RECAP: The Ultimate Fighter – “Coming for Blood”

Watch the video RECAP on Spike here: The Aftermath: Coming For Blood

Fighters and coaches recap the Court McGee vs. Nick Ring fight from the last show. Rich Attonito talks about how Nick was trying to catch McGee with kicks but McGee was stronger with boxing. Clayton McKinney says he doesn’t think Ring fought to his potential: “He wasn’t putting together combinations like he does in practice.” The referee announces Ring the winner and McGee comments he was pretty bummed out by the outcome. “I didn’t think I won both rounds, but I can honestly say I won the second round.” As the fighters walk off, Chuck Liddell tells his fighter, “you won that fight.” McGee hopes he can earn a Wild Card spot and come back to fight in the next round. Tito Ortiz says he’s happy with the decision, that his fighter won, but he thinks Ring was holding back in the Octagon.

Ring talks with a doctor and comments that he thinks he has accelerated an existing knee injury during his fight with McGee. He says he can’t push off his leg, and his knee is very wobbly.

Tito announces the last fight: Seth vs. “Caveman” (Joe Henle). Dana White says he thinks this final fight is lopsided. He doesn’t see any other outcome than Seth winning. At the Red Team training session, Baczynski trains hard as Tito barks out orders. Baczynski says he loves his profession, and that he’s “one up on everyone else” since he not only knows what he wants to do in life, but also has the opportunity to do it. Ortiz says “dealing with Seth has been nothing but pleasure.” He thinks Seth has everything it takes to make it. Baczynski feels like he’s been given a second chance by being brought back into the competition and would be “foolish” not to capitalize on the opportunity.

At the house, Attonito talks to Henle about how he trained for seven years to become a professional MMA fighter. Henle talks about his own surreal journey towards becoming a professional fighter. He says “I got into fighting completely by mistake.” He tells the story of going to a gym with a friend and first spotting the wrestling mats – “Hey, I wrestled in high school!” – and then becoming intrigued by jiu jitsu – “Who-hits-who, okay cool, we’ll try that!” Attonito says Henle is a great guy, but he wonders if his head is in the right place, mentally. Attonito says, “You get in that cage, and once it locks up, you don’t got your head together…nothing goods gonna come from it.”

At the gym, Henle spends some time alone in the cage, tracing his gloves along the edges of the fence, and meditating in the center of the Octogan. He says he is a coach and substitute teacher, and he truly cares about the kids he coaches, but right now, “there’s nowhere else I’d rather be, nothing that I would rather be doing.” He talks about his MBA, but says he doesn’t want to be in an office. During Team Liddell training, Henle comments on his upcoming match, says he’s not threatened by the speculated mismatch between him and Seth. Henle says “I’m not cocky, I don’t think I’m the best fighter in the world – I will be, that’s for damn sure!” He says if he wasn’t confident in his skills, he wouldn’t be here. Assistant Coach Howard Davis talks about Henle’s lack of experience. Henle’s only been fighting for 6 months, but in sixth months, he’s come a long way. Liddell says, “You never know.”

At Ortiz training, Ring drops to the ground during sparring. He say,s “My knee gave out on me.” He talks about the three years he spent with knee problems, and says during his last surgery his doctor told him he’d never fight again. Ring says his knee injury has been a problem since he got in the house, but he’s been trying to keep it quiet. Now that his teammates saw him drop for no reason in practice, Ring doesn’t know how he’s going to keep it quiet anymore: “I wouldn’t be surprised if people are talking about it right now.” Tito examines the knee. He says, “There’s a lot of give.” He says he’s torn his ACL before and he recognizes the symptoms. Ring tells Tito he needs to get this sorted out, since his training and fights are both being affected. He says he’s scared and he just wants to get it fixed.

At the Weigh-In, McGee talks about the upcoming fight. He says he fought against Seth to get into the house and says Seth is strong with good hands. “He dropped me and that’s the first time I’ve been dropped.” Henle steps up to weigh in. McGee says Henle is an athletic guy and if Seth doesn’t step up, “Joseph is a big athletic guy and he might submit him.” As Baczynski weighs in, Hammortree comments that Seth has been gifted a second chance and “he’s coming for blood.”

