurry should mean that Dalglish will take the round on points. End of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Dalglish.

Round 4
The round begins with Hansen taking the iniative, coming in quickly with a straight right and a leg kick. Dalglish replies with a snap jab and a wild left that misses by a long way. Hansen goes for the takedown, but Dalglish sprawls. Hansen tries to power through, but Dalglish uses that against him and turns it into a takedown of his own. They're quite close to the cage, which may help Hansen defend this. Dalglish is in guard. He throws a couple of half-hearted jabs, then tries to pass, but Hansen isn't allowing it. Hansen pulls Dalglish in tight, locking up both his arms. Dalglish pulls free and again tries to pass guard. This has turned into a bit of a stalemate, the referee may be thinking of standing them up if nothing happens soon. Dalglish tries a big right hand, which Hansen defends well. He has quite a high guard, Dalglish has to be wary not to fall into a triangle when leaning in like that. Hansen once again drags Dalglish down into a clinch, and this time even tries to work a guillotine, but Dalglish easily deals with it and hands out two solid right hands to the ribs along the way. We're back to Dalglish trying to pass guard. Hansen tries to throw a big punch and almost hands an armbar to Dalglish, but he realises the danger in time and manages to recover. The referee finally gets them back to their feet due to the lack of progress that has been made. Dalglish scores with a jab, then a second. Hansen goes for a sweeping kick to the right knee, but it isn't fast enough and gives Dalglish enough time to take him down again. Dalglish quickly goes to pass guard, looking for side control, but Hansen once again defends it. It looks like a frustrating round will end with them on the ground, and almost certainly has to go to Dalglish on points due to him being the aggressor and getting two takedowns in. The 4th round ends. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Dalglish. The official scores are in; two judges give 40-36, the other 41-35, all for Jason Dalglish. Jason Dalglish successfully retains the BCF Lightweight title.

Jason Dalglish via Unanimous Decision (40-36, 40-36, 41-35)


Awards (Fighters Will Receive a 50,000 $ Bonus)

KO Of the Night : Will Kane
Submission of the Night : Davis Spyrou
Fight of the Night : George Laurent vs. Will Kane

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 05:55 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

BCF : Heavyweight Challenge Pt. 2

Middleweight Title Fight
Davis Spyrou (c) vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal

Stafford Alois vs. Eddie Whelan
Dave Lennon vs. Russell McPhee

Doug Hansen vs. Lukas Mellberg
Curt Kitson vs. Shane Gilchrist
Andrew Rush vs. Xie Ming

---------------------------------------------------------------

Quick Picks

Davis Spyrou vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Stafford Alois vs. Eddie Whelan
Dave Lennon vs. Russell McPhee
Lukas Mellberg vs. Doug Hansen
Curt Kitson vs. Shane Gilchrist
Andrew Rush vs. Xie Ming

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 06:13 PM
Davis Spyrou vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Stafford Alois vs. Eddie Whelan
Dave Lennon vs. Russell McPhee
Lukas Mellberg vs. Doug Hansen
Curt Kitson vs. Shane Gilchrist
Andrew Rush vs. Xie Ming

andyemmy
01-18-2009, 06:34 PM
Davis Spyrou vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Stafford Alois vs. Eddie Whelan
Dave Lennon vs. Russell McPhee
Lukas Mellberg vs. Doug Hansen
Curt Kitson vs. Shane Gilchrist
Andrew Rush vs. Xie Ming

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 06:35 PM
Cheers Andyemmy, Always nice to see new predictors :)

andyemmy
01-18-2009, 06:36 PM
hehe np will predict as much as we can, still working hard at our mod.

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 06:37 PM
Glad to hear it's still in progress :) Have you guys made your picks for the dynasty awards yet ?

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 07:05 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg
BCF and Blurcat.com Present...

BCF : Rekdal vs. Spyrou

Andrew Rush (12-1) vs. Xie Ming (3-0)

Round 1
They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Ming, providing the first moment of real action. Rush hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Ming side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. Rush is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. End of round 1. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Rush.

Round 2
Ming starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Rush manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Rush uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and Ming is forced back against the cage. Rush picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. Ming uses a couple of looping punches to make Rush keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Rush bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. Ming scores with a low kick. Rush with a body shot. Rush unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. The round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to Rush by 10-9.

Round 3
Rush hits some tentative punches, then comes in fast and forces Ming to back up against the cage, where they clinch. Rush hits a nice body shot, but takes two short punches to the side of the head in return. Ming tries a trip, but it doesn't go anywhere. They separate, with Rush having to stay sharp to avoid a scorching right hand from Ming. Ming seems to be growing in confidence over the past thirty seconds. He has just come up with four good separate straight rights, although I don't think any of them did too much damage. He moves in for another, but takes a wicked kick from Rush. Ming looks wobbly, and his hands drop. Rush sees it, and comes in with a solid right hand that drops Ming to the mat. Rush follows up with more punches, and the referee has to get in there and stop it, Ming was not defending himself properly. I think it's the kick that did the most damage, it seemed to scramble his brains. Rush wins via TKO at 3:21 of the third round.

Andrew Rush via TKO (3:21, Round 3)

Shane Gilchrist (11-3) vs. Curt Kitson (10-3)

Round 1
They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from Kitson, providing the first moment of real action. Gilchrist hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but Kitson side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. Gilchrist is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. End of round 1. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Gilchrist.

Round 2
The round begins, and it is Gilchrist who starts better, energetically bounding straight into action by throwing a three-punch combination and a scything leg kick. Kitson defended all four blows well, but is forced to be on the backfoot right from the word go. Gilchrist works for an angle, coming in from the left hand side with a high right hand. Kitson ducks under it and nestles a stiff jab in the solar plexus. It doesn't seem to slow Gilchrist down much though, as he swiftly turns and hits a crisp left to the side of the head, followed almost instantly by a mid-level kick that smacks above the hip of Kitson. Interesting first minute of action, Gilchrist is looking particularly sharp. Kitson tries to turn the momentum by advancing quickly and driving Gilchrist back against the cage with a series of jabs and hooks, and they end up clinched. Kitson tries a knee from that position, but it is blocked. Gilchrist scores with two sharp blows to the ribs, and then they break away from each other. They both seem to be looking for an opening, and it's creating a stalemate at the moment. They square up to each other in the center. Gilchrist throws a head fake and comes in from low down to hit a rising shot that catches Kitson on the side of the head. Kitson got a shot in too though, although it hit the shoulder rather than the head. Time is running down; Gilchrist has probably done enough to win the round, but it has turned quite scrappy since the clinch against the cage, both will probably be slightly unhappy with that. Kitson tries a late surge, coming in hard and fast with a leading left, but Gilchrist defends it well and scores the only meaningful shot of the exchange with a crisp left hand. End of round 2. Blurcat.com gives that one to Gilchrist by 10-9.

Round 3
Kitson leads with the right hand to set up a low kick, Gilchrist deals with it well. They clinch, but only for a few seconds before it gets broken. Both throw stiff jabs at the same time, neither connects properly. Back to the clinch. It has been a disjointed start to the round, the flow hasn't quite developed properly. Gilchrist uses a knee to the ribs before backing Kitson up against the cage. Right hand from Kitson connects though, that was well timed. Gilchrist breaks the clinch and backs off. That was sloppy on his part, Kitson was basically gifted a free shot. Three quick jabs from Gilchrist sting the gloves, then a crashing hook to the body finds its mark. Good recovery. Kitson fires off a low kick again, but it's well wide. Kitson gets caught with a solid right hand out of nowhere, and is rocked. Gilchrist follows up with another one, and Kitson looks in trouble all of a sudden. He is backed up against the cage and Gilchrist is unloading. The punches are raining down, Kitson is covering up. The referee has seen enough and stops the fight, clearly feeling that Kitson was unable to defend himself intelligently. Gilchrist wins. Official time of the TKO is 3:22 of the third.

Shane Gilchrist via TKO (3:22, Round 3)

Dave Lennon (7-1) vs. Russell McPhee (4-0)

Round 1
McPhee leads with the right hand to set up a low kick, Lennon deals with it well. They clinch, but only for a few seconds before it gets broken. Both throw stiff jabs at the same time, neither connects properly. Back to the clinch. It has been a disjointed start to the round, the flow hasn't quite developed properly. Lennon uses a knee to the ribs before backing McPhee up against the cage. Right hand from McPhee connects though, that was well timed. Lennon breaks the clinch and backs off. That was sloppy on his part, McPhee was basically gifted a free shot. Three quick jabs from Lennon sting the gloves, then a crashing hook to the body finds its mark. Good recovery. McPhee fires off a low kick again, but it's well wide. McPhee seems to be growing in confidence over the past thirty seconds. He has just come up with four good separate straight rights, although I don't think any of them did too much damage. He moves in for another, but takes a wicked kick from Lennon. McPhee looks wobbly, and his hands drop. Lennon sees it, and comes in with a solid right hand that drops McPhee to the mat. Lennon follows up with more punches, and the referee has to get in there and stop it, McPhee was not defending himself properly. I think it's the kick that did the most damage, it seemed to scramble his brains. The official time is 4:37.

Dave Lennon via TKO (4:37, Round 1)

Lukas Mellberg (10-0) vs. Doug Hansen (15-4)

Round 1
They start the round with an exchange of strikes, all from fairly long range as they circle and try to work angles. None of the blows did any damage, either missing or being straight into the opponent's gloves. Mellberg is the first to land a worthwhile blow, hitting a straight right that catches Hansen on the side of the cheek. Mellberg follows up by backing him up against the cage, throws a couple of big punches, but gets pulled into a clinch without doing any serious damage. Hansen goes for a trip and almost gets it, but Mellberg is able to regain his footing at the last moment. Hansen has Mellberg against the cage, and hits three right hands to the side of the ribs. Mellberg reaches down and picks up a leg, using that as leverage to topple Hansen, who pulls guard. Mellberg starts pounding away and does some damage before Hansen grapples and pulls him down into a clinch. Hansen has both of Mellberg's arms tied up, preventing much in the way of attacking action. Mellberg uses some shoulder shrugs to the face, but Hansen isn't going to be too bothered by that. Mellberg pulls one arm free. Hansen still has tight control of the other, and brings his legs up, trying to apply an armbar. Mellberg sees it coming and blocks it easily, getting in a couple of punches for good measure. Mellberg steps through the legs and forces Hansen to release the arm so that he can cover up against a series of strikes. Hansen manages to ensare one leg though, and so Mellberg has to make do with being in half guard instead of getting the full mount that he wanted. Mellberg hits a couple of punches, takes one back, then attempts to get side control. Hansen keeps him at bay. Time is ticking away, if Mellberg is going to use this position to finish the match, it had better be done soon. Mellberg pulls Hansen's left arm to one side and straightens it out, perhaps looking to turn it into an armbar. Hansen rolls over to stop the arm getting trapped. Mellberg continues to work for it though. Time expires though, the round is over. The first round is over. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Mellberg.

