Top 10 Most Memorable Strikeforce Moments

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  • CrimsonGhost56
    True Blue
    • Feb 2009
    • 5981

    Top 10 Most Memorable Strikeforce Moments

    10. Playboy Mansion
    September 29, 2007



    When MMA hit the Playboy Mansion, it made for a unique scene. Fighters prepared in makeshift tents on the tennis courts. A red carpet and photographers greeted arrived guests. MMA luminaries gathered near the grotto in about equal number to fans, and a loud and mischievous peacock called out by the cage. It was not exactly the usual setting for the sport.

    That was precisely the idea when Strikeforce decided to hold a card at the mansion. Strikeforce often thought outside the box in expanding the promotion, and the Playboy Mansion was a unique gamble. The idea was that while there would not be that many fans in attendance, a high admission price would make up the difference. It is something boxing promoters have attempted from time to time. The returns from the first show were promising enough that Strikeforce tried again the next year, but that would be the final Strikeforce event at the Playboy Mansion.


    9. Battle of Legends
    July 30, 2011



    The early days of Strikeforce were built around Bay Area fighters with local ties and reputations. As the promotion grew and expanded, it began to take on competitors with greater and greater international fame. That trend culminated in suburban Chicago in July 2011 with a super fight between two of MMA’s all-time legends: Fedor Emelianenko and Dan Henderson.

    A matchup between two icons like Emelianenko and Henderson would usually take place on pay-per-view, but Strikeforce put the bout on Showtime -- a rare premium TV slot for such a high-profile contest. It was an unusual circumstance. Strikeforce was now owned by UFC parent company Zuffa, but both fighters had elected to sign with Strikeforce over the Ultimate Fighting Championship prior to that purchase. Strikeforce elected to match up the two Pride Fighting Championships veterans in their final bouts for the organization.

    The fight did not last long, and it did not lack for excitement. The two heavy-handed legends slugged it out, with each man landing big blows. When Henderson caught Emelianenko with a sneaky uppercut under the arm, it separated the Russian from his senses and brought an end to their bout. For Henderson, it was another impressive name to put on his resume. For Emelianenko, it was another step back from his former perch as the top fighter in the sport. For MMA fans, it was a rare treat outside the more familiar UFC Octagon or Pride ring.


    8. Go To Sleep
    June 22, 2007



    After leaving the UFC in 1999, Frank Shamrock became selective and careful about his choice of opponents. Specifically, Shamrock sought out marketable opponents that he thought would generate maximum interest. In 2007, he targeted a perfect foe: the charismatic “New York Bad Ass” Phil Baroni. Baroni was not a championship-level fighter, but he carried himself like a star. After a war of words between the two fighters, they squared off in the main event of a joint pay-per-view card promoted by Strikeforce and EliteXC.

    With the right opponent arranged, Shamrock delivered quite the show. He was going to mix in showmanship in addition to the beating he put on Baroni. In one of the most memorable moments in a Strikeforce fight, Shamrock called his own shot. In the first round, he put his hands up next to his head and then pointed at Baroni. The unmistakable connotation was that he was going to put Baroni to sleep. Just seconds later, Shamrock dropped Baroni with a big punch and nearly finished him with punches on the ground. Then in the second round, he choked Baroni unconscious.

    The sequence of events was so memorable that Mickey Rourke used the same gesture in his Oscar-nominated performance in “The Wrestler.” Professional wrestler CM Punk made it a regular part of his matches, as well. It was arguably the high point of Shamrock’s post-UFC career. He picked a fight, sold it, entertained and won.


    7. Brawl on CBS
    April 17, 2010



    While other Strikeforce moments are remembered more positively, the ignominious low point for the promotion almost certainly occurred in Nashville, Tenn., in the spring of 2010. The show itself was unsuccessful enough. All three title fights went to a decision and, collectively, did not deliver a lot of excitement. However, things went from bad to worse at the end of the evening when Jake Shields was interviewed after his victory over Henderson.

    As Shields was being interviewed, Jason Miller came into the cage to press for a rematch with the then-middleweight champion. Miller was undoubtedly trying to sell a potential future fight on a major stage. Shields and the rest of his Cesar Gracie Fight Team entourage did not see it that way. They took it as a sign of severe disrespect and an ugly brawl quickly broke out, with the Diaz Brothers putting the boots to Miller on national television.

