Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/03/2019 in all areas

  1. Hey guys, one of the oldest Tycoon brands, KAISER Fightwear, is back under original ownership... and already working on its Fall '19 collection! Now 100% free of inferiority complex because Hellbent seems to have vanished - i hope someone has the designs saved and brings them back at some point, Tycoon without Hellbent, just ain't right. Shoutout to my bud Mihail and Umberts who took care of/saved the company. Please feel free to contact me for SPONSORSHIPS - we're especially looking for up up-and-comers, fighters and managers who can put the extra bucks to a good use, we glady support you guys with top conditions, no hype needed. Here's a first teaser of what's to come, a new brand design, now in store: KAISER - Defined 2 Give us a visit: https://www.mmatycoon.com/clothingpublic.php?cid=3316
    2 points
  2. 2 points
  3. [Main Card] (Light-Heavyweight Division) Suzuki Sakurai (1-1) versus Over Power (2-2) Suzuki Sakurai is a Muay Thai stylist from Tokyo, Japan. This promotional newcomer has competed twice within the QFC arena where he scored one victory and suffered one defeat. In his MMA debut he was paired up with Greco Roman stylist John Anderson that stopped Sakurai due to the severity of a cut suffered via dirty boxing. In his second pro fight, Sakurai faced winless Muay Thai stylist Bill Blatt. Sakurai dominated this fight en route to stopping Blatt with power punches against the cage. Over Power is a Greco Roman wrestling stylist with all four of his pro MMA bouts taking place within the UFC arena. He made his fighting debut at UnderGround FC 1 where he faced power wrestler Lee Brown. Power gave up an early takedown to Brown who landed short range punches before scoring a fight ending kimura midway through the opening round. Next Power faced boxer-grappler Don Vigo who quickly wilted in the clinch. Power faced BJJ black belt Spanky Loco next, but Loco proved to be too much, knocking Power out with a brutal head kick. Most recently, Over Power faced blue belt brawler Milos Petrasek where he would go on to drop Petrasek three times in the opening round before knocking him out cold. In this fight we have a man that hates clinch fighting against a power clinch fighter. I expect Over Power to live up to his name here. (Featherweight Division) Shiro Tanaka (3-1) versus John Michael Benitoy (2-1) Hailing from Kanazawa, Japan, Shiro Tanaka is the former UnderGround Fight Club featherweight champion of the world. As a champion he recorded a successful title defense, which is a feat in this young promotion. He is a Muay Thai kickboxer and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu purple belt. All four of his professional bouts have taken place in the UFC cage. He made his professional debut at UnderGround FC 1 where he faced BJJ blue belt Ho Hek. Tanaka dominated the fight from inside the clinch from the early goings, battering Hek with short punches against the cage. When Hek scored a takedown into guard, Tanaka quickly locked in a fight ending guillotine choke. Next Tanaka faced BJJ brown belt Jay Brown for the inaugural featherweight championship. Tanaka managed to survive the few bouts of grappling against Brown and go on to dominate in the clinch, awarding him the decision and the title. Tanaka made a successful title defense against undefeated BJJ blue belt Roman Bell. In his most recent bout, Shiro Tanaka made an unsuccessful title defense against heavy handed kickboxer Reginald Budgiehandler. The entirety of the fight took place in the clinch with both fighters landing shots against the cage. After getting the better of the clinch fighting, Budgiehandler dropped Tanaka with a big right hand and then stopped him on another shot. John Michael Benitoy is a Filipino wrestling stylist with a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu blue belt. Undefeated throughout his brief tenure within the QFC arena, Benitoy promises to be a powerhouse within the UFC featherweight division. John made his MMA debut in the QFC where he faced BJJ practitioner Hamish Davies. The opening two rounds of the fight saw Benitoy playing a little game that I call “catch and release”: you obtain the clinch position and give it up. You score a takedown and then stand up. It isn't a good strategy in most cases but it happens frequently. Regardless of the validity of his game plan, Benitoy stopped Davies with ground and pound in the third round. Next he faced Hans Christian Anderson, a Muay Thai practitioner from Denmark. The game plan from Benitoy felt a bit more refined as he would obtain a position and stick with