Round 2
Mellberg leads with the right hand to set up a low kick, Hansen deals with it well. They clinch, but only for a few seconds before it gets broken. Both throw stiff jabs at the same time, neither connects properly. Back to the clinch. It has been a disjointed start to the round, the flow hasn't quite developed properly. Hansen uses a knee to the ribs before backing Mellberg up against the cage. Right hand from Mellberg connects though, that was well timed. Hansen breaks the clinch and backs off. That was sloppy on his part, Mellberg was basically gifted a free shot. Three quick jabs from Hansen sting the gloves, then a crashing hook to the body finds its mark. Good recovery. Mellberg fires off a low kick again, but it's well wide. Mellberg misses with a right hand, and leaves himself open to a left hook. Mellberg goes down, although replays confirm that it was a stumble, Hansen was a few inches away from connecting with that left. Hansen tries to quickly mount Mellberg to capitalise, but doesn't get there in time, Mellberg is already half way back up. They enagage in a fairly ragged scramble for supremacy and Mellberg slips out and gets his back! Hansen turtles up, and takes a few heavy shots to the ribs. Mellberg gets his legs around Hansen and uses them to roll him over. Exposed, Hansen tries to turn so that he is on top, but Mellberg has already rammed one arm around his throat and has a tight choke-hold applied. Hansen is in big trouble, and obviously can't see a way out as he taps out pretty quickly. Mellberg wins via 2nd round rear choke submission with the official time being 3:54.

Lukas Mellberg via Submission (3:54, Round 2)

Stafford Alois (19-7) vs. Eddie Whelan (11-2)

Round 1
Whelan starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Alois manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Alois uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and Whelan is forced back against the cage. Alois picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. Whelan uses a couple of looping punches to make Alois keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Alois bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. Whelan scores with a low kick. Other than a few half-hearted jabs, there's been a definite lull over the past minute. Alois unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. End of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Alois by 10-9.

Round 2
Alois hits some tentative punches, then comes in fast and forces Whelan to back up against the cage, where they clinch. Alois hits a nice body shot, but takes two short punches to the side of the head in return. Whelan tries a trip, but it doesn't go anywhere. They separate, with Alois having to stay sharp to avoid a scorching right hand from Whelan. Alois leads with a right hand, then delivers a brutal uppercut, Whelan had to step back quickly to avoid getting caught. He winds up back against the cage, and Alois doesn't relent, moving in fast to unload with a series of jabs. Whelan got some of his own in, but the upper hand is definitely with Alois. Vicious right hand! Out of nowhere, it caught Whelan flush in the face, and he slumps down against the cage. Alois follows up with more punches, and the referee dives in to break it up. It's all over. Whelan wasn't knocked out, but that one punch was a beauty, and it stopped him getting any sort of defence together to stop the following punches. Alois wins via 2nd round TKO with the official time being 4:06.

Stafford Alois via TKO (4:06, Round 2)

BCF Middleweight Championship
Thorbjorn Rekdal (5-1-1) vs. Davis Spyrou (13-4)

Round 1
The two fighters meet in the center with an exchange of jabs, but neither gets anything but gloves or air. They go right into a clinch, with only a few seconds of the match gone. Rekdal gets a knee to the ribs in, but it wasn't particularly hard. They break. They exchange punches. Spyrou hits a nice jab just above the left eye, but takes a hard punch to the cheek at the same time. Spyrou momentarily loses his footing and drops his hands, that shot having really rung his bell. Rekdal shoots off another right hand to capitalise, and this time it's the killer blow, Spyrou falls back and crash-lands on the floor, he was out cold from the instant that punch hit. A knock out victory for Rekdal. The official time is 1:38. Thorbjorn Rekdal wins the BCF Middleweight title.

Thorbjorn Rekdal via KO (1:38, Round 1)


Awards (Fighters will receive 50,000 $ Bonus)

KO Of the Night : Thorbjorn Rekdal
Submission of the Night : Lukas Mellberg
Fight of the Night : Stafford Alois vs. Eddie Whelan

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 08:21 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

BCF Press Conference

Ouellet : Alright everybody, as you all know, Stafford Alois and Dave Lennon will be fighting in the finals of the tournament. But now we have to start the Middleweight tournament. Champion Thorbjorn Rekdal, assisted in the making of the match-ups, as he knew who was deserving of the title shot. The Match-ups are :

Andrew Rush vs. Nigel Malley
Will Kane vs. Marcelo Oberto
Robert Darrell vs. Kendall Tracey
Rob Baines vs. Hans-Peter Schneider

And the Lightweight Brackets will look like this :

Agustin Gonzalez vs. Gordon Idle
Brandon Sugar vs. Lukas Mellberg
Cory Brewer vs. Luke Hilton
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Marko Prochazka

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 08:36 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

BCF : Mellberg vs. Sugar

Lightweight Challenge

Lukas Mellberg vs. Brandon Sugar
Agustin Gonzalez vs. Gordon Idle
Cory Brewer vs. Luke Hilton
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Marko Prochazka

Middleweight Challenge

Andrew Rush vs. Nigel Malley
Hans-Peter Schneider vs. Rob Baines
Robert Darrell vs. Kendall Tracey

*Will Kane and Marcelo Oberto will fight at the next card due to a knee injury from Kane.

Co-Main Event

Shane Gilchrist vs. Garry McSweegan


----------------------------------------------------------------

Quick Picks

Lukas Mellberg vs. Brandon Sugar
Agustin Gonzalez vs. Gordon Idle
Cory Brewer vs. Luke Hilton
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Marko Prochazka
Shane Gilchrist vs. Garry McSweegan
Andrew Rush vs. Nigel Malley
Rob Baines vs. Hans-Peter Schneider
Kendall Tracey vs. Robert Darrell

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 08:37 PM
Lukas Mellberg vs. Brandon Sugar
Agustin Gonzalez vs. Gordon Idle
Cory Brewer vs. Luke Hilton
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Marko Prochazka
Shane Gilchrist vs. Garry McSweegan
Andrew Rush vs. Nigel Malley
Rob Baines vs. Hans-Peter Schneider
Kendall Tracey vs. Robert Darrell

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 09:58 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg
BCF and Aurora Soft Drinks Present...

BCF : Mellberg vs. Sugar

http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7DFsBcVMDA) http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCxrWg-5Cbw)
Andrew Rush (13-1) vs. Nigel Malley (9-9-1)

Round 1
Rush doesn't waste any time, scoring with a big right hook almost immediately. Malley was caught sleeping, and that really landed hard, if it had been more accurate it might have been a knock out blow. Malley hits two sharp body shots in return, but it's clear that he is rattled. Malley looks to be working an angle. They get in close and exchange punches, it's not clear who got the better of that. Rush hits a good looping punch to the side of the head, that's another one that's rattled Malley. Rush is getting more force behind his punches at the moment, and that's the key difference. A looping left from Malley, but it's wide of the mark. Time ticks away, and Malley offers nothing that would make you think that he has any chance of winning this round on points. The round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to Rush by 10-9.

Round 2
The two fighters touch gloves as the round begins. Malley starts brightly, throwing out a series of jabs and raking punches, but Rush is too light on his feet and avoids all of them. Rush steps in and hits a lovely overhand right, then a low kick to the outside of the thigh. Malley throws a vicious right cross, but Rush goes under it and catches Malley with a scathing left hand to the gut. The next few minutes follow a very similar pattern; Rush using his excellent movement to 'hit and run', coming in from a variety of angles to score with crisp punches, dodging out of the way of Malley's counters. Malley is being made to look sluggish by comparison, and the amount of punches that Rush has landed in comparison to him is becoming huge. None of them have been particularly big punches, certainly nothing likely to end a fight, but the sheer number of them must be hurting Malley. Malley finally hits a meaningful blow, catching Rush coming in with a low kick. Rush still gets a crisp jab in though, and is back out of range before Malley can apply a second strike. The round comes to an end with Rush having dominated. End of round 2. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Rush.

Round 3
The fighters touch gloves, then circle. Rush throws a low kick, but it was without any conviction, it seemed designed more to keep Malley from coming inside. Rush works an angle, then comes in with a one-two combination, Malley responds with a crisp uppercut that wasn't far off from connecting. Rush backs off slightly, maybe a bit relieved not to have taken that one on the chin. Neither fighter appears to be looking for any sort of takedown or grapple, this is all about the striking. Malley circles and throws a series of high jabs, but Rush blocked them with ease, using the gloves. Rush fakes a high kick, then storms in with a wild looking right hand and a series of body shots. Malley covers up and rides out the storm, clinching to stop any further blows. It was a nice attack from Rush though, best action of the round. They stay clinched for a while, exchanging occasional punches to the ribs, then are separated by the referee. It looks like this round is going to the judges though, as there's only a few seconds remaining. Rush throws a leg kick that connects, albeit without too much force, and the round is done. The third round is over. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Rush. Andrew Rush wins the match, getting a score of 30-27 from all three judges.

Andrew Rush via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

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Hans-Peter Schneider (8-3) vs. Rob Baines (10-2)

Round 1
Schneider throws the first punch of the round, a high searching jab that didn't carry a great deal of threat with it. Baines throws a one-two combination in return, neither connecting, then steps in and delivers a hard kick to the outside of the thigh. Schneider steps back, throwing a right hand as he does to buy himself space. They circle, then move in again to exchange strikes, neither fighter getting a clear advantage. They come together again and the same result. It has become something of a stalemate at the moment. They come together to exchange strikes for the third time, and this time they wind up in a clinch. Baines hits a knee to the ribs. A couple of shots to the back from Schneider. They struggle all the way back, with Schneider ending up backed up against the cage. Baines hits another knee, but there wasn't much power behind it. Schneider stomps downward onto his foot. Schneider manages to reverse their positions, but that only lasts about thirty seconds before it gets reversed once more. Baines gets an arm free and tries to throw a big shot to the cheek, Schneider ducks under it and gets the arm back under control. The referee finally breaks them up, and we're back to where we started. Schneider tries a high kick to start, but Baines saw it coming and easily avoids it. They come back together in the center, and it's Baines who gets the first sustained attack of the round, hitting two hard body shots and a jab that caught Schneider on the nose. Schneider hits a straight right, enough to stop Baines from following up any further. The time expires with them standing. Not a great round for either of them or the crowd, it was very scrappy. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Baines.

Round 2
The two fighters meet in the center with an exchange of jabs, but neither gets anything but gloves or air. They go right into a clinch, with only a few seconds of the match gone. Schneider gets a knee to the ribs in, but it wasn't particularly hard. They break. The two fighters clinch up, ending up struggling next to the cage, with the referee watching intently to make sure there are no rules being bent during the grappling match. Baines gets in a cheeky right hand, but that's all the offence he can generate from the clinch before Schneider sweeps his legs and takes him down to the ground. Baines is forced to cover up as Schneider starts hammering away with enormous strikes from the guard, trying to simply power the shots through. Some do cause some damage, landing as Baines tries unsuccessfully to throw some counters. Schneider transitions to side control without any issues and starts finding the punches down again, this time with more leverage and therefore more power. Baines tries to defend them, but a lot of them are getting through. The referee finally has enough and calls an end to the match, feeling that Baines was getting overwhelmed. The official time of the TKO is 1:12 of round 2.

