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Round 1
Tokoro bolts across the ring with a flying knee and lands atop
Saadulaev on the ground. They scramble to their feet and Saadulaev
grabs a rear waistlock. He lifts Tokoro into the air and slams him
down awkwardly on his head, knocking the Japanese fighter out cold.
Saadulaev punches him a few times before referee Moritaka Oshiro
realizes what’s happened. It’s a knockout win for Yusup Saadulaev
at 42 seconds of round one.
Round 1
The smaller Banuelos keeps his distance and deflects hard kicks to
the body while Imanari circles. The “Ashikan Judan” shoots and is
stuffed by Banuelos, who socks his opponent one for his trouble.
Imanari charges again and gets caught off balance with a punch;
Banuelos won’t follow to the ground. Banuelos blocks a head kick,
comes forward and barely touches Imanari with a right when the
leglock specialist flops to guard again. Banuelos steps away.
Imanari shoots and gets denied again with 90 seconds left in the
opening frame. Banuelos lands leg kicks inside and out but is still
having trouble putting his hands on Imanari’s chin. Imanari tries
to pull guard as Banuelos comes in to punch and fails again to
bring the fight to the ground. Banuelos times a jumping knee and
drills Imanari with a counterpunch, just misses with an axe kick
and again steps away from the guard-pulling Imanari.
Round 2
Imanari wastes no time in trying to pull guard and this time is met
by Banuelos’ hammerfists. Imanari is falling down after nearly
every glancing blow, trying to lure Banuelos into his domain.
Banuelos bites and winds up in Imanari’s closed guard, though only
for a matter of seconds. With three minutes to go, this could still
be either man’s fight. Referee Samio Kimura pauses the bout to ask
for more action from both bantamweights, though it’s really Imanari
to blame for the lack of engagement. Imanari pulls Banuelos into
his closed guard again and immediately looks to pull rubber guard.
Banuelos busts out of it, but Imanari has his left arm trapped. The
WEC veteran extracts the limb and drops some ground-and-pound on
Imanari as the fight enters its last minute. Imanari twists and
scoops the leg of Banuelos to sweep on top, then drops back for a
leglock. Banuelos has it sized up and puts Imanari on his back
again, and that’s where it ends.
Official result: Judge Gen Isono sees the bout in favor of Imanari, while judges Hikaru Adachi and Akira Shoji side with the winner by split decision and first Dream 2011 world bantamweight grand prix finalist, Antonio Banuelos.
Round 1
Fernandes comes inside with leg kicks and ducks a punch from
Marques. The Nova Uniao product is trapped in a corner, trying to
strike his way out when he’s dumped to the ground by a Fernandes
double-leg. Fernandes leans from left to right across Marques,
dropping hard elbows to the body of his countryman. They remain in
this position, Marques clinging to a deep half-guard, until
Fernandes postures up with just over a minute remaining in the
round. The former Dream featherweight champ keeps the short punches
coming, but it’s not enough for referee Akira Shoji, who stands
them up with 30 seconds to go. That’s where the round ends.
Round 2
Fernandes quickly pressures Marques into a ring post and gets busy
with knees up the middle. Marques looks toward referee Shoji,
seeming to indicate that a strike strayed low. No action is taken
immediately, but Shoji warns Fernandes to keep the knees up when he
splits them moments later. Fernandes tags Marques with a looping
right hand, misses with a flying knee and gets tied up with a
single-leg try. Marques can only hold Fernandes in the corner until
Shoji breaks them up with three minutes left. Marques dips inside
again, drives a knee up the middle and separates. Fernandes tries
to clinch in the middle of the ring and gets underhooked into a
post. Marques stalls out again and is shoved away. This is
Fernandes’ fight to lose with 90 seconds on the clock, and he’s
keeping himself ahead with chopping leg kicks down the stretch. A
big left connects for Fernandes and he tries for a takedown behind
it. Marques turns it around and puts “Bibi” in a corner to finish
the fight.
Official result: Judges Hikaru Adachi, Gen Isono and Kenichi Serizawa unanimously award the win to Bibiano Fernandes, sending him through to meet Antonio Banuelos in the tournament final.