it. After attempting a pair of submissions in the second round, Benitoy stopped Anderson with heavy ground n pound from guard. In his most recent bout, John Benitoy faced undefeated boxing juggernaut Joe Smith at UFC WNF 2. Unlike previous opponents, Smith was able to score an immediate standup and begin landing heavy punches from the outside. Each time that Benitoy attempted to close the distance between them, Smith would make him pay with a furious barrage of heavy leather. Benitoy nearly went down on a counter right hand but managed to stay on his feet for another minute before dropping to a relentless series of punches against the cage. In this fight we have the striking and submission prowess of Shiro Tanaka against the power wrestling of Benitoy. Tanaka's big weakness seems to be his wrestling ability which is where Benitoy shines, but Tanaka is dangerous on the ground as well. If I had to pick one I would give a slight edge to Tanaka but that's assuming that he can submit Benitoy before the elbows start dropping on him. (Middleweight Division) Yewis Mybitch (8-4) versus Rory Andler (2-1) Yewis Mybitch is a hard hitting brawler with a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. A veteran of twelve pro fights, Mybitch has fought all but two of his bouts within the QFC arena. Yewis defeated his first three opponents from inside the clinch, stopping his foes against the cage with heavy punches. In his fourth fight, his opponent Darnell Jackson managed to stay on the outside to avoid clinching. It was no big problem for Mybitch, who stopped Jackson with superior boxing. After stopping John Hardin with dirty boxing, Yewis Mybitch faced submission wrestler Oleg Liguy. Mybitch would face defeat for the first time as Liguy took him down and knocked him out cold with ground n pound. Despite having suffered his first loss, Yewis Mybitch signed with Destructive Striking Championship. In his DSC debut, he faced durable grappler Lucien Lachance. The fight would take place mostly on the ground with Lachace taking home the judge's decision. Next Mybitch faced another strong grappler in Ace Ventura. The opening two rounds of the fight were a near perfect replica of the Lachance bout, but Mybitch managed to come back stronger in the third round. Too little, too late; Ventura won the unanimous decision. With three consecutive losses on his record, Yewis Mybitch parted ways with the DSC promotion. Mybitch decided to return to his roots by fighting in the QFC once again. Unfortunately this would pair him up with world class striker and well rounded fighter Hossein Vaziri. The fight only lasted thirty-one seconds with Mybitch being stopped for the second time in what was now a four fight losing skid. Fortunately for Mybitch, he was paired up with subpar grappler James Johnson three times in a row so he was able to end his losing streak, rebuild his confidence, and give Johnson early signs of CTE with three first round knockouts in sixteen days. Rory Andler is a kickboxer with a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. This relative newcomer to the sport of MMA has competed in the UFC and QFC to mixed results. He started his MMA career with a QFC match against Rob Brooks. Andler dominated Brooks from inside the clinch, bringing home a lopsided unanimous decision victory. Next he faced BJJ blue belt Raymundo Talley. In a near perfect recreation of his debut performance, Andler dominated from inside the clinch before stopping Talley with a big knee and followup punches against the cage. In his first fight with the UFC, Andler faced Muay Thai striker Benchamek Sitsopirang. Oh did I call him a Muay Thai stylist? Silly me for reading his primaries, Sitsopirang threw less than half a dozen strikes on his feet, opting to wrestlefuck his way to a decision victory over Andler. In this fight I believe we will see a pure clinch battle with both guys hammering shots. It would appear that Andler has a better chin but less stopping power which would indicate a likely decision win for him. Mybitch has an unfortunate name and serious power however so anything is possible. Still with the short rounds of the UFC, I give this one to Andler via decision. [Co-Main Event] (Featherweight Division) Jay Brown (6-2) versus Joe Smith (4-0) Jay Brown is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu brown belt, a world class submission artist, and former UnderGround FC title challenger. Before his UFC tenure began he reached the finals of a QFC tournament. Hwe started his career in the QFC 887 Featherweight Tournament. He came across as just another eighteen year old BJJ fighter with nothing special to