    It was certainly a memorable scene watching MMA fighters acting like thugs in front of millions at home. Unfortunately for Strikeforce, it had dire consequences. CBS never ran another MMA show, costing Strikeforce its most powerful television partner. Without CBS, highly paid fighters like Emelianenko and Henderson could not justify their contracts. Strikeforce began hemorrhaging money, and, eventually, the company was sold.

    Many organizations quietly and slowly march towards their own demise. For Strikeforce, the moment when things fell apart is easily pinpointed and hard to forget.


    6. Herschel
    January 30, 2010



    From his 1982 Heisman Trophy and his Olympic bobsled run to his involvement in the most famous and league-altering trade in NFL history, Herschel Walker led a fascinating and varied athletic career. Given that past, it was not that surprising when he announced that, at age 48, he wanted to make his MMA debut.

    Strikeforce made Walker’s dream happen, and it led to one of the more uplifting moments in the promotion’s history. Walker trained hard with the American Kickboxing Academy camp for three months and showed up in phenomenal shape for his first Strikeforce fight in Florida. Walker defeated Greg Nagy handily and donated his entire fight purse to charity.

    Walker’s success was a testament to the value of hard work and a message to MMA fans that they, too, can pursue improbable dreams.
  • CrimsonGhost56
    True Blue
    • Feb 2009
    • 5981

    #2
    5. Comeback for the Ages
    December 19, 2009



    In late 2009, it would have seemed improbable that the best comeback ever involving Scott Smith was still yet to come. Smith’s career was built on impressive comebacks, from his delivering split-second knockout against Pete Sell while on the verge of being finished to a remarkable come-from-behind victory over Benji Radach. Still, few comebacks in MMA history can match the one Smith authored at Strikeforce “Evolution.”

    Cung Le was one of Strikeforce’s biggest stars at the time. He was coming off the most impressive win of his MMA career against Frank Shamrock and was undefeated in MMA. Against Smith, he showed why. Punishing Smith with a brutal array of strikes for the better part of three rounds, Le looked to be on a completely different level than his opponent. Through two rounds, Le out-landed Smith 76 to eight. He even out-landed Smith in the final and decisive round. Unfortunately for Le, it only took one punch for the bout to change. Smith landed a left that dropped Le to the canvas. He followed with strikes on the ground, and Le was done. It was a stunning reversal of fate.

    Le would avenge his loss to Smith easily in a rematch, but the man they call “Hands of Stone” can always remember his most improbable of comebacks. Fans, too, remember that event fondly, as an exciting fight card also featured the classic second bout in the Gilbert Melendez-Josh Thomson trilogy.


    4. San Jose Showdown
    March 29, 2008



    Strikeforce was built on the backs of two key fighters: Shamrock and Le. Like Chris Mullin and Rick Barry represented the Golden State Warriors decades earlier, Shamrock and Le were the primary representatives of Bay Area MMA and Strikeforce.

    Shamrock was well known locally for his success in the UFC, while Le was Scott Coker’s top sanshou attraction well before Strikeforce came into existence as an MMA entity. Shamrock and Le had trained together in their native San Jose, Calif., but never fought. It was the California city’s clearest “dream” fight, and in 2008, it finally came to pass.

    In front of a raucous, divided crowd that leaned a little bit more towards Le, San Jose finally got its fight. The two aging legends stood and traded for 15 minutes before Le broke his rival’s arm with a kick and Shamrock could no longer continue. Le had city bragging rights once and for all.


    3. Women Make History
    August 15, 2009



    Women’s MMA had its doubters from the moment EliteXC and Strikeforce began featuring female fights. The skeptics argued that women could not capture MMA fans’ attention like men. In August of 2009, they were proven wrong. Gina Carano and Cristiane Santos squared off in the biggest women’s fight in MMA history. Santos won the exciting one-round bout, which proved to be one of the biggest financial successes in Strikeforce history.

    The clash between Carano and “Cyborg” was a perfect contrast in style and personality. The soft-spoken Carano was the popular girl next door, while the muscular Santos carried the intimidating name and was more akin to the female Wanderlei Silva. That dynamic packed in nearly 14,000 fans in San Jose and set a then-record viewership for MMA on Showtime.