Round 1
The fighters circle and trade kicks before a swiping left from
Sakurai catches Chonan. Sakurai pounces on his stumbling opponent
and works from the half-guard of the “Piranha.” Sakurai is being
kept at bay with Chonan’s butterfly guard, offering sparse
ground-and-pound as he works to pass half-guard on Chonan’s left.
“Mach” gets side control and Chonan tries to knee from his back,
then turns to his side and pops to his feet. Chonan lands an
outside thigh kick, sticks a jab in Sakurai’s face. Now Sakurai
rushes Chonan into the ropes and just holds him there for the last
40 seconds of the round.
Round 2
Sakurai ties up in the middle of the ring and trips Chonan down
with double underhooks. He leans from left to right on Chonan and
drops a few short punches while Chonan throws more knees from his
back. Sakurai gives Chonan a couple knees to the body in return and
the men are repositioned away from the ropes. Sakurai goes to mount
and gets stuffed back to half-guard, then full guard. Chonan throws
punches off his back and misses with an upkick, standing just as
the bell sounds.
Round 3
Sakurai lands an outside thigh kick and puts a pair of punches on
Chonan, who keeps moving forward with low kicks. A Chonan jab snaps
back Sakurai’s head, followed by a hard left. Sakurai’s left hook
finds its way to Chonan’s ribs, Mach moving in soon behind it to
hold Chonan on the ropes again. Chonan gets going with a crisp left
hook to the face, then one to the body. They wade into one
another’s range to throw bombs, but nothing’s landing flush.
Sakurai is moving backwards and Chonan moves in to slug; Sakurai
wraps him up on the ropes and they’re soon restarted. Sakurai is
cut beneath his right eye and looking increasingly gassed as Chonan
pours on punches. When Sakurai plows Chonan to the ground with 90
seconds to go, it’s Chonan flailing away with punches off his back.
Sakurai hops into mount with 50 seconds left and Chonan gives up
his back in a bid to escape. Chonan is able to flip around and put
his back on the mat, but he’s stuck under Sakurai and taking knees
to the body. Chonan reverses just before the bell, then the two
banged-up veterans grin and embrace.
Official result: Judges Hikaru Adachi, Gen Isono and Akira Shoji unanimously see the bout in favor of Hayato Sakurai.
Round 1
Kawajiri gets off first with a leg kick and a jab, fakes a takedown
attempt and then goes for a double-leg. He dumps Miyata down along
the ropes and triangles the legs, trying to flatten out “Little
Hercules.” Miyata is keeping a wide open full guard and Kawajiri
looks to step into mount. The “Crusher” gets on top halfway through
the round and flattens out Miyata. The position doesn’t allow
Kawajiri to drop much offense, especially with Miyata wrapping his
arms around his opponent. Kawajiri puts some palm strikes on
Miyata’s temple and tries to break the defense by slamming him into
the canvas. Miyata’s grip breaks and Kawajiri instantly goes for an
arm-triangle choke. It’s a deep one, but time is running out and
Miyata is saved by the bell.
Round 2
Miyata leaps in with a knee and the men get tangled up along the
ropes. Kawajiri leads with a front kick and follows with a winding
uppercut. After being clipped by a pair of Miyata punches, Kawajiri
bowls his man down with another double-leg in the middle of the
ring. Kawajiri moves between full- and half-guard until Miyata
powers back to his feet with three minutes remaining. They tie up
with over-unders and Miyata scores with some solid knees before
they tumble to the ground. Miyata jumps on Kawajiri’s back but he’s
having trouble sinking the second hook. Kawajiri shakes him over
his right shoulder and they’re back to clinching on the feet. Ref
Moritaka Oshiro splits them up with just over a minute to go.
Kawajiri leads with an uppercut to the body and gets a takedown
behind it. Miyata is struggling to retain half-guard and gets
trapped in the arm-triangle again with 30 seconds left. This time,
Kawajiri is in full side control and Miyata has nowhere to go. The
tap comes at 4:54 of the second round, giving Tatsuya Kawajiri a
submission victory.
Round 1
Fujii snaps off some kicks, aborts a double-leg shot, then falls to
her back underneath Benitez in search of a leglock. Benitez follows
to the ground and Fujii instantly sweeps to the top. “Mega Megu”
stands over Benitez, goes straight to side control and latches on
to Benitez’s left arm. Fujii rolls her over and Benitez is stuck
with the grappling ace bending her elbow the wrong way. After a
moment of hesitation, Benitez taps out at the 75-second mark of
round one.
