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July 17th, 2009

Remembering Arturo


posted by Large

A couple links on the Gatti tribute front. First of all, my piece over at HBO, which is a compendium of excerpts from interviews I did with Micky Ward, Buddy McGirt, Jim Lampley, Larry Merchant, Manny Steward, Max Kellerman and Ross Greenburg. It’s an HBO-heavy list, admittedly, but I got a lot of great material, and I think the piece reads like a neat little oral history of Gatti’s career.

I also include links to Pound 4 Pound’s show from last night, which was devoted to Gatti and includes Ward, McGirt, Greenburg and Ivan Robinson as guests. Also, remember, HBO is running all three Gatti-Ward fights back-to-back-to-back tonight at 9 and then tomorrow on HBO2 at 10:15. In other words, get the TiVo humming, cause you’re going to want to keep them shits in the collection.

Remembering Arturo Gatti
Jim Lampley: “At the end of any HBO fight, the mechanics of the telecast are such that I throw into the ring and then stand up and walk to the camera to do my post-fight on cameras, which is a difference of maybe eight or ten feet. When I stood up at the end of the tenth round of the first Gatti-Ward fight to walk the eight or ten feet to go to the camera, I almost could not straighten my body up because my stomach muscles were locked so tight from being tensed up involuntarily… just from watching what these two guys were doing to each other.”

Pound 4 Pound Radio: Gatti Tribute 1

Pound 4 Pound Radio: Gatti Tribute 2

July 16th, 2009

No Mas Partners with Pound 4 Pound Radio


posted by Large

We here at the Mas are proud to announce a new partnership with Pound 4 Pound Radio, the only boxing show on Sirius XM. We’ll be cross-promoting with them and they will be taking part and drawing participants to our “call-the-round” t-shirt contests for the big fights. The next such contest will be for the Bradley/Campbell fight on August 1st, and let me tell you something, Masians – gonna be a lot more action on that one than there has been in the past, so you better get your thinking caps on right now.

Also, starting next week, I will be making regular appearances on their radio show, which airs on Thursday nights at 7 p.m. EST at Sirius/XM 98. I urge you to check it out, because it’s really an excellent show with a regular roster of top-notch guests. Take tonight, for instance, which is a special Arturo Gatti tribute show. They’ll be talking Gatti with Ross Greenburg, Ivan Robinson, Micky Ward and Buddy McGirt.

Quite a lineup. And that’s not at all the “Mas on the Radio” news I have up my sleeve. The one and only Chief Executive Masian (he’s like Oscar, I’m like Richard Schaefer… or maybe I’m Bernard… that’s a bad thought, actually), the I-berglar, Chris Isenberg, will be making an appearance on a show called “Under Score” on the same station (Sirius/XM 98) at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Under Score is a show that focuses on the intersection of sports with society at large, art, culture, whatnot, obviously fertile terrain for I-berglary.

I’ve included below a few links to both shows for you to sample below, and also a link to a piece of mine from over at The Sporting Blog, which gives my thoughts on Showtime’s Super Six tournament, which I gather will be one of my primary topics of conversation on Pound 4 Pound next week.

Pound 4 Pound Radio (Juan Diaz, Giovanni Segura)

Under Score (Tor Hamer)

Showtime’s Boxing Tournament Doomed Early
“Therein lies the most glaring problem with their tournament, a problem not unfamiliar to those schools left out in the cold come Selection Sunday for March Madness. And this is no 64-team field. Showtime has six fighters locked up for this tournament, and they are indeed six worthy names. But not among those six is the current champion of the IBF (one of the three major sanctioning organizations), the Romanian by way of Montreal, Lucian Bute (pronounced, to my great delight, ‘boo-TAY”).”

July 13th, 2009

Farewell Arturo


Gents – I bring you my elegy for Gatti today from The Sporting Blog. I’m also in the process of doing a piece on him for HBO that will include remembrances from a lot of different writers and commentators. I’ll link to that when it’s up. As with Arguello (fucking-A, Arguello and Gatti in a matter of weeks…), I encourage you to post your thoughts and reminiscences in the comments here. I know Gatti numbers many a Masian among his hardcore fans. In conclusion, I think of Marlene Dietrich’s infamously curt epitaph for Captain Hank at the end of Touch of Evil: “He was some kind of a man.” What else is there to say?