The Red Team trains hard in the Octogan; fighters who lost the first time around work hard to earn the Wild Card. Hammortree says everyone thinks they deserve the Wild Card spot. “I think I deserve it.” Kris McCray says he wants his fight back. Kyacey Uscola also says he wants the Wild Card, wants to smash his way back in the tournament.

The sun rises on Fight Day and Baczynski and Henle both prepare. Baczynski talks about the “hurry up and wait” anxiety of fight day. Henle says he’s got more education than the typical fighter, but just because he has an MBA, doesn’t mean he has less heart than the next guy. He talks about his dedication and how bad he wants this. Baczynski says he just wants to prove he’s the best and will find a way to win. Henle says “I train 4 times a day. I’m coming. For everything.”

Henle enters the Octogan, talks about how the fight is a chess match with his body. Fighters who let too much anger in will make mistakes. Baczynski talks about staying composed and capitalizing on Henle’s mistakes. “There’s no other option when you get in there to leave it all in. I don’t know how to fight any other way.”

The men prepare in the cage and the Tale of the Tape flashes on the screen. Dana announces the rules and wishes the men good luck. The referee starts the fight. Henle and Baczynski tap gloves and get to dancing. Baczynski tries for some unruly kicks and Henle’s able to bring him down. Henle brings Baczynski to the floor but Baczynski gets in position for the beginnings of a triangle choke. Each man strains against the other, both trying to submit his opponent. They break free and Baczynski pulls Henle back down, tries to lock him up. The two men continue to strain and scramble alternately, keeping the fight on the mat. Baczynski and Henle trade upper positions, both trying to secure a submission. Baczynski gets on top and drops some elbows into Henle’s face, continuing enthusiastically to Tito’s ringside encouragement. Henle attempts to escape from the floor, but Baczynski keeps him on the ground, peppering Henle’s face with elbows. The buzzer finally goes off, and Henle is released from the mat.

Tito encourages Baczynski, tells him to believe in himself. Henle’s coaches feed him some encouragement; he looks tired and is cut underneath one eye. The fighters start the round off hard, Henle nailing Baczynski with a strong kick. Henle muscles Baczynski to the floor and jabs him in the face a couple times. Baczynski tries to stand but Henle keeps the fight on the mats, going for a rear choke hold. Henle keeps him down for awhile but Baczynski eventually manages an escape and then quickly outmaneuvers Henle’s attempted armbar. Henle keeps Baczynski on the ground for the better part of the round, but when Baczynski gets up he attacks hard. Henle dodges Baczynski’s attack and Baczynski flies against the cage. The fight is brought back to the floor. Baczynski gets the better position and pounds Henle with heavy hands.

The horn sounds and both men return to their respective corners. Tito tells Baczynski he’s doing an awesome job. Chuck tells Henle he can beat this guy. Henle looks exhausted.  It is announced that the fight will go to a third round.

Both men come out hard, Baczynski drives Henle into the fence and brings him to the floor. Baczynski holds Henle to the ground with his body and knocks his fist against Henle’s face. Henle’s coaches urge him to stand up, but Henle can’t release from Baczynski’s grip. Baczynski continues to punch the Henle, who writhes underneath, searching for an escape. Baczynski is relentless, dropping elbows and hitting Henle with heavy hands. Henle has no defense for the better part of the round. He’s finally able to turn his body, but he still can’t get off the mat.  Baczynski turns Henle onto his back and lets his fists fly, drilling Henle in the face repeatedly. Henle’s limbs are flailing but he can’t connect. Baczynski is all over Henle, dominates him until the buzzer signifies the end of the fight.