    2. Fedor Finally Loses
    June 26, 2010



    Nothing lasts forever. Even as Fedor Emelianenko dominated heavyweight MMA for years on end, it was inevitable his run would eventually come to a close. It just so happened that the historic end would come in a Strikeforce cage.

    When Emelianenko stepped into the cage to fight Fabricio Werdum in the summer of 2010, he had not lost in nearly a decade; many questioned the legitimacy of his only loss to Tsuyoshi Kohsaka in the first place. The stoic Russian had shown vulnerability against the likes of Kazuyuki Fujita and Mark Hunt, but many had to see Emelianenko defeated decisively in order to believe it could happen.

    Emelianenko, a competitor whose career was marked by quiet humility, was done in by a fighter’s overconfidence. Thinking he had Werdum in trouble from a punch, he recklessly dove into the jiu-jitsu star’s guard and began pounding away wildly. It was a formula he had used successfully against Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira, but he found himself quickly in trouble against Werdum. The two-time Abu Dhabi Combat Club Submission Wrestling World Championships gold medalist locked up a triangle choke and applied an armbar as Emelianenko tried to escape. The Russian was forced to tap, and the reign of “The Last Emperor” was over.


    1. Unlikely Birth
    March 10, 2006



    It is easy to forget looking back at Strikeforce’s many successes how improbable that rise was in the first place. This was a promotion without television. It had no MMA history. The MMA media was not what it would eventually become. Yet following very savvy local promotion built on a personal grudge between Shamrock and Cesar Gracie, Strikeforce drew a sellout crowd of 18,265 at the HP Pavilion and turned away thousands more. Strikeforce overnight became a phenomenon in its hometown of San Jose.

    Given its boxing history, Las Vegas was a natural MMA hotbed. San Jose was almost an accidental one, built on timing and a preponderance of available, high-quality fighters who trained in the area. Most important to that rise were promoter Scott Coker and main event fighter Shamrock.

    Coker knew how to succeed in San Jose, with years of experience promoting kickboxing in the area. He even brought in one of his top kickboxing attractions in Le.

    Shamrock, meanwhile, appealed to MMA fans who knew his legacy as one of the top fighters in the history of the sport. Shamrock could also sell a fight with his trash talking and did so time and time again.

    Strikeforce’s first show was a harbinger of big things to come. The card was littered with future stars, from Melendez, Le and Thomson to Nate Diaz, Clay Guida and Krzysztof Soszynski. Shamrock’s quick knockout of Gracie set up a series of future major fights for the former UFC champion. The city of San Jose was ready, and Strikeforce was on its way.

    Link to original article

    Comment

    • Warner2BruceTD
      2011 Poster Of The Year
      • Mar 2009
      • 26142

      #3
      #1 for me will always be Shamrock/Baroni. My favorite fight ever.

      Comment

      • Liquidrob
        Izzy is a bum
        • Feb 2009
        • 11785

        #4
        Awful order
        Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


        The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

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        • CrimsonGhost56
          True Blue
          • Feb 2009
          • 5981

          #5
          Originally posted by Liquidrob
          Awful order
          there wasnt any particular order to them. i just numbered them

          Comment

          • Steel Mamba
            Nasty
            • Nov 2008
            • 2549

            #6
            Everyone really overreacted with #7, the fans, media, and especially CBS. Let's see them pull NFL games the next time a fight breaks out there. It is the fight game, like Gus said, if people can't stomach a fight breaking out then what are they watching mma for in the first place. The fight itself wasn't even bad, no one got hurt and not much happened. Definitely no worse than hockey players standing toe to toe and bare knuckle bashing each other's face in while the refs allow it to happen.

            It's crazy that such a small incident led to them folding.

            Comment

            • EmpireWF
              Giants in the Super Bowl
              • Mar 2009
              • 24082

              #7
              I don't think it was so much ONLY the brawl that ended their network tv life, but the shit ratings they did, too. It was just a bad night all around between the bad fights, the show ending brawl and then the rating.

              If the show is a success and the brawl still happens, imo they're still on cbs in 2011.


              Comment

              • Liquidrob
                Izzy is a bum
                • Feb 2009
                • 11785

                #8
                Actually Fedor tanked them on CBS, the card was supposed to be Fedor vs Werdum ME with Hendo as the co, would have given them a much much bigger rating after coming off Fedor vs Rogers
                Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


                The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

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