Hans-Peter Schneider via TKO (1:12, Round 2)

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Dominykas Jankovic (8-4) vs. Marko Prochazka (10-2)

Round 1
Quick start to the round from Procházka, he comes storming in with a flurry of jabs. Jankovic defends it well, parrying them away. Nice straight right from Jankovic connects. Procházka gets in close and hits a pair of nice body shots, then they clinch up. Procházka pushes Jankovic back against the cage and goes for a trip, but Jankovic blocks it. Jankovic suddenly pushes forward off the cage and uses the momentum to take Procházka down to the ground, into guard. Jankovic throws out a right hand, parried away by Procházka. The guard is quite tight, for the moment at least Jankovic looks content to stay there and throw some punches. Procházka isn't offering any sort of attacking threat yet, instead concentrating on keeping the strikes from landing. A big punch is driven into the ribs, Procházka thought it was going for the face. Another punch lands in the same place, and a red mark starts to develop. Procházka reaches up and pulls Jankovic down into a clinch, and tries to work an armbar from the bottom. Jankovic defends it easily, and gets in a sharp jab to the face too. He stands up slightly, leaning forward into the guard, and starts throwing some right hands. One gets through, the others are parried. Procházka looked like he might be considering trying to apply a triangle then, as Jankovic was very exposed, but he didn't get a chance due to the ferocity of the punches. Jankovic gets back down to kneeling in the guard. Another right hand lands to the ribs. Procházka fires off two punches from his back, but Jankovic defends them easily by simply leaning backward out of reach. Jankovic stands again, the guard remaining tight around him, and throws another couple of bombs. This time Procházka does try to apply the triangle, and an armbar at the same time, but Jankovic breaks free. Time is ticking down, looks like Procházka will survive this ground and pound attack. The round ends without further note. The round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Jankovic.

Round 2
Jankovic throws a low kick early on, although it missed. Procházka flicks out a couple of jabs, trying to work an angle. He steps in to throw a body shot but gets caught with a left hook. Procházka stumbles backwards, falling on his ass, stunned. Jankovic charges in and throws a knock out powered right hand, but Procházka parries it and brings his legs around Jankovic's waist to pull guard. Procházka has the guard held very high. Jankovic throws a big right hand, but almost puts himself right into a triangle as a result, and he is forced to fight free. Procházka throws a punch and it lands right above the nose. Jankovic throws four massive punches as a response, threatening to try and knock Procházka right through the canvas, Procházka is forced to simply cover up and try to survive. Jankovic is controlling the round from this position, although it has to be said that he hasn't yet truly looked like he can stop the match from here. Procházka moves to butterfly guard and then tries to scramble back up, but Jankovic stops that by throwing another set of big punches, forcing Procházka to go back to the full guard. The round ends with them still like that, with Jankovic having totally controlled the round from the guard. End of round 2. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Jankovic.

Round 3
Slow start; nearly a full minute of circling, occasional fakes, and long-range jabs. Neither fighter is creating much. Jankovic works an angle, but takes a low kick to the shin when he advances. They clinch, and end up with Procházka backed up against the cage. Jankovic gets a couple of right hands to the body, but his attempts at knee strikes are deflected by Procházka, who uses his legs well to defend. Jankovic pulls free and takes a step back, then powers in a right hand. Procházka gets out the way, ducks under a second right hand, and backs up to the center. Jankovic follows, and we're back to circling. Uninspiring action so far, they've both been fairly devoid of inspiration. Jankovic hits a couple of right hands, both hitting gloves, then a left hand to the body that connected. That was the best shot of the round so far. Procházka tags him with a flicked jab to the cheek, but it had virtually no power on it. Procházka leans in to a looping left, but it puts him off balance and it's only at the last second that he gets his chin out of the way of a vicious right cross that comes back. If that had hit, we may have had a knock out. Time runs out with them standing, circling again. The round ends. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Jankovic. The official scores are: 30-27 from all three judges for Dominykas Jankovic.

Dominykas Jankovic via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

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Cory Brewer (7-4-1) vs. Luke Hilton (4-1)

Round 1
Brewer leads with the right hand to set up a low kick, Hilton deals with it well. They clinch, but only for a few seconds before it gets broken. Both throw stiff jabs at the same time, neither connects properly. Back to the clinch. It has been a disjointed start to the round, the flow hasn't quite developed properly. Hilton uses a knee to the ribs before backing Brewer up against the cage. Right hand from Brewer connects though, that was well timed. Hilton breaks the clinch and backs off. That was sloppy on his part, Brewer was basically gifted a free shot. Three quick jabs from Hilton sting the gloves, then a crashing hook to the body finds its mark. Good recovery. Brewer fires off a low kick again, but it's well wide. Hilton throws a ragged jab, missing by a mile as Brewer simply ducks under and unloads a vicious hook from below. It catches Hilton square on the jaw, and he goes down! Brewer mounts and starts firing off punches, rapid-fire. The referee waits to see if Hilton can recover, decides that he can't, and pulls Brewer off. The match is over. The official time is 3:58.

Cory Brewer via TKO (3:58, Round 1)

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Agustin Gonzalez (4-0) vs. Gordon Idle (6-2)

Round 1
Gonzalez doesn't hold back, starting by immediately shooting in for a takedown. Idle sprawls and keeps him at bay. Gonzalez pushes harder, but Idle has the much better position and manages to flip him over, putting Gonzalez on his back. Idle gets sucked into his guard though. Idle looks to pound out a victory, throwing some big punches. Gonzalez's guard prevents him from getting his body behind the shots though, and none of them have enough power to really trouble Gonzalez. A couple do get through and hit home though. Gonzalez reaches up and smothers Idle into a clinch. He fights free, with some difficulty, and starts punching away again. Gonzalez parries the shots away. Unfortunately the round enters a lull, with Idle unable to pass guard and so being content just to throw punches from there, while Gonzalez is unwilling to risk letting Idle pass guard. We enter the final thirty seconds of the round before Idle gets a breakthrough, managing to power through the guard and mount Gonzalez! Gonzalez covers up and tries to buck and roll his hips to desperately try and dislodge Idle. It doesn't work, but it does unbalance him enough to reduce the amount of punches being thrown. Some do come raining down though, and Gonzalez is probably relieved when the round ends with him not having taken too much damage. The round ends. Blurcat.com gives that one to Idle by 10-9.

Round 2
Gonzalez is the first to score a meaningful blow, tagging Idle with a jab to the cheek. Idle uses a nice straight left to return fire. Gonzalez comes in to work the body, but Idle saw it coming and uses a quick takedown to put Gonzalez onto the floor, falling into guard. Idle tries to work free from the guard, but can't. Gonzalez reaches up to try and bring Idle down into a clinch, but the attempt gets swatted away. Idle fires off a couple of punches, leaning forward to get some leverage, and Gonzalez is forced to cover up. Idle switches and starts firing off some rapid-fire shots to the chest, Gonzalez deals with it by pulling the guard tighter and punching upward. Idle looks like he is happy to sit there and throw punches at his leisure, with no real effort to pass guard. Gonzalez occasionally tries to roll his hips to get free, but it may be that he has realised that this round is beyond saving, and is just making sure that he doesn't put himself into a position to be knocked out or submitted by trying to escape. Indeed, time ticks away with nothing breaking the pattern of occasional strikes and defensive positioning. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Idle.

Round 3
Slow start; nearly a full minute of circling, occasional fakes, and long-range jabs. Neither fighter is creating much. Idle works an angle, but takes a low kick to the shin when he advances. They clinch, and end up with Gonzalez backed up against the cage. Idle gets a couple of right hands to the body, but his attempts at knee strikes are deflected by Gonzalez, who uses his legs well to defend. Idle pulls free and takes a step back, then powers in a right hand. Gonzalez gets out the way, ducks under a second right hand, and backs up to the center. Idle follows, and we're back to circling. Uninspiring action so far, they've both been fairly devoid of inspiration. Idle hits a couple of right hands, both hitting gloves, then a left hand to the body that connected. That was the best shot of the round so far. Gonzalez tags him with a flicked jab to the cheek, but it had virtually no power on it. Gonzalez leans in to a looping left, but it puts him off balance and it's only at the last second that he gets his chin out of the way of a vicious right cross that comes back. If that had hit, we may have had a knock out. Time runs out with them standing, circling again. The third round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Idle. All three judges give a score of 30-27 in favour of Gordon Idle.

Gordon Idle via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

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Robert Darrell (7-2) vs. Kendall Tracey (4-0)

Round 1
The two fighters circle. A series of looping punches from Tracey forces Darrell back up against the cage, and he has to cover up to withstand the three strikes that follow. No real damage caused, but Tracey is aggressively chasing this match. A hook finds the body and Darrell clinches. They almost lose their balance as they jockey for position, Darrell gets in a couple of knees when they regain their footing. Tracey seems to be trying to break the clinch, it's Darrell who is holding it tight, perhaps hoping to calm the energetic start that Tracey had. The referee finally does break them up, after nearly a full minute of inactivity. Tracey pushes Darrell back against the cage, and is able to use that as a set up to taking Darrell down the mat, landing in side control. Darrell tries to scramble into a better position, but Tracey grabs an arm and tries to lock a hold in. Darrell bucks him over, and manages to wind up on top, but Tracey still has the arm, and now has his legs wrapped around it. Darrell hits a flurry of left hands to the back and thighs of Tracey, who is almost upside down now. It's no good though, as Darrell cannot get his arm free, and as soon as Tracey starts to sink the hold in fully, there's no choice but to tap out. Tracey wins via first round armbar submission at 3:34.

Kendall Tracey via Submission (3:34, Round 1)

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Shane Gilchrist (12-3) vs. Garry McSweegan (12-3)

Round 1
Gilchrist isn't hanging around, right from the start McSweegan is forced onto the back foot by four hard shots, although none of them get through the gloves. McSweegan circles, steps in, then unloads a combination of punches, but Gilchrist weaves out of the way and scores with a beauty of a right hand, glancing above the right eye. That was some lovely counter punching from Gilchrist, the timing had to be perfect and it was. McSweegan is looking a bit frustrated, and uncorks a ragged-looking uppercut that missed by several inches. Gilchrist really should have taken advantage of that mistake, McSweegan was wide open for a moment there. Gilchrist hits a high kick, catching McSweegan on the shoulder. Jab from McSweegan finds the mark, but it didn't have much power behind it as he was leaning backward too much. Gilchrist fires off a couple of straight punches in response, but only finds gloves. They clinch, and the fight enters a lull. McSweegan scores with a knee from the clinch, it landed around the hip area of Gilchrist, who responds with a couple of shots to the ribs. The time runs out with them still clinched though. End of round 1. Blurcat.com scores 10-9 Gilchrist.

Round 2
They circle to start, both throwing a few tentative jabs. An uppercut misses its mark from McSweegan, providing the first moment of real action. Gilchrist hits a nice combination of body shots to set up a big right hook, but McSweegan side-stepped to safety. A few punches get thrown, but there's a lack of real action to talk about. Gilchrist is being slightly the more aggressive, but neither fighter is really going for it. They come together again and exchange punches, but no big shots get through, and they end up clinched for a while. The referee separates them, but the time is ticking away and this round looks like it's going to the judges. End of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Gilchrist.