Chuck and Henle are both defeated. Dana says he was surprised with this fight: “I thought Seth was a well rounded – completely better – fighter than Joe was, but, you know, Joe made a fight of it.” Tito recaps the fight, talks about Henle’s takedowns and Seth showing heart by battling out of submissions. Tito says Henle demonstrated his tough cardio by dominating the second round. Chuck says Henle did really well for his experience. Dana says Henle should have won the first round, completely won the second round, but then got gassed in the third round and “got demolished.” Baczynski is announces as the winner. He says he was lucky to get out with the win, and that Henle is a way tougher guy than he thought. Henle says, “Just because I lost, don’t think my heart went away. I want any fight I can get. Hell yeah, I want the Wild Card.”

Later at the gym, Dana assembles the teams to announce the Wild Card fight. He says, “What I want are the two best fighters to fight it out, and the man who wins jumps back into the competition.” Dana congratulates the preliminary winners. He says they wanted to pick two fighters they think have a shot at winning this thing. His first pick is Uscola. He says both coaches think a lot of him and think he has a chance to win the tournament. Uscola says, “The first fight didn’t go my way, but I got another shot…I’m ready to scrap.” Dana announces the second fighter: McCray. McCray says he thinks he does deserve the pick, adding that he left everything in the cage during his first fight and that’s what people want to see.

Dana continues by saying that Rich is injured and out of the competition, so someone else has to move into his slot. Dana says the men shouldn’t ever leave it in the hands of the judges and there’s not a thing he can do about a bad decision…until now. He says he already made his mind up that Court McGee will get Rich’s spot.  “I think you should’ve gone to a third round…you fought a great fight, so you’re in, brother.” McGee says he’s grateful for the opportunity and he’ll be ready to finish the next guy. Dana reiterates to the three fighters that they have a chance to win this thing, and not to leave it up to the judges. Henle thinks he should have had the Wild Card. He thinks his fight was better than McCray’s fight against Josh. Hammortree also feels let down in not earning a Wild Card slot. He says his spine injury has healed, but was detrimental towards him earning the spot, and thus he’s disappointed because he wanted it.

Sneak Peek: The UItimate Fighter

The Ultimate Fighter – Season 12 Tryouts

Here is an exclusive look at the tryouts for season 12 of The Ultimate Fighter:

EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: The Ultimate Fighter – Tito comes down on Clayton McKinney

RECAP: The Ultimate Fighter – Smashed Up

An action-packed montage of UFC events introduces Season 11 coaches Chuck Liddell and Tito Ortiz.  Dana explains that he and Tito are on good terms, but Tito and Chuck still have beef.  But first, 28 Middleweights must fight their way into the house.

The fighters crowd around while Dana White delivers his first speech.

The fighters enter the new and much larger training center.  Joe Henle and Woody Weatherby are especially impressed.  Dana walks in flanked by Tito and Chuck.  As the guys line up, Kris McCray says, “I’m ready to go.  Put me in a canon and shoot me.”  Dana introduces the coaches and then explains the Wildcard twist for the season, in which 2 lucky losers will be selected to fight each other for the 8th spot in the Quarterfinals.  Dana urges the guys to not leave it in the hands of the judges and fight hard so that they are not riding home on the bus tomorrow with regrets.

James Yager delivers a devastating blow to the head of Ben Stark.

Fight Day arrives and the competitors return to the training center to prepare for battle.  First up is Jamie Yager from Pasadena, whose huge, wild afro is surpassed only by his ego, evident in his assertion that he will be in the final.  Dana comments on his cockiness and Tito says, “Cockiness is always good.”  Taking on Yager is Ben “The Hebrew Hammer” Stark who speculates that he is the only fighter in the group to have been raised Orthodox Jew.  Dana explains the rules, the ref starts the fight, and 26 seconds and 3 head kicks later, Yager has a KO victory.  Dana admits that Yager backed up his talk and Tito is impressed with Yager’s power and confidence.

Brad Tavares delievers an impressive knockout.