credit him with. After giving up a takedown to his debuting opponent, Chang Luann, he immediately locked in the fight ending triangle choke. Brown turned around with another easy victory over fellow submission fighter Roberto Medina. After making short work of Joe Bean, Brown faced Darrel Shane in the final round of the tourney. Shane, as it turned out, had serious power in his hands; he used this power to shut off the lights for Jay Brown. You can tell a lot about a fighter by the way that he handles a big KO loss. Does he turtle up and hide from the world or get back on his feet and keep winning? Jay Brown did the latter; he made his debut in the big shows at UnderGround FC 1. His opponent was Marlin Scars, a submission fighter. Brown submitted Scars in the opening round. Next he faced Shiro Tanaka for the inaugural featherweight championship title. After scoring an early takedown, Brown began to struggle with the strength and clinchwork of Tanaka who would walk away with the unanimous decision and the title. Joe Smith is a heavy handed boxing phenom and undefeated mixed martial arts sensation. Known as the Mike Tyson of the UFC featherweight division, Smith has stopped three of his four opponents within the first half of the very first round of their fights. Joe Smith started his journey through the world of mixed martial arts fighting for the Rapid Fighting Championship of Sydney, Australia. It was there that he faced Jiu-Jitsu brown belt and undefeated fighter Alexmuria Bagueraiu. Smith went to work early with his soon to be patented power punches and it became obvious immediately that Bagueraiu couldn't take his punches for long. Each strike sent a shockwave of despair through the victim's face. In less time than it takes to heat up a Stouffer's TV dinner, Alexmuria Bagueraiu was out cold with curled toes and shattered dreams. Smith returned for RFC Aloha Hawaii 3 which took place in Hilo, Hawaii. His dance partner for this ballet of brutality was Mander Dell Palmer, another undefeated BJJ brown belt predicted to be a great. Smith guarateed that this would not be possible. Smith was a hammer and Palmer was the nail for fifty-two short seconds. The referee barely got out of the way before Smith began clubbing Palmer like a newborn seal pup. Joe Smith walked away with knockout of the night honors while the paramedics bagged his opponent up in the cage. As a freshly free agent, Joe Smith next signed with UnderGround Fight Club. He made his promotional debut at UFC WNF 1 where he faced undefeated Jiu-Jitsu purple belt John Hogan. The big selling point for Joe Smith was that he brought an early fury that crushed opponents before they had a chance to get started. Smith delivered on his campaign promises, beating Hogan like literally anybody that has played chess against me has beaten me. Yes, I'm running out of metaphors, sue me. Joe Smith crashed into Hogan like a tidal wave and nearly finished him in the final seconds of the opening round. Hogan survived the early crisis and somehow made it through the second round without getting body bagged but he really only delayed the inevitable: early in the third round, Smith picked up the heat, knocking Hogan out cold. In his most recent appearance, Joe Smith faced undefeated power wrestler and BJJ blue belt John Michael Benitoy. Smith would be taken down in the opening seconds of the match, facing true adversity for the first time in his career. He would immediately jump back to his feet however, so take the word “adversity” with a massive grain of salt here. From there it was all Joe Smith who spanked Benitoy like he was answering a Craigslist ad request. God I'm so sorry for that one. In this fight we have Joe Smith facing another confident, dangerous pure grappler which is what he has made a career around defeating. Jay Brown is tough, experienced, and has a decently large name within the organization so this is a great opponent to elevate Smith if he can win it. I give this one to Joe Smith via early stoppage. [A closer look] (Jay Brown) Age: 19 Started Fighting At: 18 Record: 6-2 Knockouts: 0 Submissions: 6 UnderGround Record: 3-1 Total Opponent Record: 18-16 Rank (Division): 6 Rank (Organization): 66 Style: BJJ (Brown Belt) Accolades or Accomplishments: Former UFC Featherweight Title Challenger, QFC 887 Tournament Semi-Finalist, SUB of the Night (x1) (Joe Smith) Age: 20 Started Fighting At: 18 Record: 4-0 Knockouts: 4 Submissions: 0 UnderGround Record: 2-0 Total Opponent Record: 12-8 Rank (Division): 2 Rank (Organization): 28 Style: Boxing Accolades or Accomplishments: Undefeated, Four Fight Winning Streak, KO of the Night (x2), Fight of the