Round 3
The two fighters meet in the center with an exchange of jabs, but neither gets anything but gloves or air. They go right into a clinch, with only a few seconds of the match gone. Gilchrist gets a knee to the ribs in, but it wasn't particularly hard. They break. Gilchrist stalks McSweegan, backing him up against the cage. McSweegan ducks a left hand and clinches up. Knee from Gilchrist. McSweegan hits an elbow to the ribs. They separate...and Gilchrist nearly takes McSweegan's head off with a sensational uppercut! McSweegan went down like a ton of bricks, he has been knocked out cold. Awesome punch from Gilchrist, that was close to the perfect punch. The official time is 1:19.

Shane Gilchrist via KO (1:19, Round 3)

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Lukas Mellberg vs. Brandon Sugar

Round 1
Slow start to the round, they're both circling, looking for an opening. Mellberg tries a looping punch from way back, but Sugar side steps with ease. Jab from Sugar, gets one back in response. Mellberg comes in, looking for the right hand lead, but Sugar shoots in and uses a double-leg takedown. He winds up in a closed guard. Sugar rains down three big punches, Mellberg covers up and doesn't take too much damage. Sugar works one leg free, but Mellberg has the other tightly wrapped up between his own. Sugar fires off three rapid-fire elbows to the ribs to try and soften Mellberg up, but can't get the leg free. This is not a good position for Mellberg though, and Sugar is looking dangerous. Sugar pushes down, then brings his free leg forward to drive a knee into the lower back. Mellberg can't do a lot to stop that strike. Sugar hits a further knee, and that is enough to allow him to move into side control. Mellberg is in huge trouble here. Elbow to the face, only partially blocked. Sugar briefly gets a forearm across the throat of Mellberg, but it is knocked away before it can develop into a choke. Mellberg tries to scramble out of it, and almost manages to pull guard again, but Sugar maintains side control. Knee to the ribs again. Mellberg is taking a lot of punishment from those knee strikes. Sugar switches tactic and tries to grab an arm lock of some kind, Mellberg almost got caught by surprise but not quite. The round is almost over, and there is no question that this round has gone to Sugar, it has been utter dominance. Mellberg tries to get a knee strike of his own in, but it misses and Sugar responds with a hard elbow to the chest. That'll be the last action of the round. End of round 1. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Sugar.

Round 2
Quick start to the round from Mellberg, he comes storming in with a flurry of jabs. Sugar defends it well, parrying them away. Nice straight right from Sugar connects. Mellberg gets in close and hits a pair of nice body shots, then they clinch up. Mellberg pushes Sugar back against the cage and goes for a trip, but Sugar blocks it. Sugar suddenly pushes forward off the cage and uses the momentum to take Mellberg down to the ground, into guard. Sugar rains down three big punches, Mellberg covers up and doesn't take too much damage. Sugar works one leg free, but Mellberg has the other tightly wrapped up between his own. Sugar fires off three rapid-fire elbows to the ribs to try and soften Mellberg up, but can't get the leg free. This is not a good position for Mellberg though, and Sugar is looking dangerous. Sugar pushes down, then brings his free leg forward to drive a knee into the lower back. Mellberg can't do a lot to stop that strike. Sugar hits a further knee, and that is enough to allow him to move into side control. Mellberg is in huge trouble here. Elbow to the face, only partially blocked. Sugar briefly gets a forearm across the throat of Mellberg, but it is knocked away before it can develop into a choke. Mellberg tries to scramble out of it, and almost manages to pull guard again, but Sugar maintains side control. Knee to the ribs again. Mellberg is taking a lot of punishment from those knee strikes. Sugar switches tactic and tries to grab an arm lock of some kind, Mellberg almost got caught by surprise but not quite. The round is almost over, and there is no question that this round has gone to Sugar, it has been utter dominance. Mellberg tries to get a knee strike of his own in, but it misses and Sugar responds with a hard elbow to the chest. That'll be the last action of the round. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Sugar.

Round 3
Good start from Mellberg, taking Sugar down almost immediately! Sugar scrambles though, and gets back to his feet without taking any damage at all. Mellberg will be disappointed with that. Sugar comes in and throws two big right hands, but neither connects, and they put him off balance, allowing Mellberg to score with a nice right hook to the side of the head, crunching into the top of the ear. Sugar felt that one for sure. He stalks Mellberg, trying to back him up against the cage. It doesn't work though, Mellberg keeps out of the way. Sugar tries a kick, but Mellberg catches the foot and uses it for a trip. Mellberg gets Sugar down for the second time, and this time is right on top of him in guard position. Mellberg throws some punches, then tries to pass. Sugar doesn't allow it, and tries to grab an armbar in response. Mellberg easily stops that, and throws some more punches. That becomes the pattern, as the fight falls into a predictable pattern; punches from Mellberg followed by a pass attempt, with Sugar blocking the pass and throwing the occasional punch in response. The round ends like that, just as the referee was about to stand them back up. End of round 3. Blurcat.com gives that one to Mellberg by 10-9. All three judges give a score of 29-28 to Brandon Sugar.

Brandon Sugar via Unanimous Decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28)


Awards (Fighters will receive a 50,000 $ Bonus

KO Of the Night : Shane Gilchrist
Submission of the Night : Kendall Tracey
Fight of the Night : Luke Hilton vs. Cory Brewer

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 10:07 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

BCF HQ

McCallum : Hey PJ, What's On Your Mind Man ?

Ouellet : Alright McCallum, Here's the deal. As you know the company is getting bigger and better every show, and it's not even the end of '96 yet. What I'm thinking, is to stop taking risks, and after each show, put the guys that request or need negotiations should be put on exclusive contracts.

McCallum : Alright, But what if they reject the offer ?

Ouellet : Than we push them harder to accept, When Companies get bigger, they offer better contracts, It's the circle of life... I think.

McCallum : Alright, whatever you say, you're the owner.

UFC-KING
01-18-2009, 10:44 PM
I'd Love to hear your guys' feedback on how I'm doing on this diary, If you guys like it or what I should do different or include

UFC-KING
01-19-2009, 08:00 PM
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BCF : Rush vs. Schneider

This Saturday, The tournaments continue as the Lightweight Semi-Finals are set to go. Also, in the main event slot, Andrew Rush and Hans-Peter Schneider will battle for a shot in the Finals of the tournament. Will Kane is back to fight for his spot in the semi-finals, against Marcelo Oberto. Here is the event preview.

Andrew Rush (14-1), was the Middleweight Champion many months ago, but a devastating loss to Davis Spyrou had him relinquish the title. Many thought his career was done after a loss in that big of a way. He came back the next month to dominate Xie Ming, the undefeated Muay Thai Sensation to a 3rd Round TKO Stoppage, which proved he was back with a vengeance. In his tournament Quarter-Final Match-Up, he beat "Knock Out" Nigel Malley by Unanimous Decision to earn his spot in the semi-finals. The Man that will be standing across from him in the opposing corner will be the destructive German Wrestler Hans-Peter Schneider (9-3). Schneider, winner of 9 of his 12 professional fights, 2 of which have been fought with BCF, both of which finished before the third round, A first round submission of Grant Capelli, and he earned his semi-final spot Stopping English Favorite Rob Baines with a second round TKO. The odds would show that Schneider is in a bad spot coming into this fight, but if he could take Rush down, he could impose his will on the former champion, and potentially earn a spot in the finals.

Also on the card, the two North American imports, and the two top prospects in the tournament many would say, Cory Brewer and Brandon Sugar, would've met in the finals, if the fans had their way, but either way, they are going to get to see the fight. Brewer (8-4-1), is possibly one of the most experienced fighters in the tournament, Knocked Out Luke Hilton in his last fight, which shows that his stand-up striking skills are not to be taken lightly. Sugar (8-2) is the complete opposite of Brewer. A Jiu-Jitsu Brown Belt, Sugar has fought once for the title, but not in BCF. His most well known fight was abroad with GAMMA, where he fought Sean Morrison for the Lightweight Championship. Unfortunately, the fight did not go his way, as he was on the receiving end of a TKO courtesy of the current champ. He bounced back giving Lukas Mellberg the first loss of his professional career at the last event. Should Sugar have his way in this fight, many would believe it would be by submission, as Brewer by a TKO or KO finish, but anything can happen in MMA. So expect fireworks.

Shane Gilchrist (13-3) Could be on the fast track to a title shot if he continues fighting the way he's been fighting lately. On the receiving end of a TKO towards the end of a fight he was dominating against Stafford Alois, Gilchrist rejuvenated his career after being eliminated from the tournament, Stopping Curt Kitson in the 3rd Round by TKO, and made Garry McSweegan experience decerebrate posturing for the very first time, Knocking Him Out cold with a Killer Right Hand. But this could be his toughest fight yet to date since the tournament, as he fights the man responsible for one of the most Brutal Knockouts in BCF History, Russell McPhee. McPhee (4-1) Knocked Out Nicolai Mickiewicz with a brutal head kick in his quarter-final match-up, but after a set-back in a loss to Dave Lennon, he is back and ready to fight again against Gilchrist. In a bout that should finish with an Ice Cold Knockout if the fans should have their way, nobody should blink in this fight.

The Quick picks for this event will be found below, and hope to see you back at BCF.co.uk for the next event write-up

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Quick Picks

Andrew Rush vs. Hans-Peter Schneider
Brandon Sugar vs. Cory Brewer
Will Kane vs. Marcelo Oberto
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Gordon Idle
Shane Gilchrist vs. Russell McPhee

UFC-KING
01-19-2009, 08:02 PM
Andrew Rush vs. Hans-Peter Schneider
Brandon Sugar vs. Cory Brewer
Will Kane vs. Marcelo Oberto
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Gordon Idle
Shane Gilchrist vs. Russell McPhee

SeanMcFly
01-21-2009, 05:10 PM
Andrew Rush vs. Hans-Peter Schneider
Rush is just too good for somebody like Schneider, I'm thinking Rush takes the tournament

Brandon Sugar vs. Cory Brewer
Sugar is not exactly the best match-up for somebody like Brewer, Brewer is more of a one trick pony as Sugar has more skills

Will Kane vs. Marcelo Oberto
No question, Kane is a much better striker and could easily finish the fight early.

Dominykas Jankovic vs. Gordon Idle
Idle is a scrub in most games, and Jankovic has huge potential training with Mantas Andreyev early on in the game.

