Moves like Jagger: Bellator 115 pound contender Jessica Aguilar interview exclusive with (Part one)
05/18/2012
Tomorrow night (May 18, 2012), Jessica Aguilar’s dream has an opportunity to come true.
That’s because Jag will be battling Megumi Fujii, a legend of women’s MMA and the current top-ranked 115 pound female fighter on the planet.
No slouch herself, Aguilar sports a 14-3 record and is the consensus number two-ranked strawweight. She’s been clamoring for a shot at the Japanese legend ever since before she was a participant in the Bellator season three women’s 115 pound tournament alongside Fujii.
Both ladies lost extremely controversial decisions at the hands of Zoila Gurgel, but have been unstoppable since. Aguilar has gone on to defeat the likes of Lisa Ellis and Carla Esparza under the Bellator banner in 2011 and has more than earned her shot to potentially be the top ranked women at 115 pounds.
Before she steps into the cage tomorrow night on the Bellator 69 main card, Aguilar spoke with MMAmania.com during a special guest appearance on The Verbal Submission where she talked about her in-fight decision-making process, her dream fight finally coming to fruition and even Dana White’s business-like opinion on women’s MMA in part one of this two-part interview.
Check it out:
Brian Hemminger (MMAmania.com): Let’s get right to business. It’s fight week, you’re a few days until you’re stepping into the cage. What’s going through your head right now? Do you kind of get more moody or are you just as outgoing and happy as you always are?
Jessica Aguilar: It depends on how the weight cut is going. When the weight’s on track, it’s easy to be in a good mood. (laughs) Right now, everything is really nice. My weight is fine and I feel good and I’m really looking forward to this fight. It’s been a fight I’ve been wanting for a long time and I’m finally getting it so I couldn’t be in any better spirits right now.
Brian Hemminger (MMAmania.com): This is a fight you were talking about wanting even back in 2010 before the Bellator season three women’s 115 pound tournament. Now it’s finally happening so what do you feel with it being this close to fruition?
Jessica Aguilar: Well it’s all business. The mindset is that I’ve trained and I just feel like everything I’ve done in my whole career has been working up to this fight. It’s been a long road with a lot of training and I’m just so honored to be here fighting against somebody who’s really been an idol of mine so to have this opportunity now, I can’t even express how grateful I am to Bellator for making this happen.
Brian Hemminger (MMAmania.com): You mentioned how a bad weight cut can affect your mood heading into a fight. Now your last fight in Bellator against Lisa Ellis, I think I remember that was a bad weight cut. Did you have some issues then?
Jessica Aguilar: Yes, I hurt my foot in my previous fight so the training camp was tough. When you have a broken foot it’s tough to do cardio. I wasn’t having an ideal training camp for the Ellis-Ward fight so it was a tough cut. This time, it’s business as usual. I’ve never come in heavy other than that fight. I usually come in underweight but that was just extenuating circumstances and that will certainly never ever happen again.
Brian Hemminger (MMAmania.com): It’s been really nice to see the evolution of your striking game. I remember your first fight in Bellator, you took your opponent down and submitted her right away but since then, you’ve stood and traded with everybody. I know that you put in a lot of time working on it, but how far do you feel your striking has come and how confident are you on the feet now?
Jessica Aguilar: I feel like I’ve always had it in my back pocket and I really just never got a chance to use it because I always was so successful on the ground. I’m definitely very confident in my striking. This is the kind of sport when you have to be completely well-rounded and if you have any holes in your game, other people will capitalize on that. I spend a lot of time on the ground and a lot of time wrestling and doing all the things I need to do. You have to have the full package and my striking is something I’m proud of.
Brian Hemminger (MMAmania.com): With this fight being between the number one and number two 115-pounders, the winner will be the number one 115-pounder in the world but do you think the winner of this fight will have a claim to be best pound-for-pound female fighter?
Jessica Aguilar: That’s a tricky one because the pound-for-pound rankings right now, there’s a couple key players that aren’t in the rankings at the moment. It depends what you’re going by. Are you going by the quality of the victories or the records overall. If you look at Megumi’s record, 25-1, that’s ridiculous but they say if you beat number one, you should become number one. I think obviously for the 115 I’ll have that claim but for pound-for-pound, I don’t know. That’s tough. There’s a lot of really tough girls on there.
Brian Hemminger (MMAmania.com): In Megumi’s last fight under the Bellator banner, she fought Zoila Gurgel and she stood. It was surprising. I thought she won, but still it was surprising that she stood and traded with Zoila throughout the five round fight. Would you be surprised if she stood with you for the full three rounds?