Round 1 (K-1 Rules)
It’s a firefight early on with both men standing in the pocket and
slugging away. Nagashima finds a home for a few hard left hooks,
but seconds later he hits the deck courtesy of a right straight
from Kikuno. He makes it back up to meet the referee’s count, but
the karateka Kikuno is relentless, bombarding the dazed Jienotsu
with punches against the ropes. Nagashima takes everything Kikuno
has to offer and eventually catches Kikuno with a counter left,
with only seconds left in the round. His face swelling up, Kikuno
gets back to his feet and finishes the standup portion of the
bout.
Round 2 (MMA Rules)
Kikuno walks into a punch from Nagashima to take the kickboxer’s
back standing. Nagashima shakes him and tries to throw long
punches, keeping his distance. Kikuno walks him down, trying to
clinch and knee, then bombing over the top with punches. Kikuno
gets another rear waistlock and this time drags Jienotsu to the
ground. Nagashima is on his belly with both of Kikuno’s hooks in.
Kikuno bangs away with about 20 clean rights, seemingly knocking
out Nagashima and waking him back up before the fight is halted at
the 2:34 mark.
Round 1
Fernandes walks down Banuelos and the American explodes out with
punches. A high kick and right hook from Fernandes have Banuelos
looking for escape, but he falls on his way to the other side of
the ring. Fernandes smells blood and pounces, unloading 20 or more
fast punches on the dazed Banuelos and forcing referee Kenichi
Serizawa to intervene. Bibiano Fernandes becomes Dream’s inaugural
bantamweight champion with a stoppage of Antonio Banuelos at 1:21
of round one.
Round 1
Lots of heavy pawing early with Takaya coming forward. He cracks
Inoue with a hard left kick to the body, and doubles up on his jab.
Inside low kick from Inoue, but Takaya responds with a left hook.
The champion steps in with a low kick to the thigh, but the former
Shooto champ whizzes two punches by his ear. Outside leg kick from
the challenger. Takaya grabs the collar tie and cracks Inoue with a
knee. Two left hooks and a jab land for Takaya, who is starting to
operate effectively, though Lion continues to move away and try to
counter. Takaya pumps his hands and ducks under an Inoue right
hook, finishing a double-leg takedown just before the bell, ending
a solid opening round for himself.
Round 2
Inoue kicks to the leg again, but Takaya counters once more. Takaya
jacks Lion with two more right hands, and then lands another
moments after. Takaya is the much more aggressive, successful
fighter so far. Inoue grabs an ankle and tries to run Takaya into
the ropes, but the “Streetfight Bancho” stays up. Takaya continues
to move in, and Lion circles away again, prompting a quick warning
from referee Yuji Shimada. Another big right cross for Takaya, and
Lion is moving away with his hands down again. Lion clears the
cobwebs, and pumps his jab in the champ’s face. Lion starting to
put his hands out there, and when Takaya rushes him, he stuns him
for a moment with the jab and right hand. Takaya wobbles for a
minute and soldiers on after Inoue’s best punching of the fight.
Takaya’s nose is bloodied from Inoue’s brief flurry. Outside low
kick by Takaya is countered by Inoue’s right hand. “Evil Fist”
lands another smacking body kick, audible through the venue. Two
Takaya punches crack Inoue, but he switches up his strategy,
clinching and taking Inoue down just before the bell again.
Round 3
Hard outside thigh kick for Takaya starts the bout, and Takaya
shoots, putting Inoue on the mat once more and setting up in full
guard. Lion shifts his hips, looking for butterfly hooks to push
the champ away, but Takaya stays on top, throwing small hammerfists
from full guard. Lion finally jumps up to his feet, but the champ
races at him with a right-handed haymaker that glances. After a
short respite to fix Takaya’s glove, the fight is back on, and
Takaya’s outside thigh kick on Inoue’s left leg returns. Inoue’s
right goes wide, and Takaya counters him with two quick rights of
his own. Inoue continues to jab and bloody Takaya’s nose, but he
isn’t finding power shots now. Inoue continues jabbing as Takaya
blocks and kicks inside and outside on his lead left leg. Inoue is
starting to look more ginger on his left leg now. Inoue continues
to move away, but thwarts Takaya’s pre-bell takedown this time,
holding him up in the corner until the round expires.