Night (x1) [Main Event] http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/belt/20190401234215Belt3.jpg(Welterweight Division, Championship bout) Sivile Gonya© (5-1) versus Guido Turturro (8-1) Sivile Gonya© is the undisputed UnderGround FC Welterweight Champion of the World. He is a veteran of the Quick Fight Championship, the GET REKT promotion, the Rapid Fighting Championship, and the UnderGround Fight Club. He comes in to this fight riding a five fight winning streak. He is a Muay Thai stylist and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu purple belt that has shown comfort fighting on his feet, in the clinch, and on the ground. Although he is most comfortable pressing opponents against the cage, working their body with knees. Sivile made his MMA debut in the QFC arena where he faced catch wrestler Finn Mann. New to the art of grappling, Gonya struggled to survive the ground game of Mann, who worked him over en route to a unanimous decision victory. Not one to be put off by a setback, Sivile Gonya took time away from fighting to train up his ground game to match his striking abilities. He returned to the cage at GR 12 under the GET REKT banners. There he faced world class kickboxer William Bonin. Gonya put his newfound grappling to work in this fight dominating the opening round with his Jiu-Jitsu. After nearly being finished in the opening seconds of the third round, Gonya managed to clinch and score a takedown into half guard; from there he pounded Bonin until he was able to steal a fight ending kimura submission. Gonya next faced William Emkimp at RFC Aloha Hawaii. Emkimp was known for his kickboxing so Gonya dominated him in the clinch, winning a very one-sided unanimous decision. Next Sivile signed with the UnderGround Fight Club; he made his promotional debut at Monday Night Fights where he faced BJJ brown belt Mike Tantalau. Sivile kept the fight entirely on the outside, hammering Tantalau with power punches before stopping him with a big flurry early in the opening round. Sivile Gonya faced fellow Muay Thai standout Monte Goglin at UFC MNF 1 for the inaugural UFC Welterweight Championship title. The two strikers would take turns winning the first four rounds with Gonya comfortably winning the fifth and final round to become the first welterweight champion of the UnderGround Fight Club. For his first title defense, Sivile Gonya faced undefeated BJJ brown belt Divanei Silva. The fight was expected to be a deep and long war with Silva giving Gonya a real challege on the ground. It would be over in just eighteen seconds as Gonya would catch Silva early and stop him with a few big shots in the opening seconds. Guido Turturro is the former Rapid Fighting Championship Welterweight Champion. With only one defeat in his impressive nine fight career, it is easy to undertand why Tuturro is such a tremendous fan favorite coming into thi fight. He has won five “of the night” awards across multiple promotions including four “submission of the night”s. He has fought for the QFC, FARTMMA, and RFC promotions before finding his way into the UFC. Guido Tuturro is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu brown belt that makes no secret about what he plans to do to you in your fight with him. Everyone knows what he's going to do and almost nobody can stop him from doing it. Guido Turturro made his MMA debut, as so many have before him, in the QFC arena where he faced world class Muay Thai striker Seamus Coleman. As elite as his opponent may have been, you wouldn't have known it from how quickly Turturro clinched, pulled guard, and submitted the man. Turturro turned around with another quick victory, this time over Jaleel Guy, a Canadian brawler in the FARTMMA promotion. Same strategy, same outcome: clinch, pull guard, destroy. He next faced a power wrestler by the name of Sticker Romano who swore that their fight would end differently... but he was wrong. Romano took him down and was submitted in seconds. With two Farts behind him, Guido Turturro signed with the RFC promotion. He made his debut there against BJJ blue belt Haisu Kulli. This would prove to be the longest fight in Turturro's career, going into the second round before his opponent was tapping out. Turturro's destruction of BJJ blue belt Haka Tonga was reminiscent of his early demolitions over Coleman, Guy, and Romano. At RapidFC 20, Guido Turturro faced reigning welterweight champion Michael Swango for the RFC welterweight championship. Swango was no slouch himself; a high level Muay Thai kickboxer that was attempting to make his third consecutive title defense. Turturro dominated Swango from the opening belt