Jessica Aguilar: No, I don’t think I’d be surprised. I think Megumi wanted to prove that she can stay there and trade and bang with someone that’s known for their striking. She had a point to prove and I do too. Everyone thinks I’m a ground fighter and of course I am a ground fighter, but I wanted to show people what I can do and I think Megumi felt the same way. Honestly, I would not be surprised at all and it will be very interesting to see what happens in there. Wherever it goes, I’m prepared.
Ben Thapa: I wanted to ask you about the third round of the Ellis fight. You kind of came out and were throwing a bunch of overhands but then you seemed to come to and you started snapping jabs and that seemed to set off a great chain of events for you. What caused the shift from overhand, overhand, overhand to working the jab?
Jessica Aguilar: To tell the truth, in the heat of the battles, it’s hard to remember what clicked in my head at the moment but I can tell you that I have a fantastic corner and my coaches a lot of times, if they see something that’s missing or they see a hole or something that I need to capitalize on, I’ve got the benefit of American Top Team and the fantastic coaches that will tell me what to do. A lot of times, it’s just listening to your corner.
Sometimes your corner will say, Hey, throw some jabs! and you’ll start throwing jabs and turn it all around. It’s that eye outside of the cage that’s the big help and a lot times, it’s instinctual. You see something isn’t working and you try something else. I can’t honestly say that something went off in my head where I went, Oh, try this now. It’s probably a combination of the coaches and the instincts.
Gerry Rodriguez: What do you think about Dana White’s thoughts on women’s MMA as a whole?
Jessica Aguilar: I think that his problem is he’s a businessman. Obviously, he feels like, how’s he gonna put together a division if there’s no depth to it. There’s not enough females out there has been his take but now when you look at these cards like with Invicta and he sees that there’s depth out there with females and I really think that Ronda Rousey is sparking his interest. He sees something with her that he really likes and she’s done some promotional things and she’s gonna open up the doors for females to get into the UFC.
Again, I think Dana’s gonna look at it and say, Am I really gonna have enough females to put together competitive fights? We’ll see what happens but we’re at such an infancy stage of MMA for the females and I think if we’re having this conversation five years from now, we’ll definitely be seeing females on the big stage for MMA. There’s no doubt about it. The girls are coming out now and they’re training and it’s just a matter of time before there’s a ton of competitors out there. I’m excited to be a part of it.
You can follow Jessica Aguilar on Twitter @JagATT.
Stay tuned tomorrow for part two of our interview with Jessica Aguilar where she talks about Megumi Fujii’s legendary ground game, working with American Top Team coaches like Marcos Da Matta and punching people you like in the face as hard as you can.
To listen to our full interview with Jessica Aguilar, click here (audio starts at the 22:00 mark).
UFC Quick Quote: ‘Cain Velasquez is more of a multifaceted threat than champion Junior dos Santos’
05/18/2012
Cain Velasquez is more of a multifaceted threat. He can lull you into a striking match and take you down or he can punch you in the face if you’re worried about the take down. With Dos Santos, he basically concentrates on his best asset which is boxing but it’s hard to argue, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
– During today’s (May 17, 2012) UFC 146 pre-fight media call, Frank Mir proclaimed that Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez is much more of a multifaceted threat than his upcoming opponent, current Heavyweight champion, Junior dos Santos. Mir, who was originally set to compete opposite Velasquez on May 26, 2012, at UFC 146 in the co-main event, got the call to step up to the main event slot against Cigano in replacement of Alistair Overeem when Zuffa officials made the call to yank the embattled fighter from the event altogether following his testosterone debacle. Velasquez, a former NCAA Division-1 wrestler, has proven that his all-around mixed martial arts (MMA) game is quite well rounded indeed. With his superior grappling skills and unlimited cardio, Velasquez has compiled a 7-1 record in the UFC (9-1 overall). However, Brown Pride doesn’t solely rely on his wrestling mojo to get him by inside the Octagon, proving he can strike with the best of them and finish fights. In fact, of his nine victories, only one has gone to decision one with the rest of his wins coming by way of knockout or technical knockout. Not that Mir is completely downplaying Junior’s skills, on the contrary, the Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt goes on to say that Cigano focuses on what has brought him success, and that is the power and speed of his boxing skill-set. Though dos Santos has yet had the opportunity to display his ground game because of his tendency to knockout folks on the feet, the heavyweight champion has stated in the past that he will surprise everyone should he ever be forced to play the ground game. Perhaps Mir, who is highly regarded as one of the, if not the best submission artist in the division, will force the Brazilian bomber to the mat, giving him his opportunity to show the world his jiu-jitsu game. What are the chances of that happening?
Pic: A very extensive (and shameless) photos gallery of Bellator ring girl Mercedes Terrell. Check…
05/17/2012
Pic: A very extensive (and shameless) photos gallery of Bellator ring girl Mercedes Terrell. Check out more right here.