Round 4
The familiar pattern resumes in round four, as Takaya is stalking
Inoue and repeatedly cracking him in the legs with kicks. Takaya
feints, shoots a left cross, and snaps Lion’s head back. Takaya
clinches and looks for a trip, and Inoue nearly counters with an
uchi mata throw, but Takaya blocks it and they resume
standing. Inside low kick for Takaya now cracks the right leg. Two
nasty outside low kicks for Takaya, and one to the body. Lion
continues to circle away from the forward-charging Takaya, and
again, referee Yuji Shimada halts the action to reprimand him, this
time handing him a yellow card. Inoue looked frustrated now, and on
the restart, Takaya is all over him in the corner. Lion is swinging
back, but Takaya is trapping him in the corners of the ring and
pulverizing him. The bell rings after another Takaya cracker
bobbles Inoue’s head.
Round 5
Lion tries to respond to Takaya’s low kicks with his own, but the
champ moves to the Thai clinch inside and puts knees to his body. A
long right-handed counter comes over Inoue’s jab, landing for
Takaya. Takaya corners his foe again, and lands another double-leg,
but can’t keep Inoue on the mat. Right cross-outside low kick
scores for Takaya. Boos start to come in with two minutes to go.
Inoue starts to step forward with the intent to land some offense,
but Takaya continues to launch two- and three-punch salvos to keep
him away. Left hook and a push kick land for Takaya. Double jab for
Inoue lands, but he is hit with a pair of hooks from Takaya. Takaya
swings back, stopping Inoue’s momentum before the bell. Consummate
performance by Hiroyuki Takaya.
Official result: All three judges -- Hikaru Adachi, Matt Hume and Gen Isono -- award the bout to the winner by unanimous decision, and still Dream featherweight champion, Hiroyuki Takaya.
Round 1
Aoki quickly looks for a double-leg, but Kitaoka counters on the
way down with a powerful guillotine. However, Aoki passes to the
side, escaping the worst of the squeeze. Nonetheless, Kitaoka's
enormous power has Aoki still in remote trouble from side control.
However, the Dream champ escape, and in the blink of an eye, he's
on Kitaoka's back. Kitaoka shakes him, but Aoki goes over the top
and locks up a triangle. Aoki threatens with a farside kimura with
the triangle, and when Kitaoka attempts to defend, Aoki pulls out a
triangle armbar on the other side. Kitaoka escapes and grabs a
front headlock, taking a minute to breathe after two minutes of
intense grappling. Stood up in the corner, Aoki nearly reaps
Kitaoka to the floor, but he blocks the attempt, and referee
Moritaka Oshiro breaks them up. Aoki clinches and trips Kitaoka to
the mat with just over a minute to work, staying close on top in
half guard. Aoki lands some short, ineffective punches before the
bell.
Round 2
Immediately, Aoki bulls into the clinch, gets double underhooks in
the corner, and trips Kitaoka to the mat once more. Kitaoka kicks
him away, but Aoki passes to half guard and sits right back on top.
Kitaoka moves to butterfly hooks and tries to kick him away, but
Aoki is all over him, keeping half guard and looking for the pass.
Kitaoka pushes him away again, and when Aoki re-establishes, he
tries some hammerfists from his back. Aoki tries to triangle over
Kitaoka’s outstretched legs and pass right into mount, but Kitaoka
shuts that down. Kitaoka is trying to elevate Aoki to get him off,
but he just can’t shake the champion’s sensational top control.
Palm slaps to the ear by Aoki, who is trying to cut through half
guard and pass right into mount. Kitaoka looks for deep half guard,
so Aoki cradles him, but the Pancrase rep explodes and regains half
guard. The chess match continues until referee Moritaka Oshiro
stands them up with just over a minute to go. On the feet, Aoki
shows off his muay Thai training, smacking Kitaoka with lead kicks
to the body. Aoki’s third hard roundhouse makes Kitaoka clinch, and
Aoki puts him on the mat once more before the bell.