Next out is Jordan Smith of Utah, a teacher for whom fighting is a way to keep his rage in check.  His opponent is Hawaiian Brad Tavares who grew up fighting because, “Fighting is fun.”  The fight starts, and soon Tavares has Smith against the cage.  Smith tries to break free but gets dropped with a lightning quick knee to the chin that forces the ref to stop the fight.  Chuck and Tito are both impressed with Tavares’ knockout.

Cleburn Walker, Texas cager, comes out and says he has sacrificed more than he’ll ever admit for his fighting career.  Kris “The Savage” McCray fesses up to not being the most technical of fighters, but he makes up for it with his “ferociousness,” adding that he’s “tamed but off the chain.”

The fight starts with Walker and McCray meeting in center-cage and when McCray executes a brutal hip throw, Walker verbally taps out.  Dana thinks that Walker’s shoulder popped out in the takedown.  McCray calls himself a “Swamp Thing,” because he’s both a savage and a superhero.

Norman Paraisy quits after getting pummeled in the first round.

Frenchman Norman Paraisy enters the gym with the intent of changing the opinions of those who think French people are soft.  Floridian firefighter James Hammortree has no problem saving people for a living and then beating them up in the cage.  The fight starts and Paraisy shoots in to get the early takedown.  Hammortree gets to his feet, they trade shots, and then it goes back to the mat where Hammortree takes the top position.  Paraisy struggles to get up, but Hammortree keeps control with a barrage of leather and elbows.  The horn sounds and a battered Paraisy goes to his corner, saying “I’m done.”  Chuck looks shocked, “He’s quittin!”

Paraisy sits in his corner as assistant coaches Howard Davis and John Hackleman urge him to get up.  Paraisy spews forth multiple complaints expressing both numbness in his body and pain in his wrists.  Herb Dean comes over and Paraisy waves him off, giving the win to Hammortree, who’s so excited he hugs the ref.  Dana and the coaches are outraged, and Chuck makes the comment that quitting is the same as tapping to strikes – something Tito has done in the past.  Paraisy’s excuse is that he wasn’t himself today.  Dana says Paraisy was here to change opinions about the French, but instead he should look for another job.

Kyle Noke leaves his opponent very bloody.

In a montage of fight highlights we see MMA moosehead Nick Ring win a 2 round decision after dismantling Woody Weatherby.  Tito thinks Nick has a chance of winning it all.  In the next fight, kangaroo kid Kyle Noke takes Warren Thompson to the ground and drops elbows until blood gushes from Thompson’s forehead.  Noke says it got slippery for a while, but he hung in there to get the win by decision.  Then bushy-bearded bruiser Court McGee goes to war against Seth Baczynski, as both men come out blasting.  Dana is impressed that McGee was able to keep his wits after taking a big shot in the first round.  Round 2 could have gone either way, but Dana thinks the third belonged to McGee due to his superior wrestling.  At the end, McGee’s hand is raised in a unanimous decision.

Into the Octagon next is Cincinnati banger Victor O’Donnell, who says being here makes the hair on his neck stand up.  Chris Camozzi of Colorado can’t see the fight going any other way than him winning.

Dana and the Coaches contemplate the first round of a fight.

An extended cutdown of the fight begins as the opponents tap gloves and Camozzi goes in for a guillotine, but instead gets a spin lift from O’Donnell.  They get back to their feet and proceed to clobber each other with big punches and knees, in the process getting big reactions the coaches table.  The round ends and Dana debates with Chuck and Tito over which fighter did more damage.  Round Two is more of the same with each man fearlessly dishing out and absorbing incredible punishment.  Camozzi takes O’Donnell down with a nice hip throw, but soon they’re back up and it’s O’Donnell who has an impressive takedown that lifts Camozzi off his feet and slams him into the cage.  Tito shouts for Camozzi to get a triangle, but O’Donnell fights it off until the horn sounds.  Dana applauds and says “Good fight!”  After some tabulating from the judges, Dana announces a third Sudden Victory round.  The action continues with more solid shots to faces and hard takedowns.  Camozzi attempts a rear naked choke, but O’Donnell rolls out and they get back to their feet and swing a few more times before the horn blows.  The fighters walk to the corners as Dana, Chuck and Tito give them a standing ovation.  Dana says they showed a lot of heart, and while no one should be considered a loser, only one man gets to go on to live his dream.