Junior dos Santos shuns Frank Mir’s constant trash talk, aims for knockout at UFC 146
05/17/2012
Frank Mir is one of the most well spoken fighters in mixed martial arts (MMA) today. So-much-so that Zuffa had the confidence to put Mir as a World Extreme Cagefighting (WEC) commentator from time-to-time before it closed shop and all fighters were absorbed into the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) ranks.
And he did a very good job at it, too.
With his eloquent speaking style, however, Mir has a tendency to use it to get under his opponents skins, as well, being one of the great trash-talkers in the game today.
Sure, it’s all part of selling the fight and drawing attention to the upcoming event. However, some people don’t particularly care too much for it. One of those people is none other than his upcoming opponent at the UFC 146: Dos Santos vs. Mir event, UFC Heavyweight champion, Junior dos Santos.
Cigano is quite possibly one of the nicest and most humble people you can ever meet. That’s not to say Mir isn’t, he is, actually, but one of the big differences between the two is that Junior usually shuns trash-talking and goes out and lets his fist do the talking for him, while Frank doesn’t mind a little bit of extracurricular chatting.
Appearing on The MMA Hour, dos Santos says he is growing old of listening to Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt bad mouth he and his mentor, Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, whom Mir has a very extensive history with, but says, though he doesn’t appreciate the constant banter, he doesn’t try to make a fight with him personal.
Check it out:
He likes to talk a lot, and I don’t agree with that. Yeah, as a fighter, he is a pretty good fighter. He got pretty good jiu-jitsu skills and he is a good striker too, but he likes to talk, and that is not so good to me to hear when he says something stupid. When he fought Big Nog my mentor, he said a lot of things, and now, he says he is going to smash my joints in the fight. I saw in the PRIMETIME too, he said that. But, you know, I don’t care about that because I know he likes to promote the fight. But, sometimes it isn’t too good to hear. (But)It’s never personal for me, it’s my job, I don’t know him personally and he doesn’t know me personally. It’s very professional, I just want to win the fight. I don’t want to hurt him or get hurt. I just want to beat him in the fight. I don’t care who the UFC wants me to fight. Now, it’s Frank Mir and I’m looking for a war in the cage with him.
Personal or not, Junior has high praise for his opponents abilities, but reiterates once again that his confidence lies in the power he possesses in his hands, but isn’t afraid to surprise people with his ground skills should the fight hit the mat:
I know Frank Mir is going to try to take me down and use his very good Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, he got good strikes too, but I believe so much in my hands, and all the fights start on the standing, so I think I can take advantage on that and keep this fight on feet and I will be looking for the knockout for sure. I want to knock him out and I will give my best to knock him out. If the fights goes to the ground, I don’t want to put the fight on the ground, but if he takes me down or something like that and holds me there, I will show my jiu-jitsu for everybody. I can tell you I’m ready to fight, it doesn’t matter where. I can surprise everyone fighting on the ground, too.
UFC 146 is set to go down next weekend (May 26, 2012) from the MGM Grand Garden Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada in a card that features the UFC’s first ever all Heavyweight main card.
In what will be his first title defense since winning the belt from Cain Velasquez last November at UFC on Fox 1, Cigano will look to keep his undefeated streak in the UFC (8-0) alive while Mir aims for his fourth win in a row and looks to capture the heavyweight title for the third time.
In this classic striker vs. grappler heavyweight tilt, only one can prevail and show why he truly deserves to be called the best heavyweight in the world.
But who will it be? The crafty submission specialist Mir? Or the always dangerous knockout artist dos Santos?
UFC on FUEL TV 3 post-fight press conference video live stream for 'Korean Zombie vs Poirier'
05/16/2012
UFC on FUEL TV 3: Korean Zombie vs Poirier from the Patriot Center in Fairfax, Va., took place tonight (Tues., May 15, 2012), airing live on cable television.
Immediately following the event, a handful of participating fighters — Chan Sung Jung, Dustin Poirier, Donald Cerrone and Jeremy Stephens, among others — will be on hand for the UFC on FUEL TV 3 post-fight press conference, which is now embedded below (after the jump) for an approximate 11:30 p.m. ET start time.
Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) President Dana White will not be present because he has upcoming surgery planned that is related to his Meniere’s disease.
Be sure to tune in for post-fight reactions from all the major players, as well as up-to-the-minute results of all the post-fight bonuses, including Fight of the Night, Knockout of the Night and Submission of the Night. A replay will also be available below for those who turn in early or miss the live broadcast altogether.
Check it out below:
For complete UFC on FUEL TV 3 results and blow-by-blow coverage of all the night’s action click here.