Friday, March 30, 2007

ROF promoter Sven Bean is happy to announce that he is bringing back the promotion BATTLEQUEST

Posted by Dan Magnie


WWW.ColoradoFightEvents.com



ROF promoter Sven Bean is happy to announce that he is bringing back the promotion BATTLEQUEST to the fight circuit. From August of 2003 to August of 2004, BATTLEQUEST ran four successful events. The promotion was originally created to provide athletes a venue to get ring experience, and work as a feeder show to the RING OF FIRE flagship. The shows featured top up and coming fighters from Colorado and surrounding states. The promotion also featured the debut of some very popular ROF fighters. ROF Bantam Weight Champion Joe Doherty , K-1 Heroes veteran Ali Abdelaziz, and lightweight Rocky Johnson all cut their teeth on BATTLEQUEST.

"With the success of Ring Of Fire, it made sense to bring back Battlequest. I have so many fighters that want to fight and I can't keep them all busy. I also need a place for me to build fighters and explore new talent. I brought in my partner from Vail, Carlos Carvahlo to run the series. We have done a few events together and he knows what to expect out of a ROF event. We plan on doing 2-3 events in Vail, and also return to Castle Rock with the series in the summer. I am excited to see what Carlos can do with the opportunity." said Bean

On Saturday March 31st, the promotion comes to the Dobson Arena in Vail, Colorado. BATTLEQUEST 5: AVALANCHE! will feature 10 MMA bouts, and 1 Muay Thai match.The full line up will be released next week, but the card is headlined by the first title match in BATTLEQUEST history. Elizabeth Colorado's Rocky Johnson will take on Omaha's Ben Henderson at 155 lbs. Tickets are on sale now at all Ticketswest locations, online at
www.ticketswest.com or by calling 866-464-2626.

BATTLEQUEST 5: AVALANCHE!!
Dobson Arena, Vail, CO
Saturday, March 31st, 2007
Doors open 6:30, first bout 7:30 pm
General Admission: $25.00
Reserved Seating: $40.00
Vip Tables 303-250-3627

Thursday, March 29, 2007

HUMAN WEAPON" - HISTORY CHANNEL announces new martial arts program3-29-2007

"HUMAN WEAPON" - HISTORY CHANNEL announces new martial arts program3-29-2007
Denver, COThe History Channel announced a new weekly martial arts series called Human Weapon. The show is currently in production and will premier sometime in 2007 - 2008. Each of the martial arts -- whether Karate, Capoeira, Muay Thai, Kung Fu, or Greco-Roman wrestling -- is the unique product of a fascinating culture. Each is steeped in the history and mythology of a region. And each has a Master. Every week on Human Weapon, our hosts, Jason Chambers, a mixed martial artist and professional fighter, and Bill Duff, a former football player and wrestler, go on a quest to find the master of a different martial art. They venture to extreme and exotic places -- one week, seedy back streets of Bangkok to find Master Muay Thai fighter Suriya Ploenchit, and the next, sampling local delicacies such as steamed silkworms and snake blood en route to face off with the reigning Taekwondo champion in South Korea. Along the way they absorb a nation's unique history and traditions, and how it gave birth to its distinct form of combat. In a series of extreme tests, they must confront professionals in each fighting style and fight a master. Marc Etkind is The History Channel Executive Producer. (13 episodes).

www.ColoradoFightEvents.com

Fightnews.com: Ultimate Fighting

Fightnews.com: Ultimate Fighting: "C 71: LIDDELL VS. JACKSON!
Over the last four years Chuck “The Iceman” Liddell has been unstoppable. He has dominated his last seven fights and gained legendary status in the Octagon™ as the UFC� World Light Heavyweight Champion. In what will be the mega-fight of the summer, Liddell will meet Quinton “Rampage” Jackson for the second time in an attempt to avenge his loss to the last man who defeated him. Liddell will face his greatest challenge to date when The Ultimate Fighting Championship� organization presents UFC 71: LIDDELL vs. JACKSON live from the MGM Grand Garden Arena Saturday, May 26. . . . . click here for more

UFC 69: SHOOTOUT MAIN CARD LINE-UP"

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Ultimate Fighting's Next Battle