Round 3
Aoki gets the double collar-tie and neckwrestles with Kitaoka,
landing knees for tripping him to the mat again. Aoki stands out of
his guard in Ali-Inoki position, and when Kitaoka tries to get
away, he dives on his back and sinks both hooks. Aoki continues to
rotate grips, threatening with both his face crank and rear-naked
choke, but Kitaoka does a good job of controlling Aoki’s far arm,
and punching behind his shoulder. As Kitaoka looks to turn back
into guard, Aoki tries to bait him into a triangle, but Kitaoka
escapes and stands above him with the “Tobikan Judan” in the butt
scoot. Moritaka Oshiro returns them to their feet, and quickly
fixes Aoki’s glove. Aoki looks for another takedown, but can’t get
it. Instead, he goes back to his standup, cracking Kitaoka with a
right head kick before looking for a single-leg takedown in the
corner. With 10 seconds to go, Oshiro breaks them, and Kitaoka goes
flying at Aoki, who grabs his waist and puts him on the mat.
Round 4
A pair of body kicks by Aoki are mostly blocked, but when Kitaoka
tries one of his own, Aoki cracks him with a clean one. Kitaoka
drives inside, and Aoki gets his neck again, and this time cracks
him with three knees. One stiff, clean knee forces Kitaoka to
shoot, and Aoki is all over his b ack. Kitaoka’s nose is badly
busted, perhaps on account of the knee. Aoki gets two rear-naked
chokes nearly applied, but Kitaoka slips his chin under Aoki’s
forearm and defends. He’s startling to gargle his own blood
inadvertently, and Aoki grabs another choke that has him wheezing.
Once more, Kitaoka gets his chin underneath and stops the choke
attempt. Kitaoka rolls and goes belly down, but Aoki pulls him
right back down and continues his grappling dominance. Kitaoka uses
a two-on-one to defend Aoki’s choke, and the champ uses his free
arm to punch Kitaoka in the face. Kitaoka gets locked in another
rear-naked choke for a moment, but his face is so bloody that he’s
able to turn his head into Aoki and abate the choke once more. The
bell rings, ending a lopsided round for the increasingly-dominant
Aoki.
Round 5
Kitaoka presses in on Aoki, and is taken down once more with Aoki
quickly looking to advance position. Kitaoka turns away in half
guard, exposing his back and baiting Aoki to pass. He acquiesces,
and Aoki ends up with back mount once more with three minutes to go
in the fight. Aoki’s forearm hovers dangerously close to Kitaoka’s
neck, but the former Sengoku champ incredibly continues to fight
the chokes despite how exhausted and outmatched he is. With just
under two minutes to go, Kitaoka explodes into Aoki and regains his
feet. Aoki wants the fight on the mat, and body locks and trips
Kitaoka to the mat again. Aoki drives his shoulder into Kitaoka’s
chest, and referee Moritaka Oshiro stands them up with
approximately 45 seconds to fight. Stiff Aoki jabs land as the
champion dances on the outside. Kitaoka swipes with a big right,
but misses. Aoki shoots, and Kitaoka gets a headlock and lands a
salvo of knees before the bell that makes the crowd roar. The fight
ends with Aoki and the canvas smeared in the blood from Kitaoka's
nose.
Official result: All three judges -- Hikaru Adachi, Matt Hume and Gen Isono -- award the bout to the winner by unanimous decision, and still Dream lightweight champion, Shinya Aoki.
Round 1
Emelianenko stalking Ishii quickly, and he connects with an inside
low kick. Surprisingly stiff left hand for Ishii lands. Emelianenko
kicks and the former gold medalist gets his leg, but Emelianenko
keeps his balance and gets him off. Another smacking low kick from
Emelianenko before a right-hand follow. Inside low kick from Ishii
this time. Emelianenko kicks low, and uses the low kicks to set up
bigger combinations. He shoots a straight right through Ishii's
guard that stumbles him but the Russian doesn't pounce. He coolly
walks Ishii down, and throws another laser-guided right hand that
crumples Ishii on the mat. Emelianenko simply stands there like
stone, perhaps waiting for Ishii to regain his feet. When referee
Yuji Shimada realizes that it isn't happening, he steps in
immediately to rescue the fallen gold medalist. Fedor Emelianenko
is the winner by knockout a 2:34 of the first round.