Shane Gilchrist vs. Russell McPhee
Easy win for Gilchrist, Much too big for McPhee

UFC-KING
01-21-2009, 05:52 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrNpuQFwzP0&feature=related) http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GoCOg8ZzUfg)
Shane Gilchrist (13-3) vs. Russell McPhee (4-1)

Round 1
The two fighters circle. McPhee flicks out a couple of jabs, then an unconventinal looping right hand. Gilchrist easily side-steps it, but trips and falls to the ground! He is up quickly, before McPhee could get in. Replays confirm that it was purely a stumble, the punch was well wide of the mark. Gilchrist moves in, ducks under a big right hand, and gets two crisp jabs in before getting smothered into a clinch. One of those jabs landed hard, McPhee is a little rattled. They struggle in the clinch, both throwing small punches to the back and ribs. The referee separates them. McPhee forces Gilchrist back up against the cage, and starts throwing jabs. He looks to be keeping Gilchrist in position, waiting to unload a big punch. McPhee does, lunging in with a huge right cross, but Gilchrist saw it coming and goes underneath it, scoring with a right hand to the gut on the way past. McPhee turns and tries to follow up immediately, but gets tagged with a wicked left hook that drops him to one knee. McPhee is up quickly, causing Gilchrist, who was about to dive in, to back off. Replays show that the punch connected, but McPhee was already going downward to duck the punch, so it wasn't as powerful as first thought. McPhee throws a high kick, but it doesn't do anything but cause Gilchrist to step back. The time expires without anything further of note happening. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Gilchrist.

Round 2
The two fighters touch gloves as the round begins. McPhee starts brightly, throwing out a series of jabs and raking punches, but Gilchrist is too light on his feet and avoids all of them. Gilchrist steps in and hits a lovely overhand right, then a low kick to the outside of the thigh. McPhee throws a vicious right cross, but Gilchrist goes under it and catches McPhee with a scathing left hand to the gut. The next few minutes follow a very similar pattern; Gilchrist using his excellent movement to 'hit and run', coming in from a variety of angles to score with crisp punches, dodging out of the way of McPhee's counters. McPhee is being made to look sluggish by comparison, and the amount of punches that Gilchrist has landed in comparison to him is becoming huge. None of them have been particularly big punches, certainly nothing likely to end a fight, but the sheer number of them must be hurting McPhee. McPhee finally hits a meaningful blow, catching Gilchrist coming in with a low kick. Gilchrist still gets a crisp jab in though, and is back out of range before McPhee can apply a second strike. The round comes to an end with Gilchrist having dominated. The second round is over. Blurcat.com scores it 10-9 for Gilchrist.

Round 3
McPhee starts fast, coming out almost immediately with a three punch combination. None of them get through, and Gilchrist manages to squeeze a jab of his own through and score just above the left cheek. They exchange a flurry of blows right in the center, it's difficult to see who got the best of it, and both of them retreat a few steps to recover. Good start to the round, early indications are that this is going to be all about the striking, neither fighter has even hinted at going for a takedown. Gilchrist uses a low kick to set up a nice right hand, and McPhee is forced back against the cage. Gilchrist picks his shots and gets a big punch to the body in. McPhee uses a couple of looping punches to make Gilchrist keep back, but it doesn't last for long, as Gilchrist bursts forward and hits two big right hands, taking a counter punch to the body though, and they wind up in a clinch. They exchange weak-looking blows from that position, before the referee grows tired of the inactivity and breaks them apart. McPhee scores with a low kick. For a second it looked like Gilchrist was about to go for a takedown, but nothing came from it. Gilchrist unwinds a right hook that narrowly misses. That will be the last action of the round though. End of the round. Blurcat.com gives that one to Gilchrist by 10-9. The official scores are: 30-27 (twice), 29-28 for Shane Gilchrist.

Shane Gilchrist via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 29-28)

http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJof2jMsh_c) http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNLRqyLHSNE)
Dominykas Jankovic (9-4) vs. Gordon Idle (7-2)

Round 1
Jankovic starts fast, immediately going on the attack with jabs and straight rights. Idle covers up from the initial burst, then starts throwing some raking rights and lefts. Jankovic bobs and weaves out of harm's way, countering by flicking off jabs whenever possible, peppering Idle with strikes. None of them are likely to knock Idle down, but they will add up over time. Idle moves in and tries to back Jankovic up against the cage, but he is too quick, and won't allow himself to get caught. Idle is having a real problem with Jankovic's movement, which is allowing him to dart in and out almost at will, hitting quick jabs and avoiding any counters. There's another example, as Jankovic scores with a sharp left hand to the chest, and is gone before the big right hand of Idle hits. Idle looks frustrated, and switches tactics, no longer looking for the big punches but trying to stop Jankovic getting in close by using low kicks and long, raking punches. Jankovic is kept from doing any further damage, but Idle isn't generating any offence either. Jankovic comes in from an angle, takes a right hand, but scores with a flurry of his own. Idle tries to hit a low kick, but misses. Time is running down, Jankovic is going to take this round on points, he has been able to dominate it thanks to his superior movement. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com scores it 10-8 for Jankovic.

Round 2
The two fighters touch gloves as the round begins. Idle starts brightly, throwing out a series of jabs and raking punches, but Jankovic is too light on his feet and avoids all of them. Jankovic steps in and hits a lovely overhand right, then a low kick to the outside of the thigh. Idle throws a vicious right cross, but Jankovic goes under it and catches Idle with a scathing left hand to the gut. The next few minutes follow a very similar pattern; Jankovic using his excellent movement to 'hit and run', coming in from a variety of angles to score with crisp punches, dodging out of the way of Idle's counters. Idle is being made to look sluggish by comparison, and the amount of punches that Jankovic has landed in comparison to him is becoming huge. None of them have been particularly big punches, certainly nothing likely to end a fight, but the sheer number of them must be hurting Idle. Idle finally hits a meaningful blow, catching Jankovic coming in with a low kick. Jankovic still gets a crisp jab in though, and is back out of range before Idle can apply a second strike. The round comes to an end with Jankovic having dominated. End of the round. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Jankovic.

Round 3
Fast start by Jankovic, who has thrown three crisp jabs in the first twenty seconds, although none of them got past the gloves. Idle circles, drawing a lunge from Jankovic, allowing him to score with a nice low kick to the front leg. Jankovic ignores that and darts in for a takedown, but only ends up holding one leg, Idle hopping on the other to remain vertical. Jankovic tries to push forward to complete the takedown, but Idle manages to pull them all the way back to the cage before ultimately going down. That's a much better position to be in though, he has his corner right there, and can use the cage to effectively cut off any form of attack to the left hand side of his body. Jankovic has one leg trapped between Idle's, and is struggling to get it free. He throws a couple of punches, none of them doing much damage, and then tries to work on one of the arms. It might be a kimura that he looking for. Idle defends it well, without fully escaping it, Jankovic can't really do a lot with it due to how much he is having to stretch to apply it, due to his leg being trapped. Idle suddenly releases the leg and scrambles up, looking to take Jankovic's back. Jankovic was ready for it though, and blocks it by pinning a half-standing Idle up against the cage. It's a precarious position for both fighters. Idle throws a couple of short-range punches. Jankovic gets a leg in and trips Idle, putting him back on the ground, albeit this time in full guard. It was a nice escape attempt from Idle, at least he can take heart from the fact that it resulted in a better defensive position. Time is running out, it looks like this round will end with them in this position. End of the round. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Jankovic. The official scores are in; two judges give 30-26, the other 29-27, all for Dominykas Jankovic.

Dominykas Jankovic via Unanimous Decision (30-26, 30-26, 29-27)

http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZZADbubu0Y) http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13itWv6-kUg)
Will Kane (8-0) vs. Marcelo Oberto (8-3)

Round 1
Oberto starts the round like a house on fire, hitting three quick jabs and a vicious right hook. Kane covered up well, but at least one of the jabs got through and landed above the left eye. Kane backs up to buy some time, but Oberto keeps coming and lands a right hand to the body. Kane scores with a jab in return, then goes with a kick to the waist. Oberto catches the leg though and quickly rushes forward with a takedown. Kane pulls guard. Kane has the guard held very high. Oberto throws a big right hand, but almost puts himself right into a triangle as a result, and he is forced to fight free. Kane throws a punch and it lands right above the nose. Oberto throws four massive punches as a response, threatening to try and knock Kane right through the canvas, Kane is forced to simply cover up and try to survive. Oberto is controlling the round from this position, although it has to be said that he hasn't yet truly looked like he can stop the match from here. Kane moves to butterfly guard and then tries to scramble back up, but Oberto stops that by throwing another set of big punches, forcing Kane to go back to the full guard. The round ends with them still like that, with Oberto having totally controlled the round from the guard. End of round 1. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Oberto.

Round 2
Nice fast-paced start from Oberto, who gets right in Kane's face from the beginning of the round, throwing some crisp jabs and then a vicious uppercut. The two jabs got parried, the uppercut missed as Kane side-stepped. Kane fires back with a left hand, then a right to the body. Oberto steps in, but only into a waist-high kick from Kane. Oberto is quick though, and manages to catch it around the knee. Using it as leverage, Oberto sweeps Kane's standing leg and takes them to the ground. Kane quickly pulls guard. Oberto fires off a couple of tentative punches, testing out the guard of Kane. Oberto tries to pass the guard, but can't, Kane isn't going to let him get a better position, as he knows that Oberto will start raining down punches. Oberto tries a big right hand, but it's easily defended. Kane gets a punch of his own in, but it didn't connect properly. Oberto again tries to get past the guard, but again is foiled. It's turned into a bit of a stalemate, although the referee probably won't stand them up as long as the punches continue to flow. Oberto fakes an elbow before trying to pass the guard for a third time, and briefly has side mount, but Kane fought it hard and gets back to guard within seconds. Butterfly guard by Kane, and Oberto is having trouble generating any attacking threat. He'll probably win the round as he has been more aggressive, but Kane has defended the danger well. The second round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Oberto.

Round 3
Oberto comes out fast, and looks like he is aiming for a quick takedown, but Kane stops that plan with some looping punches. Solid right hand from Kane connects, and that's the best moment of the opening minute of the round. Oberto is mainly defending against punches, it looks like he is trying to work an angle to try for a takedown. Kane seems to have noticed, as he is purposely positioning against that. Straight left from Kane, then a low kick, then a wicked body shot. Oberto felt that, and backs off. Oberto tries to get in for a clinch, perhaps looking for a takedown from that position, but Kane gets him to back off with some jabs. Kane has really been able to stamp his gameplan on this round, Oberto has been blocked at every turn. That's the end of the round. Blurcat.com has it down as 10-9 Kane. The official scores are: 29-28 (Marcelo Oberto), 29-28 (Will Kane), 29-28 (Marcelo Oberto). Marcelo Oberto wins by split decision.

Marcelo Oberto via Split Decision (29-28, 28-29, 29-28)

http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOA8QT-sk4M) http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg
Brandon Sugar (8-2) vs. Cory Brewer (8-4-1)

Round 1
Not the most interesting of starts to the round, it's mainly a lot of circling. The referee apparently gets bored, as he tells them to get on with it and fight. Brewer complies, firing off a dangerous right cross, narrowly missing. Sugar throws a couple of stiff jabs, but they only find gloves. Brewer fakes left, then comes in from the right, hitting a nice body blow. Sugar steps forward and unleashes a big kick, thundering it into Brewer's ribs. He felt that one for sure. Sugar follows up by hitting a right hand too. Brewer finds himself backed up against the cage. Sugar advances, and throws a scythe-like kick to the legs. Brewer can't get out of the way, and almost gets felled by the impact. Sugar steps in and scores with a high head kick. Brewer partially blocked it with his hands, which was probably the only thing stopping it from being a knock out blow. Brewer gets a right hand jab out in response, then pulls Sugar into a clinch. Knee strike from Sugar. They break. Brewer still looks hurt from that first kick. Sugar gets in close and gives a receipt for that earlier body blow, nailing a right hand to the gut. Brewer hits a jab to the cheek in response, then clinches again. Time runs down, the round will end before anything more can happen. Sugar has used those powerful kicks to dominate this round. The first round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Sugar.