O’Donnell and Camozzi stand with the ref as Dana reads the decision in favor of Chris Camozzi, who is happy to be going into the house, despite some soreness in his face region.  O’Donnell expresses regret over missing out on the chance of a lifetime.

Sacramento’s Kyacey Uscola considers himself a dark horse, despite his poor – albeit experienced – record.  Brent Cooper of Irvine steps into the cage and makes no bones about his love for punching people in the face.  The Californians collide with swift kicks and quick fists, one of which catches Cooper on the button and he drops like a ragdoll.  Uscola pounces for some finishing shots before the ref intervenes.  “Don’t blink when I fight,” warns Uscola, “Pretty fast knockout.”  Dana thinks Uscola displayed killer instinct by ending the fight “quick and nasty.”

Another montage begins with Jesusian Joe Henle fighting Constantinos Philippou.  Dana observes that Henle’s getting killed for all of Round One, but then he pulls off an armbar for the win in Round Two.  Henle is happy that his jujitsu came through when he needed it.  Next up, a chrome-domed Rich Attonito attacks Lyle Steffens with an aggressive double-leg takedown.  Tito sees that Rich dominates, which leads to a decision in his favor after Round Two.  Two more fighters take the cage, and Tito comments on how chin-strapped Josh Bryant took a lot of shots but used his wrestling to pull out the 2-round decision over Greg Rebello.  Bryant says he’s ready to win the whole thing.  Finally, as Charles Blanchard pounds on Jacen Flynn, Chuck says Blanchard is short and stocky, but strong.  After Round One, the ref stands by as Flynn tells the doctor he can’t see from one eye, and the fight is handed to Blanchard.  Blanchard is eager to bang, despite being the shortest guy in the room.

Charley Lynch continues to fight with a broken nose.

Minneapolis middleweight Charley Lynch walks out, his greasy bangs converging to a point over his brow.  Even though he’s fighting his buddy, Lynch wants most to put on a good show, preferably with one of them getting knocked the “F” out.  Not to be outdone in the crazy-hair category, Clayton McKinney strolls out with half of his head dyed bright Joker green.  McKinney wishes the best for his friend in the future, but plans to put a stop to his dreams for now.  “The greatest feeling in the world is to knock somebody out,” says McKinney, “Raw, real, nasty.”

Round One opens with McKinney driving Lynch to the mat with a nice double.  Lynch powers his way up, eating a knee in the process.  They get in the clinch and McKinney flips Lynch with a judo throw, only to have Lynch get right back up.  McKinney stays on the offense, firing off hard strikes punctuated by a knee that causes him to fall back.  Lynch seizes the opportunity to get in the guard and deliver big shots to the head and body.  Lynch backs off, and McKinney gets a chance to stand up and move in with a flurry of punches and knees.  When they separate, McKinney sees that Lynch’s nose has essentially collapsed and he says, “Your nose is smashed up.”  He drives one final punch to the face that drops Lynch and the fight is stopped.  Dana says, “That is a broken nose.”  In the replay, Dana says the fight was entertaining because Lynch is so tough, adding “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a broken nose that nasty.”  McKinney hugs his friend and apologizes for shattering his nose.  After getting his hand raised, McKinney says his shoulder hurts but he’s ready to go again right now if need be.

All of the day’s winners assemble before the coaches and Dana, who congratulates them for not being the guys riding home on the bus.  Ring, Noke and Uscola are all impressed by the group of talent on the show.  Dana knows the competition between the coaches will be fierce, and then he wishes everyone luck and welcomes them to The Ultimate Fighter.

The top 14 fighters make it into the house.

In a tease of the upcoming season, we are privy to a montage of tough training, bad mouthing and hilarious hijinx, all culminating with teams and coaches screaming outside the cage and the now obligatory coach-smashing-a-door shot.

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