A Fight Fan Remembers Arturo Gatti
“What is it that Mickey Rourke says at the end of The Wrestler? He’s about to head into the final contest that will probably kill him, and he turns to Marisa Tomei, gestures to the ring, and says something like, ‘I’m fine in there… the only place I get hurt is out here.” I’ve been thinking about that line these last couple of days. You always sensed that there was exuberance and joy woven into Gatti’s endless turmoil, and yet one wonders if there wasn’t something in the larger-than-life Gatti persona that he simply could not out-run in the end, some essential poison in the 180-proof cocktail that was his existence.”

July 7th, 2009

The UFC Loves Itself Some Mas

posted by Ariel Helwani

Prior to every major UFC event, Dana White puts out several video blogs to show what he’s up to behind the scenes in the days leading up to a pay-per-view. Of course, he is doing the same this week for the upcoming UFC 100 event.

As far as video blogs go, this might be the worst one yet. I mean, I’m all for jokes and hijinks, but did we really need to see almost 10 minutes of some office prank?

The best part of this video? Check out which T-shirt UFC CEO and billionaire Lorenzo Fertitta is rocking. Respect. (The shirt in question makes its appearance at about 4:30.)

In case you’re wondering, this isn’t the first time Fertitta has shown love to the Mas – that’s him in the picture up top sporting the colors on the right.

Meanwhile, every few weeks I see White wearing the infamous Leon Spinks shirt:


So to all the MMA haters on this site, I ask you this: when’s the last time you saw Don King, Bob Arum, Lou DiBella or any other boxing promoter wear a No Mas shirt? That’s right, never. Show some love! (Now that should put an end to the ridiculous boxing vs. MMA debate once and for all, right?)

July 2nd, 2009

The Ten Greatest Moments in UFC History


posted by Ariel Helwani

Once upon time, I provided No Mas with my 23 greatest moments in Wrestlemania history. So with UFC 100 right around corner, I thought I would do the same kind of thing, only this time I’ll keep it at 10. I don’t think anyone wants to read about my top 100 moments. Let’s do this:

10. Randy Couture def. Vitor Belfort via TKO (punches) , RD 1, 8:16
UFC 15 – Collision Course
Date: October 17, 1997
Location: Bay St. Louis, Mississippi

I remember watching this fight thinking that there was no way this wrestler guy (Randy Couture) would defeat the terrifying Belfort. Well, he did, and it helped kick off one of the most storied careers in MMA history.

9. Matchup: Gabriel Gonzaga def. Mirko Cro Cop via KO , RD 1, 4:51
Event: UFC 70: Nations Collide
Date: April 21, 2007
Location: Manchester, England

Greatest. Knockout. In. UFC. History.

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July 1st, 2009

Alexis Arguello, R.I.P.

posted by Large

Gentleman – here’s my Alexis Arguello piece from over at The Sporting Blog. A more beautiful fighter, a sweeter scientist, there never has been. It’s a sad day in Boxiana. Needless to say, Arguello is a no-doubt, hands-down, first-ballot No Mas Hall-of-Famer. I invite you to share your memories of him here – I’m sure the Masian faithful have many great Arguello memories. Mine are primarily of the two Pryor fights and the Mancini fight, where I admit I was rooting against him, and yet came to be awestruck by his greatness by the end of the evening (like so many, I rooted for him against Pryor – I couldn’t win with this guy). Anyway, for the second time today I write – may he rest in peace. He was something else.

Alexis Arguello, 1952-2009
“What most Americans will remember of Arguello is the beautiful and courageous boxer, the man who won titles in three weight divisions and fought some of the most memorable battles of his era, with defining victories over some of the great names of the 70′s and 80′s, like Olivares, Alfredo Escalera, Rafael Limon, Bobby Chacon and Boom Boom Mancini. Boxing experts generally rank Arguello as the greatest 130-pounder who ever lived, and among the greats at 135.”