Round 2
Slow start, both fighters are throwing tentative punches without threatening anything more powerful. Sugar puts together the first exciting moment, stringing together four punches in quick succession, but Brewer defended well. Straight right from Brewer in response, but it caught nothing but gloves. They start circling. The referee tells them to fight, the lack of action so far is worrying. They get in close and exchange body shots, Sugar probably getting the slightly better punches in, and then fall into a clinch. That goes nowhere, and the referee separates them. Brewer gets a nice kick in just before the time expires, but it's unlikely that is going to stop the judges giving that round to Sugar. The second round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Sugar by 10-9.

Round 3
Brewer starts strongly, hitting two stiff jabs to the gloves, stinging the hands of Sugar. The third strike is a meaty left hook that narrowly misses. If that had hit, Sugar may well have been decapitated. Despite leaning backwards, Sugar throws a mighty kick that explodes across the chest, Brewer staggers back. That was an enormously powerful blow, and Brewer didn't see it coming at all. They circle for a moment, sizing each other up. Sugar throws a flurry of jabs, but Brewer blocks them easily. A right hand from Brewer lands below the eye, and a straight left glances off the shoulder. Another exchange doesn't see either fighter get an advantage. Brewer throws a heavy left, but Sugar goes underneath it. Another hard kick from Sugar, this time smashing into the left thigh. Brewer almost get knocked down. He throws a left hook in retaliation which misses by a mile, and gives Sugar the chance to hit another big kick, this time to the ribs. The round has been pretty even, with the exception of those kicks by Sugar which have really made a big difference. As the round comes to an end, it looks like those will make sure that Sugar wins the round on points. End of round 3. Blurcat.com gives that one to Sugar by 10-9. All three judges give a score of 30-27 in favour of Brandon Sugar.

Brandon Sugar via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)

http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Neop9OVaB8&feature=related) http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/play-1.jpg (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5X-yqPhItr8)
Andrew Rush (14-1) vs. Hans-Peter Schneider (9-3)

Round 1
Not the most interesting of starts to the round, it's mainly a lot of circling. The referee apparently gets bored, as he tells them to get on with it and fight. Schneider complies, firing off a dangerous right cross, narrowly missing. Rush throws a couple of stiff jabs, but they only find gloves. Schneider fakes left, then comes in from the right, hitting a nice body blow. Rush steps forward and unleashes a big kick, thundering it into Schneider's ribs. He felt that one for sure. Rush follows up by hitting a right hand too. Schneider finds himself backed up against the cage. Rush advances, and throws a scythe-like kick to the legs. Schneider can't get out of the way, and almost gets felled by the impact. Rush steps in and scores with a high head kick. Schneider partially blocked it with his hands, which was probably the only thing stopping it from being a knock out blow. Schneider gets a right hand jab out in response, then pulls Rush into a clinch. Knee strike from Rush. They break. Schneider still looks hurt from that first kick. Rush gets in close and gives a receipt for that earlier body blow, nailing a right hand to the gut. Schneider hits a jab to the cheek in response, then clinches again. Time runs down, the round will end before anything more can happen. Rush has used those powerful kicks to dominate this round. The first round is over. Blurcat.com sees it 10-9 to Rush.

Round 2
Slow start, both fighters are throwing tentative punches without threatening anything more powerful. Rush puts together the first exciting moment, stringing together four punches in quick succession, but Schneider defended well. Straight right from Schneider in response, but it caught nothing but gloves. They start circling. The referee tells them to fight, the lack of action so far is worrying. They get in close and exchange body shots, Rush probably getting the slightly better punches in, and then fall into a clinch. That goes nowhere, and the referee separates them. Schneider gets a nice kick in just before the time expires, but it's unlikely that is going to stop the judges giving that round to Rush. The second round is over. Blurcat.com gives that one to Rush by 10-9.

Round 3
Schneider starts strongly, hitting two stiff jabs to the gloves, stinging the hands of Rush. The third strike is a meaty left hook that narrowly misses. If that had hit, Rush may well have been decapitated. Despite leaning backwards, Rush throws a mighty kick that explodes across the chest, Schneider staggers back. That was an enormously powerful blow, and Schneider didn't see it coming at all. They circle for a moment, sizing each other up. Rush throws a flurry of jabs, but Schneider blocks them easily. A right hand from Schneider lands below the eye, and a straight left glances off the shoulder. Another exchange doesn't see either fighter get an advantage. Schneider throws a heavy left, but Rush goes underneath it. Another hard kick from Rush, this time smashing into the left thigh. Schneider almost get knocked down. He throws a left hook in retaliation which misses by a mile, and gives Rush the chance to hit another big kick, this time to the ribs. The round has been pretty even, with the exception of those kicks by Rush which have really made a big difference. As the round comes to an end, it looks like those will make sure that Rush wins the round on points. End of round 3. Blurcat.com gives that one to Rush by 10-9. All three judges give a score of 30-27 in favour of Andrew Rush.


Andrew Rush via Unanimous Decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27)


Awards (Fighters will receive 50,000 $ Bonus)

KO Of the Night : N/A
Submission of the Night : N/A
Fight of the Night : Will Kane vs. Marcelo Oberto

UFC-KING
01-21-2009, 06:42 PM
http://i429.photobucket.com/albums/qq11/TEWMan/BCF/BCF.jpg

BCF To End The Year Strong

The last show of the year in British MMA and it is going to be a big one. The Lightweight and Heavyweight Finals are set for the fights and to kick off 1997, Kendall Tracey and Marcelo Oberto are going to go to war for a shot in the finals against Andrew Rush. But first, we are going to give a little preview of the key matches of this ever so important card.

When Dave Lennon (8-1) entered BCF in July, nobody really knew who he was, but now, he is practically a household name in Britain, with Wins over Rav Kapur and Russell McPhee lasting only a combined 7 Minutes and 53 Seconds, Dave Lennon has dominated the division with amazing Ground and Pound tactics, but now, Kapur and McPhee are out of the way and the path ahead of him lead up to this man. Stafford Alois (20-7), The Man who none of his 4 victories with BCF have gone the distance, and all finishing by TKO, Alois is probably the biggest Heavyweight in Britain. Wins over Eddie Whelan and Shane Gilchrist under the Ouellet Era, are not only his key wins of the year, holding a Stoppage of perennial star Daniel Hornsby, and dark horse Bob Dozier. Alois' come forward and bang style, has been one of the deciding factors in his 20 professional victories, but that is not his only way of winning fights, after his brutal leg kicks on display against Shane Gilchrist last August. If Dave Lennon can pull off the upset victory, he will get the first Heavyweight Title shot of 1997, and with stakes this high, anything can happen.

Brandon Sugar (9-2), remember that name, He came into BCF with a pro record of 7-2, and a well-padded resume, being one of the first men to fight Sean Morrison in GAMMA. While not being the definition of a "Finisher" Sugar has looked more dominant than anyone, and a work ethic that would rival Jason Dalglish. But the question is, can he handle somebody much bigger than him. The Big man that will be standing across the cage from him will be Dominykas Jankovic (10-4), who also comes into this fight with a well-padded record with victories over Marko Prochazka and Gordon Idle. While both men have won fights over the likes of Mellberg, Brewer, Prochazka and Idle, the rough style of Jankovic could be something of a problem for Brandon Sugar, other than the size aspect. For Brandon to win this fight, he will have to bring forward his full arsenal, as will Jankovic. The winner of this fight could be decided just by the pure Determination and Will to win the fight.

Richard Smith (10-5) is back in action after a lackluster year, this time to face newcomer Adam White (0-0) who will be making his debut at this Massive event. White, a wrestling sensation in college, should not be underestimated in the stand-up department, posessing a full arsenal of kicks and knees. Grappling up-close could also be a problem as White has a devastating ground game that could rival anybody in the game today. The match will definitely be an uphill struggle for Smith, on the losing end of his last 3 fights, to Rob Baines, Davis Spyrou and most recently Robert Darrell. If Smith is to win this fight, he will need to bring forward the best Smith BCF could ever see, and with another loss, he could be finding his way out of the promotion.

That's all for today, and we hope for you to come back and see the play-by-play of our next event "BCF : Alois vs. Lennon" at BCF.co.uk

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Quick Picks

Stafford Alois vs. Dave Lennon
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Brandon Sugar
Jesse Singh vs. Mark Bicknell
Brian Barnes vs. Daniel Hornsby
Paul Duffell vs. William Powell
Jeremy Sproule vs. Milenko Rudonja
Travis Jones vs. Casim Yenkini
Adam White vs. Richard Smith
Michael Bannon vs. Sylvester Collins
Stjepan Andric vs. Oscar Gomez

UFC-KING
01-21-2009, 06:43 PM
Stafford Alois vs. Dave Lennon
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Brandon Sugar
Jesse Singh vs. Mark Bicknell
Brian Barnes vs. Daniel Hornsby
Paul Duffell vs. William Powell
Jeremy Sproule vs. Milenko Rudonja
Travis Jones vs. Casim Yenkini
Adam White vs. Richard Smith
Michael Bannon vs. Sylvester Collins
Stjepan Andric vs. Oscar Gomez

grits207
01-22-2009, 04:53 PM
I'd Love to hear your guys' feedback on how I'm doing on this diary, If you guys like it or what I should do different or include

I like it as is.

SeanMcFly
01-22-2009, 05:37 PM
Stafford Alois vs. Dave Lennon
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Brandon Sugar
Jesse Singh vs. Mark Bicknell
Brian Barnes vs. Daniel Hornsby
Paul Duffell vs. William Powell
Jeremy Sproule vs. Milenko Rudonja
Travis Jones vs. Casim Yenkini
Adam White vs. Richard Smith
Michael Bannon vs. Sylvester Collins
Stjepan Andric vs. Oscar Gomez

MMA-KING
01-22-2009, 05:38 PM
Stafford Alois vs. Dave Lennon
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Brandon Sugar
Jesse Singh vs. Mark Bicknell
Brian Barnes vs. Daniel Hornsby
Paul Duffell vs. William Powell
Jeremy Sproule vs. Milenko Rudonja
Travis Jones vs. Casim Yenkini
Adam White vs. Richard Smith
Michael Bannon vs. Sylvester Collins
Stjepan Andric vs. Oscar Gomez

RennikKain076
01-23-2009, 06:23 PM
This is the first time ive read this dynasty and I really enjoy it keep up the good work King.