MediaUltimate Fighting's Next BattleR.M Schneiderman, 10.05.06, 3:00 PM ET
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In Pictures: Inside Mixed Martial Arts
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Last month, roughly 5,000 fans piled into the Memorial Coliseum in Portland, Ore., to watch martial artists Matt "The Law" Lindland and Jeremy "Gumby" Horn battle back and forth. And that they did. In the second round, Lindland snapped a left high kick to Horn's head, appearing to stun him. Horn tried to counter with a kick of his own, but Lindland, 36, followed with a left hook, sending his 31-year-old counterpart to the canvas.
The bout, hosted by the International Fight League, was over in less than five minutes. But the real battle is still raging: What will become the premier organization in mixed martial arts?
The sport, which traces its roots to the vale tudo or "anything goes" fights that became popular in Brazil in the 1920s, combines a wide variety of fighting styles, from boxing to jiu-jitsu. The sometimes bloody battles prohibit head butting, eye gouging, biting, hair pulling and other forms of attack generally considered dangerous or unfair.
In Pictures: Inside Mixed Martial Arts
Since its founding in 1993, a privately owned league called the Ultimate Fighting Championship has been the sport's preeminent brand. In 2001, Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta, who also own Station Casinos (nyse: STN - news - people ) in Las Vegas, bought the UFC for roughly $2 million from entertainment executive Robert Meyrowitz. Since then, they've led the transformation of the sport from a glorified tough-man contest into an increasingly mainstream, money-making sport. With mixed martial arts now legal in 33 states, some say the UFC could eventually rival World Wrestling Entertainment (nyse: WWE - news - people )--a $400 million company (fiscal 2006 sales)--in size and scope.
In 2005, the UFC signed a contract with Viacom's (nyse: VIA - news - people ) Spike TV to produce a reality show called The Ultimate Fighter, the sport's first major cable TV deal. An average of 2 million viewers have watched the various seasons of the show each week, and its success helped the UFC launch five other shows on Spike. Last spring, it bolstered its presence on the Internet, launching a video-on-demand service. Customers can now download individual fights for $1.99 apiece.
Television pay per view numbers are also skyrocketing. In July, 775,000 people watched former light heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz defeat UFC hall of famer Ken Shamrock, according to California-based Kagan Research. The fight grossed an estimated $29 million dollars in pay per view revenues.
But no heavyweight champ goes unchallenged for long. Four competitors are now emerging to grapple for a piece of the American market: Pride Fighting Championships, the International Fight League, the World Fighting Alliance and Strikeforce Fighting Championship.
"There isn't room for everybody," says Gareb Shamus, the co-founder of the International Fight League and head of comic book giant Wizard Entertainment. "But there is room for the organizations that have the top talent." Pride Fighting Championships may be the UFC's strongest competitor. Owned by Tokyo-based Dream Stage Entertainment, which sells out 35,000 seat stadiums in Japan, Pride has arguably more talent than any of its American counterparts, including the UFC. In September, Fox Sports Net began airing bimonthly replays of Pride bouts. And in October, Pride will hold its first U.S. live show, in Las Vegas.
Fortunately for the UFC, Pride is rumored to be struggling financially. In June Fuji TV, the company that broadcasted Pride on television in Japan, canceled its contract due to alleged ties between Pride's parent company and the Japanese mafia.
Other challengers are winning small battles. California-based Strikeforce Fighting Championship broke the mixed martial arts attendance record in March when 18,265 people attended its first show in San Jose. In May, the World Fighting Alliance signed Rampage Jackson, one of the sport's most marketable athletes. And nearly 2 million people watched replays of the International Fight League's first two shows on Fox Sports Net in June. On Aug. 31, the company announced its plans to go public and an initial public offering date should be announced in the next few months.
At some level, of course, the emergence of these rivals is good news for the UFC. They're helping the sport grow, further legitimizing what only five years ago was considered an obscure niche sport. But over time, these startups could potentially drive up costs for talent and dilute the UFC brand.
Still, it's likely that the UFC will remain a dominant player in the sport. "The UFC is like Kleenex," says Josh Gross, the editor of Sherdog.com, the largest combat sports Web site in the country. To many fans, their brand is the sport.