June 28th, 2009

Tales from the Fight Game: The Maidana/Ortiz Edition

posted by Large

Papa Was a Rolling Stone
Literally, the first thing I saw when I turned the corner off Figueroa and looked down at the facade of the Staples Center was Oscar De La Hoya’s dad standing alone directly across from his son’s statue (and if you’ve seen it, you know that statue looks about as much like Oscar as I do). Joel De La Hoya was in a suit but no tie, drinking a can of beer and pacing around next to the road like he couldn’t decide whether to stick around or maybe hop in a cab and go somewhere else. I went up and talked to him for a while, got his prediction for the fight (Ortiz by decision in a tough one) and his take on the comparison between Ortiz and Oscar, which according to him is a non-starter because ‘Oscar is left-handed, but I teach him to fight conventional… Ortiz, he fight left-handed… so I cannot compare them.” I left him then and made my way to the media entrance. When I looked back, he was still there, looking agitated and indecisive. I wonder if he ended up leaving. It definitely seemed like it was on his mind.

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June 28th, 2009

Kid Vicious Takes a Fall


posted by Large

When you’re pushing forty and you’ve chosen the sober path for yourself, when you have a wife at home and a rambunctious nine-month-old who makes it such that you rarely (dah… never) are to be found awake past eleven o’clock at night, and when you’re avidly working on the first paunch of your life and your hairline’s way down on the scorecards in its battle with Father Time and you smell of a good two hours of accumulated adrenaline sweat, and when because of all of these things and more you feel decidedly out of place amongst the emaciated and vapid vampires of Tinseltown after dark… when you are like this, people, it is VERY hard to know where to turn when you find yourself all amped and aimless after a fucking ferocious fight in L.A. lights a candle up your ass the size of a forest fire.

Me, I’ve chosen this cafe (and when there is a DJ in the corner playing an endless thrumming ode to digital technology, can an establishment actually be called a “cafe?”) in the lobby of my unfortunate hotel, The Standard, to try and wrestle with my feelings. For now I resort to prose – maybe later I will shift to rhyme. Maybe I’ll take the mic in this joint and drop knowledge. “I got so much trouble on my mind, refuse to lose…” I doubt I would even scratch the surface of my surroundings. Around me are gathered some of the most expensive-jeans-be-wearing motherfuckers I’ve ever seen in my life. The people who party away their lives in these ultra-fashionable hotels… they are a race unto themselves.

Another race altogether, nearer to my heart needless to say, are the men who choose to make their monthly nut with their fists and their faces, and oh did we see a prime example of their work tonight. My mind still reels, my heart still beats a little too eagerly for me to sit still. This incessant godawful house music has nothing on the beat of my heart right now.

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June 26th, 2009

The Heir Apparent


posted by Large

No A-listers in the ring this weekend, but we do have two guys who are well on their way to the top of the heap, JuanMa Lopez in A.C. on an Arum in-house pay-per-view and Victor Ortiz in L.A. headlining B.A.D. on HBO (no Rocky Juarez/Chris John rematch on the BAD card unfortunately due to John being ill – poor Rocky, man, the guy is cursed). Also, we got King Arthur on Showtime on tape delay in his middleweight tune-up from Germany, a fight that some people are saying (including one of our very-plugged-in No Mas people who I will not out but I think you dedicated Masians know who I’m talking about) may be Showtime’s precursor to an Abraham/Froch donnybrook at 68.

Just to let you dudes know up top, I’m covering Ortiz/Maidana for HBO tomorrow night, so look for my post-fight recap over there. I’m going to try and put together a little video of the goings-on to run here at the Mas. Also, I did a profile of Ortiz for HBO this past week, so check that out if you are so inclined – Victor Ortiz’s Date with Destiny.

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June 25th, 2009

Gambling on Chaos

posted by Ariel Helwani

If you’re a degenerate combat sports gambler, boy, do I have the event for you.

It’s fitting that Saturday night’s “Ultimate Chaos” pay-per-view event is called such, because a quick look at the card shows a bunch of bizarre match-ups that don’t quite justify the $29.95 pay-per-view price tag. I mean, I’m down to watch Bobby Lashley vs. Bob Sapp any day of the week for a good laugh or two, but considering how bad Sapp has looked in his last few fights, I’m not expecting this one to last very long. It will be interesting to see whether Lashley can out-muscle the gigantic Sapp, as this is the first time in three pro MMA matches that he will be facing a fighter bigger than him. That said, I still like his chances via first-round TKO. The good people at bestfightodds.com have Lashley listed as a -550 favorite, so if you are feeling crazy you may want to drop a few on Sapp at +400 just for the hell of it. Don’t say that I didn’t warn you, though.

(By the way, did they travel back to 1986 to produce their preview video? I have never watched one of these hype videos and actually felt less excited afterwards about watching the event… video after the jump.)

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