Stafford Alois vs. Dave Lennon
Dominykas Jankovic vs. Brandon Sugar
Jesse Singh vs. Mark Bicknell
Brian Barnes vs. Daniel Hornsby
Paul Duffell vs. William Powell
Jeremy Sproule vs. Milenko Rudonja
Travis Jones vs. Casim Yenkini
Adam White vs. Richard Smith
Michael Bannon vs. Sylvester Collins
Stjepan Andric vs. Oscar Gomez

UFC-KING
01-23-2009, 06:34 PM
Thanks Ren, Always happy to see new predictors, and glad you enjoyed it, I got a couple things in mind that I might include starting next event.

UFC-KING
01-24-2009, 12:59 AM
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Well this was it, the last pay-per-view event of the year for BCF, and with a TV Show on the horizon, this could mean big things for the company. If a successful show, the company could be on the verge of big things in the future, if it's a flop, than this could be the biggest crash-and-burn in MMA this year.

The start of the night was kicked off with Stjepan Andric (9-4) dominated Oscar Gomez (8-15) to a Unanimous decision, with devastating knees and ground and pound which scored 30-27 across all cards. The same fate which met with Sylvester Collins (2-0), who beat Michael Bannon (5-5) by Unanimous Decision as well in his debut with the promotion.

The Highly Touted Adam White (1-0) was successful in his debut against Richard Smith (10-6), scoring a unanimous 30-27 mark on all the score cards, out-wrestling the Jiu-Jitsu Artist for three straight rounds. Smith has had one of the worst years in MMA, dropping 4 out of his last 5, could easily be finding his way out of the promotion with another loss. Casim Yenkini (8-3) dominated Travis Jones (7-8). Yenkini came into this fight with a dominant wrestling pedigree, winning the fight across all score cards.

Jeremy Sproule (6-5) was dominating Milenko Rudonja (8-3) until getting cracked on the jaw by a huge right hand that came from nowhere in the third round. Rudonja, not necessarily known as a striker, shocked everyone in attendance tonight, Including his corner. Paul Duffell (7-5-2) was suprised tonight, as William Powell (8-3) secured a nice third round arm-bar submission, besting Duffell for all three rounds, before ultimately finishing the fight.

Daniel Hornsby (10-2) was back to his old self tonight, besting Brian Barnes (9-7) for three rounds, in a very exciting fight from start to finish, dominating Barnes in the ground department, and nearly Knocking him out in the second round. Barnes Chin was much better than many thought, as he withstood the barrage of punches and kicks that Hornsby threw, but ultimately ended up losing the decision. Jesse Singh (5-3) suprised everybody in attendance tonight, dominating perennial superstar Mark Bicknell (8-4), in a three round Unanimous Decision, filled with Punches, Ground and Pound, and the occasional slam. Singh could be in the title picture soon with another win like this.

The Lightweight Tournament Finals took place tonight, as Brandon Sugar (10-2) took Dominykas Jankovic (10-5) to the third round in a rather lopsided bout in Jankovic's favor, although ending up the victor by Rear Naked Choke in the third, after quickly grabbing Jankovic's back on the ground and snaking in a choke, and won the Grand Prix in a rather convicing Manner. With the win, Sugar sets himself up for a title fight with Jason Dalglish in 1997.

Dave Lennon (8-2) vs. Stafford Alois (21-7) lived up to expectations in a massive way. The biggest fight in British MMA this year, ended up with a third round, KO by head kick that would've made Maarten De Vries Proud, coming from the Brixton Butcher himself, cutting off Dave Lennon in the third round with a stellar swinging head kick. Alois sets himself up for possibly one of the best fights of 1997, in just kicking off the year.

The Awards for the night were given to the best KO, Submission and Fight, each fighter earned 50,000 $ for an award. Stafford Alois scored KO of the night in a very convincing way, wrecking Dave Lennon in the process. Submission of the night went to William Powell, with his dominant Arm-Bar Submission of Paul Duffell earlier tonight. Fight of the Night went to Brandon Sugar and Dominykas Jankovic, as the Lightweight Grand Prix came to a close, in great fashion.

For more information on future shows, and write-ups of our next shows, always come to BCF.co.uk for all your BCF needs.

UFC-KING
01-24-2009, 01:12 AM
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BCF BATTLE LINES ANNOUNCED

Premiere Episode Announced

Card

Shane Gilchrist (14-3) vs. Jerry Bogdonovich (8-6)
Henning Olsen (3-2) vs. Dennis Gallagher (3-1)
Wayne McKellen (4-1) vs. Leandro Piquet (6-3)
Datuk Ong Ka Ting (0-0) vs. Taufik Wijaya (32-16-2)
Thiago Ceni (11-6) vs. Truck Gleeson (5-0)
Steven Griffin (3-1) vs. Marcus Speed (2-1)
Harvey Loeb (9-3) vs. Jacob Matthaus (9-10)
Norman Pike (13-7) vs. Graham Goodbody (2-0)
Murray Darby (8-4) vs. Bob Dozier (4-2)

UFC-KING
01-24-2009, 01:14 AM
By the Way :

Rennikain076 : 8/11 or 8-3
MMA-KING : 6/11 or 6-5
SeanMcFly : 6/11 or 6-5

Rennikain076, I'll PM you your prize

UFC-KING
01-24-2009, 01:14 PM
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"Reality Check"

The Debut Episode, was a full out success, with some great fights, and back and forth battles.

Shane Gilchrist (15-3) continued his winning streak, dominating Jerry Bogdonovich (8-7) to a Third Round Unanimous Decision. The Fight was continually dominated by Gilchrist's Superior Striking and Reach Advantage and technical skill, connecting on a number of moments with Punches and Kicks, taking out Bogdonovich's Legs and movement due to this. Gilchrist, Winner of 4 of his last 5, two of which came by KO over Garry McSweegan and Curt Kitson, seems to be next in line for the title shot.

Dennis Gallagher (4-1) got back to his winning ways, Knocking out Henning Olsen (3-3) in the first round, with a series of punches, knocking the Dane of balance, and finishing the fight. Gallagher was able to keep the fight at his pace, and dominate with superior punching and ground and pound abilities. Wayne McKellen (5-1) also plead his case for a title shot, outlasting Leandro Piquet (6-4) to a three round Unanimous Decision, scoring 30-27 on all score cards. McKellen, with only One blemish on his 6 fight career, came back strong after a Knockout loss to George Laurent, and could easily be next in-line for the title shot.

Datuk Ong Ka Ting (1-0) also debuted successfully, dominating the well-traveled Taufik Wijaya (32-17-2) by Unanimous Decision, dominating the Grappling and Striking. Datuk could easily be a threat to anybody in the division if he continues moving ahead like this. Thiago Ceni (12-6) shut-up the critics tonight aswell, defeating Truck Gleeson (5-1) by Unanimous Decision, in a rather convincing manner, being able to take Gleeson down, and dominate him with superior ground game.

Steven Griffin (4-1) upset Marcus Speed (2-2) in his British MMA Debut, decisioning the Florida native in a convincing manner tonight, managing to beat Speed at the striking game, and the ground department. If Speed wishes to stay with the promotion, he'll need to pick up a win, because another loss could mean trouble for the young star. On the undercard, Jacob Matthaus (10-10) picked up the first KO of the night, unleashing a brutal Elbow on Harvey Loeb (9-4) beating him in the first round.

Norman Pike (14-7) picked up a win tonight aswell, beating the formerly undefeated Graham Goodbody (2-1) by Unanimous Decision aswell, and Murray Darby (9-4) picked up a win over Bob Dozier (4-3) also tonight. Both men were rather boring in their victories tonight, but we expect better in the future.

The Awards tonight were given to Jacob Matthaus for his brutal elbow, and Fight of the night was awarded to Shane Gilchrist and Jerry Bogdonovich.

For More BCF news and event Write-Ups, and BATTLE LINES Info, go to BCF.co.uk, and thanks for reading tonight.

UFC-KING
01-24-2009, 01:20 PM
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BCF HQ

Ouellet : Jerome, We've got a change of plans

McCallum : What are you talking about ?

Ouellet : Rekdal is leaving, and by the time the tournament is over, He'll be gone

McCallum : So what do we do ?

Ouellet : Rush will fight either Tracey or Oberto for the title, and McKellen will fight the winner.

McCallum : Alright then, you've been doing a good job since we started you 6 months ago, and whatever you have in mind, I can go for.

SeanMcFly
01-24-2009, 07:03 PM
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"Reality Check"

The Debut Episode, was a full out success, with some great fights, and back and forth battles.

Shane Gilchrist (15-3) continued his winning streak, dominating Jerry Bogdonovich (8-7) to a Third Round Unanimous Decision. The Fight was continually dominated by Gilchrist's Superior Striking and Reach Advantage and technical skill, connecting on a number of moments with Punches and Kicks, taking out Bogdonovich's Legs and movement due to this. Gilchrist, Winner of 4 of his last 5, two of which came by KO over Garry McSweegan and Curt Kitson, seems to be next in line for the title shot.

Dennis Gallagher (4-1) got back to his winning ways, Knocking out Henning Olsen (3-3) in the first round, with a series of punches, knocking the Dane of balance, and finishing the fight. Gallagher was able to keep the fight at his pace, and dominate with superior punching and ground and pound abilities. Wayne McKellen (5-1) also plead his case for a title shot, outlasting Leandro Piquet (6-4) to a three round Unanimous Decision, scoring 30-27 on all score cards. McKellen, with only One blemish on his 6 fight career, came back strong after a Knockout loss to George Laurent, and could easily be next in-line for the title shot.

Datuk Ong Ka Ting (1-0) also debuted successfully, dominating the well-traveled Taufik Wijaya (32-17-2) by Unanimous Decision, dominating the Grappling and Striking. Datuk could easily be a threat to anybody in the division if he continues moving ahead like this. Thiago Ceni (12-6) shut-up the critics tonight aswell, defeating Truck Gleeson (5-1) by Unanimous Decision, in a rather convincing manner, being able to take Gleeson down, and dominate him with superior ground game.

Steven Griffin (4-1) upset Marcus Speed (2-2) in his British MMA Debut, decisioning the Florida native in a convincing manner tonight, managing to beat Speed at the striking game, and the ground department. If Speed wishes to stay with the promotion, he'll need to pick up a win, because another loss could mean trouble for the young star. On the undercard, Jacob Matthaus (10-10) picked up the first KO of the night, unleashing a brutal Elbow on Harvey Loeb (9-4) beating him in the first round.

Norman Pike (14-7) picked up a win tonight aswell, beating the formerly undefeated Graham Goodbody (2-1) by Unanimous Decision aswell, and Murray Darby (9-4) picked up a win over Bob Dozier (4-3) also tonight. Both men were rather boring in their victories tonight, but we expect better in the future.

The Awards tonight were given to Jacob Matthaus for his brutal elbow, and Fight of the night was awarded to Shane Gilchrist and Jerry Bogdonovich.

For More BCF news and event Write-Ups, and BATTLE LINES Info, go to BCF.co.uk, and thanks for reading tonight.