to the final tap, controlling him with wrestling while working towards the inevitable submission victory. Turturro attempted to defend the title at RFC Showdown in Tokyo 5 against world class wrestler and fellow BJJ brown belt Serhey Rishkinov. A former champion in his last promotion, Rishkinov proved to be the greatest challenge of Turturro's career. The two traded submission attempts and positional exchanges for three rounds with the wrestling of Rishkinov proving to be too much for the champion. In the opening seconds of the fourth round, a visibly exhausted Turturro got caught with a big punch reaching in to clinch. The champion stayed on his feet but would go down on a big right hand, costing him the title. Looking to rebound in a big way, Guido Turturro turned around with a fight over Bung Popper. The former champion clinched and controlled Popper before taking him down and submitting him late in the opening round. The bout would be Turturro's last one with RFC. The former champion found himself a free agent looking to revitilize hi career. He signed with UnderGround FC not long after the Popper fight. Guido Turturro's most recent bout came at UnderGround FC 6 against catch wrestler and BJJ blue belt Marin Ivanov. The former champion made a big splash upon jumping into the deep end, submitting Ivanov with a first round armbar to stake his claim as the top contender in the UFC welterweight division. [A closer look] (Sivile Gonya) Age: 20 Started Fighting At: 18 Record: 5-1 Knockouts: 2 Submissions: 1 UnderGround Record: 3-0 Total Opponent Record: 20-13-1 Rank (Division): 3 Rank (Organization): 6 Style: Muay Thai, BJJ (Purple Belt) Accolades or Accomplishments: Undisputed UFC Welterweight Champion, Five Fight Winning Streak, SUB of the Night (x1), Fight of the Night (x1) (Guido Turturro) Age: 21 Started Fighting At: 18 Record: 8-1 Knockouts: 0 Submissions: 8 UnderGround Record: 1-0 Total Opponent Record: 44-28 Rank (Division): 1 Rank (Organization): 5 Style: BJJ (Brown Belt) Accolades or Accomplishments: Former RFC Welterweight Champion, SUB of the Night (x4), Fight of the Night (x1) http://www.mmatycoon.com/images/company/logo/1555333717205-175.jpg
    2 points
  4. I just got back here áfter a year or so of abscence. My first impression is that the amount af active companies and managers have decreased a lot since i was active. What happened? Please fill me in, was it drama once again (Castro style) or what happened? And maybe more important, what can we do to change this? - More advertising? - Bigger rewards to recruit new players? - Extended free trial as VIP for new managers? I used to love this game and the reason why i rejoined the game is that I Believe and hope that I can love it again, but active (vip) managers is the base for the whole experience of the game. Low number of VIP´s gives Lowe amount of good fighters, fewer and fewer companies. Let´s help Mike here and recreate the Buzz around this game.
    1 point
  5. Gonna be up Mamaevs ass here shortly.
    1 point
  6. Submitting now
    1 point
  7. Former member of CBK (coldblooded killers) looking to find an active alliance to enjoy the game even more. Send me a pm IF there are any alliances with space :-)
    1 point
  8. 1 point
  9. 1. There's still a fairly decent amount of active and involved managers. 2. Help Mike create a buzz around this game? No thanks. He's been feeding everyone bull dookie for years already with empty promises. He should be the one putting in the effort, since he is the one making the money off the game. If there wasn't an option to trade in-game cash for VIP, I would have quit the game a long time ago as I will not contribute another dollar from my own pocket to Mike until he starts being involved in the evolution of the game, or at least proper maintenance(get rid of all the multis already).
    1 point
  10. Stay Tuned Preview for The Middleweight Clowny Cup this weekend
    1 point
  11. New script for hype/pop (including KT and Grappling) is available: https://pastebin.com/xtQMT0vz
    1 point
  12. Great job once again! I always enjoy your writeups!
    1 point
  13. Uh not another bot, just kid!
    1 point
  14. Testing fighters? As soon as you create them, or before physicals get high--throw them into QFC or find an org that can test your fighter versus another new creation. Look for Tale Of The Tape, it will say something like granite chin or determined; also read through fight commentary (as well as the top of the page, where it might say something like x has the power to get to y's chin) and look for them getting rocked and how quickly they recover (has gotten his legs/senses back).