The art is great in this :) keep it up

UFC-KING
01-24-2009, 07:08 PM
Thanks, Really Appreciate it

UFC-KING
01-25-2009, 12:20 PM
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BCF : McSweegan vs. Rekdal

Well, It all had to come to an end, Rekdal is leaving the company, and to give him one last fight, Garry McSweegan is coming down to send him off, The Question is, can he do it. McSweegan has had the bit of bad luck in his last fights, and he needs this win to rejuvenate his career. Rekdal, winner of 3 of his last 4, the only loss coming to George Laurent, destroyed the division as of late, and with a win over former Heavyweight Champion Garry McSweegan, could give him the momentum he needs with ALPHA-1. Can he beat a much bigger opponent is the question at hand.

Marcelo Oberto (9-3) and Kendall Tracey (5-0) will finally fight to see who will get the shot at the title against Andrew Rush later this year. Oberto, coming off a huge confidence booster against Will Kane last year, looked great, in probably one of the best fights in British MMA of the year. In the Split Decision victory, he scored the chance to fight Kendall Tracey, winner of his last fight by Submission over Robert Darrell. He'll have to show his striking skills against the Black Belt in Karaté, as well as his full arsenal of Ground skills.

Nicolai Mickiewicz (9-2) is back in action, this time against former contender Perry Barr (13-5). Barr, Loser of 3 of his last 4, against McSweegan, Kapur and most recently Whelan, needs to bounce back or could be on his way out of the promotion. Mickiewicz, recently signed up by BCF, Lost in the heavyweight tournament in the most brutal KO of 1996, to Russell McPhee in his debut. He needs to bounce Back, and a win over Barr, could set up a re-match against McPhee in the future.

That's all for today, and we hope for you to come back and see the play-by-play of our next event "BCF : McSweegan vs. Rekdal" at BCF.co.uk

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Quick Picks

Garry McSweegan vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Marcelo Oberto vs. Kendall Tracey
Nicolai Mickiewicz vs. Perry Barr
Bixente Fontaine vs. Ralph Kohl
Mugur Boc vs. Manol Sirakov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Zachary Gilbert
Sinali Shomen vs. Stefan Champion

UFC-KING
01-25-2009, 12:41 PM
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BCF BATTLE LINES

Jason Dalglish (10-2) vs. William Powell (8-3) (Non-Title Match)
Will Kane (8-1) vs. Casim Yenkini (8-3)
Rav Kapur (5-1) vs. Jesse Singh (5-3)
Adam White (1-0) vs. Wayne McKellen (5-1)
Bae Yoon (0-2) vs. Pat Troy (0-1)

SeanMcFly
01-25-2009, 06:33 PM
Garry McSweegan vs. Thorbjorn Rekdal
Marcelo Oberto vs. Kendall Tracey
Nicolai Mickiewicz vs. Perry Barr
Bixente Fontaine vs. Ralph Kohl
Mugur Boc vs. Manol Sirakov
Korekiyo Anzai vs. Zachary Gilbert
Sinali Shomen vs. Stefan Champion

UFC-KING
01-26-2009, 01:55 PM
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BCF : McSweegan vs. Rekdal

Thorbjorn Rekdal (7-1-1) Shut up the haters yet again, Stopping Garry McSweegan (12-5) quickly in the first round, In just under a minute and a half. Rekdal will be going off to Japan with a ton of momentum, prepared to fight anybody at anytime, after massive victories over some of the premier BCF fighters, we wish him the best of luck in his journey to conquer The ALPHA-1 Middleweight Division.

Kendall Tracey (6-0) will be set to take on Andrew Rush very soon after a convincing Decision victory over Marcelo Oberto (9-4) Oberto, having trouble to get used to Tracey's massive reach advantage, and his powerful striking and ground and pound attack. Tracey, set to take on Andrew Rush this February, will have to bring that same game plan to action if he wants to take the BCF Middleweight title.

Perry Barr (14-5) dispatched himself of Nicolai Mickiewicz (9-3) fairly quickly, as did Bixente Fontaine (10-4) of Ralph Kohl (4-2). Both victors taking the fight by TKO due to elbows early on in the first round. Mugur Boc (3-0) scored a Unanimous Decision over Manol Sirakov (5-7) tonight aswell, as did Korekiyo Anzai (7-2) over Zachary Gilbert (6-4). With that win, Anzai could have pushed himself into the top ten middleweights, in the Updated rankings to be posted at a later date to the site.

In the first fight of the night, Sinali Shomen (2-2) unfortunately did not pull off the victory over Stefan Champion (3-0). Although Shomen won a round, Champion had the better athleticism, and dominated the fight to the finish.

Fight of the night was given to Thorbjorn Rekdal and Garry McSweegan, as was KO of the Night. Coming up at the end of the week is BCF : BATTLE LINES, in an episode you will not want to miss. That's all for tonight, and check back at BCF.co.uk, for Updated Rankings and BCF BATTLE LINES news next week.

RennikKain076
01-26-2009, 02:31 PM
Jason Dalglish (10-2) vs. William Powell (8-3) (Non-Title Match)
Will Kane (8-1) vs. Casim Yenkini (8-3)
Rav Kapur (5-1) vs. Jesse Singh (5-3)
Adam White (1-0) vs. Wayne McKellen (5-1)
Bae Yoon (0-2) vs. Pat Troy (0-1)

UFC-KING
01-28-2009, 10:14 AM
Update Should Be Posted Tomorrow, Stacked Schedule today, School till' 2, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Wrestling, Muay Thai and Boxing from 3 until 6 tonight, and Tomorrow I have nothing to do :p

UFC-KING
01-29-2009, 11:05 PM
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BCF BATTLE LINES

"Set In Stone"

Bae Yoon (0-3) could easily be on his way out of the promotion if he can not pick up a win soon, dropping a loss to Pat Troy (1-1) via Submission due to Rear Naked Choke in round 3, dominating the fight until the finish. Troy could be a future star with the promotion if he can continue to pick up wins with submission skills like those on display tonight.

Unfortunately, Wayne McKellen (5-2) will not be getting the title shot he was waiting for, dropping a first round TKO to Adam White (2-0), the dominant Up-And-Coming Jeet Kune Do Practitioner. White came in launching cannon balls landing multiple punches early on, connecting with a right hook that ended the fight in the first round. White could also be on his way to a title shot if he can stay undefeated like he has lately.

Rav Kapur (6-1) is back to his winning ways, unfortunately not in the manner he had hoped, scoring a unanimous decision over Jesse Singh (5-3), Singh, defeating Mark Bicknell last time out, had lost to Kapur before, and wanted to get back on track beating him this time, unfortunately, things don't always pan out properly, as Kapur dominated Singh for 3 rounds, and won the match-up.

Will Kane (9-1) scored a victory over Casim Yenkini (8-4), but did not win over the crowd, winning by Cut Stoppage in the second round, in a stoppage that was contested by Yenkini, His Corner, and the Crowd. The Two will probably meet again in a future match-up but until then, Will Kane will have the win on his record.

In a non-title match-up, Jason Dalglish (11-2) cemented a marquis match-up with Brandon Sugar next month, submitting William Powell (8-4) by Kimura Finish in Round 2, beating Powell to the pound every time, scoring punches, kicks, knees and even the occasional elbow over the ground specialist, before eventually submitting him.

Next time, on BCF BATTLE LINES, More future stars will clash, and more winners will emerge, and for all your BCF needs, including BATTLE LINES, Rankings and Event Write-Ups, always visit BCF.co.uk

UFC-KING
01-30-2009, 05:27 PM
Warning, Big Pictures

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UFC-KING
02-01-2009, 09:42 PM
Alright Guys, Sorry about the lack of updates, I haven't had much time lately with the DOTY nominations and the HoF ceremony, but I assure you this dynasty is not dead and the next card should be up tomorrow if possible, if not tuesday

UFC-KING
02-03-2009, 05:06 PM
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BCF is bringing it with yet another stellar card set in stone, Shane Gilchrist Will be taking on Daniel Hornsby, and in the Main Event, Andrew Rush and Kendall Tracey will finally meet, in the Middleweight Title Match-Up.

Rush and Tracey, both blasting through the tournament, Rush coming out of the tournament with a 15-1 Record, Tracey coming out Undefeated at 6-0, both with quality wins over Nigel Malley, Hans-Peter Schneider, and Robert Darrell as well. Both men will be competing for the Middleweight Championship since Thorbjorn Rekdal will be leaving the company, the Winner will have his hands full though, as the Middleweight Division is a tough place to be. The winner could easily be decided by the will and determination to win.

Gilchrist and Hornsby is a completely different affair, as both men are heavy handed and love to stand a bang it out for Knockouts, so this fight could be decided by whoever can connect first, and the winner could easily be next in line for the title shot.

The Full Card can be found here :

---------------------------------------------------------

Andrew Rush vs. Kendall Tracey
Shane Gilchrist vs. Daniel Hornsby
Percy Catcher vs. Dave Lennon
Rodolphe Gygax vs. Scott Gillespie
Laz Briar vs. Derick Blair
Conor Houghton vs. Uwe Maier
Lachlan Bowen vs. Curt Kitson
Nicholas Bretton vs. Jay Dorridge

UFC-KING
02-05-2009, 06:39 PM
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The BCF Title Picture is looking big now, as one champion emerged from the fog to reclaim the title and here's how the show went

First off, Nicholas Bretton (3-0) made his long awaited debut, submitting Jay Dorridge (1-1) in the first round with a rear naked choke, Bretton looked tough, rocking Dorridge on the feet, with a crisp left hook, dropping him to the mat, and submitting him quickly. Lachlan Bowen (2-0) earned a stunning upset victory, Stopping Curt Kitson (10-5) in the first round as well, Kitson, who was doing great in the first round, even dropping Bowen, was taken down shortly there-after, and stopped quickly after.

Uwe Maier (6-2) notched one of only two decision victories tonight, over Conor Houghton (1-1), in a very lopsided affair, dominating him to the pound, and beating him with a Unanimous Decision. Laz Briar (1-0) also scored a victory in his debut, but again, back to the Stoppages, scoring another first round TKO over Derick Blair (0-1).

Rodolphe Gygax (17-8) scored another first round stoppage, against Scott Gillespie (3-1) by TKO due to punches from mount, after quickly dropping a drowsy Gillespie against the cage and firing off punches. Dave Lennon (9-2) got back to his winning ways, scoring a first round Knock out of Percy Catcher (7-3), in what was probably BCF's fastest KO ever, in just 0:17 Seconds.

Shane Gilchrist (16-3) notched himself another victory, and in only the second decision of the night, beating Daniel Hornsby (10-3), by Unanimous Decision, and beating him down for all three rounds.

Andrew Rush (16-1) got his title back in a rough fashion, dispatching himself of Kendall Tracey (6-1) also in the first round, but with a massive punch dropping Tracey against the cage, and beating him senseless. The doctors where quick to get to Tracey, and Andrew Rush was once again crowned the Middleweight Champion of BCF.

Fight of the night was awarded to Andrew Rush and Kendall Tracey for their amazing title bout, and KO Of the Night was obviously awarded to Dave Lennon for his record Breaking Knockout victory. Nicholas Bretton also won Submission of the night, and won his first fight with BCF.

For all BCF News, Event Results, Fighters and Forum Discussions, visit BCF.co.uk