    1 point
  15. Testing fighters is super important. You wouldnt want to train a guy for a year in real life time, and then it turns out he has crap hiddens, would you? Testing a fighter doesnt mean success, but it ensures that you dont spend money and time on a dud.
    1 point
  16. Didn't you JUST close an org because you would be playing "on and off due to work"? Or am I thinking of someone else?
    1 point
  17. Like we already have on "search.php" page: Fighter hype: to (scale measuring hype is 1 to 1000) Fighter KT hype: to (scale measuring hype is 1 to 1000) Will be good to have field for grappling hype on searching page same like we have for MMA and KT hype
    1 point
  18. Preview for Arjan Bhullar (305692) vs Alessandro Orsini (286393) One of these jokers will progress to the next round of the prestigious CEC 10 million dollar tournament in what must seem like a complete insult to the other competitors. Despite their obvious lack of fighting talent, Bhullar with his glass granite chin and Orsini with his mediocre record and shit tattoos, we can only hope they give it their all for the fans. Sources have told me that Bhullar's manager is using the threat of sacking as motivation for his fighter. An interesting tactic. When I asked Orsini's manager what he was doing to motivate his fighter he simply replied "what motivation". Inspirational stuff. My prediction for this fight is disappointment, embarrassment and probably a KO victory for Orsini. But the beauty of MMA is we just never know. May the least worst man win! *Actually really looking forward to the tournament. Good luck everyone
    1 point
  19. 1 point
  20. If your not going to sell every ticket then giving out freebies is better than empty seats, free ticket holders spend extra on food and merch so you are losing out on cash at every event. Use the event helper to get a rough idea on predicted sales and see how many you can give out free, you should look to spend around 150% of the decreasing returns as that gives a slight ticket sale boost too.....if it suggests $10000 then spend $15000. I would also suggest spending $3-4 per seat on production so if its a 1000 seat arena then you should set it at $3000-$4000.
    1 point
  21. I’ll be 40.....to this day I’ve never done or tried a drug, smoked anything or tried a drop of any alcohol. I’ve managed just fine with stressful situations without feeling like I needed something to help me escape. I don’t need anything to help me cope with any hard comings or dealings of any sort. My view is if I can’t control it personally then why fight it, get mad or worked up about it or let it put me in a state of mind different than what my normal state of mind is. I played (American) football until I was 30 and never felt the need to do any of those things, not matter how many of the guys around me were doing it. I don’t care that people do it, but I just don’t see the interest in doing something that makes you a different person that you are when you aren’t drinking or smoking, because it’s not the real you....it’s just an escape from who you are. I don’t care that people do these things and it doesn’t bother me, but It’s just not for me....I’ve never been in a situation that made me feel like damn I need a drink or to smoke. Even though my 3 and 6 year old could push me pretty close at times.
    1 point
  22. Did I PM you a deal? Would it let you put up more $$$ to trade for VIP? Did you accept?
    0 points
  23. 50%. User base growing is only a positive, but Mike abandoned the game and the community and doesn't deserve any sort of financial gain in my opinion.
    0 points
  24. List of "unethical", but legal shit most of us have done: - Were financially tangled w/ "friends"/"relatives" logging in from the same IP - Created 25 year olds at ID turn and beat up on 18 year old noobs in ID orgs/stat padded - Shared gyms/fought against "friends"/"relatives" - "Hey man, I won't have access to my computer this weekend, can you log on and cancel my auto flights?" - Picked up FAs w/ a shit ton of cash, laundered, and released them back into the wild - Bought orgs, funneled out the cash, and closed them The list can go on and on. Also, I am not justifying anyones actions(I am actually in the same boat as the rest of you. I gave out the last few energy supps I had to my projects and am now fully out). I'm just saying we've all done things that aren't right, and there's no need to swarm on 1 person like flies to shit(yes, I am also aware this affects the entire community, and again, I am not saying this was right).
    -1 points
  25. Can we not increase the limit of ordering because I don't think 2500 is enough to last a full month if I'm honest
    -1 points
  26. I would join but I feel betrayed you guys didn't do any write up or celebrate my victory in hard earned tournament!
    -1 points
  27. Minor complaint but that image that you're using looks like Jersey City. Change it to this this or this
    -1 points
×
×
  • Create New...